Rainfall Characteristics of the Prescott, Arizona, Storm of 23–24 September 1983

Verne H. Leverson Division of planning Technical Services, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Denver, CO 80225

Search for other papers by Verne H. Leverson in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

Abstract

On 23–24 September 1983 the vicinity of Prescott, Arizona, experienced a 36 h period of recurrent heavy rains. Measurement obtained from a supplemental precipitation survey of the storm-affected area are used to derive maximum 6 h and total storm (36 h) precipitation patterns. Rainfall depth-area-duration (DAD) data computed from the patterns are compared with three standards of precipitation severity: 1) documented extreme rainstorms in the southwestern United States, 2) precipitation-frequency values and 3) probable maximum precipitation (PMP) estimates. The comparisons show the Prescott storm to be an exceptional event that produced rainfall exceeding 100-yr amounts as well as some categories of PMP.

Abstract

On 23–24 September 1983 the vicinity of Prescott, Arizona, experienced a 36 h period of recurrent heavy rains. Measurement obtained from a supplemental precipitation survey of the storm-affected area are used to derive maximum 6 h and total storm (36 h) precipitation patterns. Rainfall depth-area-duration (DAD) data computed from the patterns are compared with three standards of precipitation severity: 1) documented extreme rainstorms in the southwestern United States, 2) precipitation-frequency values and 3) probable maximum precipitation (PMP) estimates. The comparisons show the Prescott storm to be an exceptional event that produced rainfall exceeding 100-yr amounts as well as some categories of PMP.

Save