Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Heideman, M. 2013. Flood hazard and risk in the Lillooet River Valley, British Columbia, Canada. PhD Thesis, SFU.
Organization SFU
URL http://summit.sfu.ca/system/files/iritems1/13834/etd8084_MHeideman.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords This thesis examines flood hazard in Lillooet River valley in the southern Coast
Mountains of British Columbia, Canada. My research is multi-disciplinary: I used earth
science methods to estimate pre-historical flood frequency and sediment yield, as well
social science theory to study the process of knowledge transfer between the scientific
community and local stakeholders. The results from this thesis contribute to and
complement previous earth science and natural hazard studies in Lillooet River valley,
while furthermore providing knowledge for river and floodplain management. The results
also shed a light on the communication of scientific knowledge to local emergency
managers and the use of such information at the local level.
My thesis comprises three studies. First, I compiled a varve chronology spanning
825 years (AD 1179-2004) from annually layered sediments (varves) recovered from
Lillooet Lake. I compared twentieth-century discharge records of Lillooet River to the
contemporary part of the varve chronology to determine the relation between river
discharge and varve thickness. Based on this relation, I examined the entire 825-year
varve chronology for the floods it might record. Second, I made annual sediment yield
estimates for the period AD 1629-1997 and compared them to estimates derived from
Lillooet Lake cores by previous researchers. I compared times of anomalously high
sediment yield to ages of large landslides and floods in the watershed, and to times of
marked glacier advance and retreat in order to understand controls on sediment
delivery. I assessed the persistence of high sediment input episodes using statistical
methods. Third, I assessed the history and current flood management policy landscape
at the federal, provincial, and local levels. In the context of the transfer of flood
management responsibility from the British Columbia Government to municipalities in
2003, I interviewed local floodplain and emergency managers on their use of scientific
knowledge in preparing for flooding in Lillooet River valley.
Keywords: varves; sediment yield; flooding; natural hazards; Lillooet River valley;
British Columbia; knowledge transfer; society-science relationships; flood
management
Information Type thesis
Regional Watershed Howe Sound & Sunshine Coast
Sub-watershed if known Lillooet River
Aquifer #
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Project status complete
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