Floods and Debris
Flows in the Catalina Front Range and Southern Arizona,
July 31, 2006
Chris Magirl
US Geological Survey,
Tucson, Arizona
Ample geologic evidence indicates
early Holocene and Pleistocene debris flows from the south side of the Santa Catalina Mountains
north of Tucson, Arizona, but few records document historical
events. On July 31, 2006, an unusual set of atmospheric conditions aligned to
produce record floods and an unprecedented number of debris flows in the Santa
Catalinas. During the week prior to the event, an upper-level area of low
pressure centered near Albuquerque, New Mexico generated widespread heavy rainfall in
southern Arizona.
After midnight on July 31, a strong and widespread complex of thunderstorms
developed over the Mogollon Rim in central Arizona in a deformation zone that formed on
the back side of the upper-level low. High atmospheric moisture (50 mm of
precipitable water) coupled with cooling aloft spawned a mesoscale thunderstorm
complex that moved southeast into the Tucson
basin. These thunderstorms interacted with a low- to mid-level zone of atmospheric
instability to create an initial wave of rainfall across the Tucson metropolitan area in the early morning
hours. A second wave of thunderstorms and heavy rain developed over the Santa Catalina Mountain near dawn. A 15-20 knot low-level
southwesterly wind developed with a significant upslope component over the
south face of the Santa Catalina
Mountains advecting moist
and unstable air into the merging storms. NEXRAD radar indicated a swath of 75-150
mm of rainfall occurred over the lower and middle elevations of the southern Santa Catalina Mountains. This intense rain falling on
saturated soil triggered multiple debris flows throughout the front range. Sabino Canyon
was the epicenter of mass wasting where at least 18 debris flows removed
structures, destroyed the roadway in multiple locations, and closed public
access for months. To the west in Rattlesnake Canyon, a similar number of debris flows
coalesced to travel several kilometers down the channel washing out the
roadway, debouching into Sabino Creek, and contributing to a net 5-7 m of
deposition within Sabino Creek. The debris flows were followed by streamflow
floods which eclipsed the record discharge in the 75-year gaging record of
Sabino Creek. The floods reworked most of the debris-flow deposits in or
adjacent to the channel or buried them beneath coarse, sandy deposits.