Statistics of numerous rainfall time series have been analyzed and set into relation with dominating rainfall mechanisms (Objective I, scientific article published). For Objective II, statistics of floods have been analyzed at over 400 gauged river catchments of Austria and set into relation to the intensity-duration-frequency statistics from rainfall by means of a novel approach (scientific article in preparation), which allows to better understand the transformation from rainfall into flood probabilities depending on topography, soils, geology and climate. To understand the scaling behavior of hydrological processes and their link to flood generation (Objective III), a rainfall-runoff modelling framework is currently being set up. In that context, a new non-parametric rainfall model has been developed (scientific article published). In addition, synergies could be built between STARFLOOD and the ongoing project WETRAX+ that examines how synoptic weather situations lead to flash flooding in the Upper Danube basin (Jacobeit, J., Blöschl, G., Komma, J., Stahl, N., Hofstätter, M., Haslinger, K., & Pistotnik, G. (2018). WETRAX+: welche Wetterlagen führen zu Sturzfluten? Forum für Hydrologie und Wasserbewirtschaftung 40 (18)).
During the STARFLOOD project, considerable effort has been devoted to dissemination.
- Seven conferences were attended, including the (i) European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly 2019 and (ii) 2020 (Vienna, Austria), (iii) the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) General Assembly 2019 (Montreal, Canada), (iv) International Disaster Response Expo 2019 (London, UK), (v) European Forum on Disaster Risk Reduction (EFDRR) hosted by United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction 2018 (Rome, Italy), (vi) Natural Hazards and Disaster Science Forum 2018 hosted by the Centre of Natural Hazards and Disaster Science CNDS (Uppsala, Sweden) and (vii) Symposium on Statistical Hydrology 2019 (Uppsala, Sweden). Contributions included research talks (EGU, CNDS), poster presentations (EGU, IUGG), keynotes (International Disaster Response Expo), and development and moderation of a working session (EFDRR), with a large audience of researchers from various domains, practitioners, stakeholders, policy makers and general public.
- Two workshops have been attended, namely the Vienna Catchment Science Symposia (VCSS) 2019 and 2020 (Vienna, Austria).
- On social media, namely LinkedIn and Twitter, Horizon 2020 and ongoing research progress has been reported in posts/tweets at regular intervals.
- Two school visits have been initiated for spring 2020 with support of the Young Science Center Austria (youngscience.at). Due to the Covid19-pandemic, these school visits had to be postponed and are currently planned for 2021.