2009 Station Fire, Dunsmore Canyon, Glendale California
Monitoring post-fire flash floods and debris flows
Rainfall on steep burned basins can quickly transform into potentially dangerous flash floods and debris flows. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA), conducts detailed monitoring of the precipitation, runoff, and erosion in Dunsmore Canyon, Glendale, CA. The canyon was burned in the 160,000-acre Station Fire of August and September 2009. The monitoring effort is intended to provide information from the “heart of the fire” to NOAA’s National Weather Service for warning decision-making and to advance the understanding of post-fire runoff, erosion, and debris-flow generation processes.
This web page displays data being collected by a station monitoring channel runoff and erosion in a sub-basin of Dunsmore Canyon.
Real Time Data
Data is transmitted from the site every four minutes and displayed on graphs:
Other USGS real-time monitoring in Dunsmore Canyon
For more information
- Post-Wildfire Landslide Hazards
- NOAA/USGS Demonstration Flash-flood and debris-flow early warning system
- Weather forecast for vicinity
- NOAA Shared Mobile Atmospheric and Teaching Radar (SMART-R)
- Google Earth photo documentation of the response from the 11-13 December 2009 storm
Contact Information
Jason Kean
jwkean [at] usgs [dot] govDennis Staley
dstaley [at] usgs [dot] gov
Mailing Address
U.S. Geological Survey
Geologic Hazards Team
Box 25046, MS 966
Denver, CO 80225

