This list of cold drop events chronologically compiles the heavy rainfall events caused by cold drops (Spanish: Gota Fría) that have resulted in serious flooding.
In Spain, cold drops often cause intense rainfall and are created by the interaction of upper-level low pressure systems strangled and ultimately detached from the zonal (eastward) circulation displaying stationary or retrograde (westward) circulation with humid and warmer air masses provided by an overheated Mediterranean in the Autumn.[1]
Spanish meteorologists also call this phenomenon Depresión Aislada en Niveles Altos or DANA (English: “Isolated Depression at High Levels”).[1]
List
editDate | Regions impacted | Event | Effects |
---|---|---|---|
August 13, 1356[2] | Valencia | Intense flooding of the Rio Turia, after which a "Council for Walls and Ramparts" was established. | 400–500 dead |
September 27, 1517[3] | Valencia | Heavy rains caused the Rio Turia to overflow its banks and destroy numerous bridges, mills and other buildings near the riverbed. | Dozens of people and numerous animals died. |
June 10, 1796[3] | Province of Burgos | A devastating weather event that severely affected grain production. | |
October 15, 1879[3] | Province of Murcia, especially the city of Orihuela | Santa Teresa flood: The heavy rains caused the Segura to overflow, acquiring destructive power as it passed through inhabited areas. | More than a thousand dead and significant material losses |
September 11, 1891[3] | Southeast Spain, especially the towns of Adra, Gádor, and Benahadux | Sudden flooding of the Almería Rambla and other canals in the region. Local authorities had neither effective warning systems nor adequate infrastructure to manage an event of this magnitude. | Several streets and buildings were destroyed or severely damaged, and more than a hundred people died. |
End of September 1949[4] | Valencia | Severe flooding of the Rio Turia, hundreds of houses located in the old Turia canal were razed to the ground. | High number of victims |
October 14, 1957[3] | Valencia | 1957 Valencia flood: A severe cold snap caused the Turia to burst its banks. In less than 24 hours, the city was completely flooded and in the districts closest to the river, the water level reached five meters. The flooding showed the city's vulnerability to extreme events. As a countermeasure, the Turia River was to be diverted to the south of the city. | Death of at least 81 people and destruction of houses and infrastructure |
September 25, 1962[5] | Barcelona | Floods occurred in the catchment areas of the Llobregat and Besós rivers.
Flooding also occurred throughout the Balearic Islands (Palma de Mallorca and Andratx). |
Between 600 and 1,000 fatalities. |
October 20, 1982[6] | La Ribera | As a result of heavy rainfall, the Tous Reservoir collapsed and the Júcar River flooded the entire La Ribera region, causing great damage and entire towns were flooded up to the first floor. | Eight people died. |
August 26, 1983[7][8] | Bilbao | Due to the rains, water in some parts of Bilbao rose to a height of 5 metres. | 34 deaths and 5 missing |
November 3, 1987[9] | Gandía and Oliva | In Gandía and Oliva, rainfall exceeded 500 l/m2, devastating the Safor region. In Oliva, the Spanish record for rainfall in 24 hours was reached: 817 l/m2. | |
September 6, 1989[10] | Balearic regions around Manacor and Felanitx | 188 l/m2 in Manacor and 192 l/m2 in Porto Cristo, Mallorca. Artificial waterways overflowed their banks within a few hours, flooding fields and bays as well as part of the town centre of Manacor. | 3 fatalities |
September 30, 1997[11] | Alicante and the south of the Province of Valencia | Alicante experienced its worst storm since weather records began, with 270 mm of rain falling within 6 hours, causing flooding. | 5 deaths, severe damage to houses and buildings in the city |
October 2000[12][13] | Province of Castellón and north of Valencia | A long period of cold weather caused rainfall of more than 600 l/m2 to accumulate in three days, which flooded rivers such as the Palancia , Sonella , and Mijares, causing serious damage. Floods in Onda, Nules, Castellón, and Vall de Uxó were close to destroying the María Cristina and Benitandús reservoirs. | |
March 31, 2002[14] | Tenerife | A cold drop caused torrential rain in the Santa Cruz de Tenerife area that amounted to 232.6 l/m2 in 24 hours and 129.9 l/m2 in 1 hour. | 7 deaths and property damage worth 90 million euros. |
October 12–13, 2007[15][16] | Marina Alta | The cold snap exceeded 450 mm of rainfall in about 15 hours in the towns of Parcent, L'Atzúbia, Murla and La Vall de Boí, causing the largest recorded flood of river banks in Girona, the destruction of the Beniarbeig bridge, and the flooding of a large part of this town. | 1 death |
September 28, 2012[17] | Vera and Cuevas del Almanzora | Heavy rain lasting several hours caused fatalities and considerable property damage. | 4 dead |
September 30, 2012[18] | Province of Murcia | In the Guadalentín Valley, especially on the Rambla Nogalte , torrential rains destroyed roads and hundreds of affected houses, and caused the collapse of the motorway bridge in Puerto Lumbreras. | 7 fatalities, thousands of animals perished. |
October 19–21, 2018[15] | Province of Málaga | Rainfall amounts of 463 mm were recorded in Campillos and 452 mm in Ardales. Alpandeire also recorded high rainfall. More than forty municipalities suffered damage to infrastructure, livestock and crops. | One firefighter died during the rescue efforts. |
September 2019[19][20][21] | Province of Murcia, Albacete, and Almería | 300 mm or more of rainfall caused the Río Clariano in Ontinyent and the Segura River, as well as the Almansa reservoir, to overflow. Orihuela was the worst affected, with more than 500 mm of rainfall, flooding numerous urban centres and more than 5,000 hectares of orchards. | 7 deaths, damages estimated at 170 to 190 million euros. |
January 2020[22][23] | Entire Spanish Mediterranean coast, mainly the Balearic Islands, Catalonia, and the Valencian Community. | Storm Gloria: Severe damage caused by waves up to 7 metres high near the coast. | 14 fatalities |
September 2 and 4, 2023[24] | Much of the Iberian Peninsula, particularly the provinces of Toledo and Madrid, as well as area in the provinces of Tarragona, Segovia, and Cádiz. | Heavy rainfall resulted in up to 215 l/m2 falling within 24 hours, flooding numerous houses and requiring the closure of roads and railway lines. | 6 deaths |
October 29 to November 8, 2024[25][26] | Málaga, Albacete, Cuenca and especially Valencia. | 2024 Spanish floods: Widespread flooding caused severe damage, particularly in the regions of Valencia, Andalusia and Murcia. Huge amounts of rain fell in a short space of time, reaching up to 491 mm in 8 hours, causing flash floods and mudslides that trapped many people in their homes or cars. | At least 223 deaths, one of the deadliest flood disasters in Spain's modern history. |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b National Geographic Spanish edition article about DANA)
- ^ Institucio Govern politich; Y Iuridich, Costums, Y Observancies de la fábrica vella, dita de Murs, E Valls; y Nova; Dita del Riu. Iusep Lop. Ayuntamiento de Valencia. 2001. ISBN 84-95171-95-3
- ^ a b c d e Couto, Erica (2024-11-03). "Las DANA más mortíferas registradas en la historia de España" [The deadliest DANAs recorded in the history of Spain]. Muy Interesante (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "1949, la terrible riada de las chabolas" [1949, the terrible flood of the shantytowns]. Las Provincias (in Spanish). 2012-03-03. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "Los mil muertos de las lluvias torrenciales de Barcelona en 1962: «Hemos recogido ya 150 cadáveres en Tarrasa»" [The thousand dead of the torrential rains in Barcelona in 1962: “We have already collected 150 bodies in Terrassa”]. Diario ABC (in Spanish). 2024-10-31. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ Vázquez, Cristina (2022-10-20). "40 años del crac de la presa de Tous: la 'pantanada' que anegó toda una comarca valenciana" [40 years since the Tous dam crash: the 'swamp' that flooded an entire Valencian region]. El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "Bilbao bajo el agua - ¿Qué pasó el 26 de agosto de 1983?" [Bilbao under water - What happened on August 26, 1983?]. www.institutohemingway.com. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ Santiago, Violeta (2024-11-01). "Renedo, 1983: el año que el agua lo devastó todo" [Renedo, 1983: the year that water devastated everything]. El Diario Montañés (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ El episodio de Oliva-Gandía de 3-4 de noviembre de 1987: récord nacional de precipitación en 24 horas. [The Oliva-Gandía episode from November 3–4, 1987: recorded national precipitation in 24 hours.] divulgameteo.es (in Spanish), 2018.
- ^ "Als der Himmel auf Mallorca fiel" [When the sky fell on Mallorca.]. Mallorca Magazin. 2009-09-10. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ Bryant, Tony (2022-09-30). "30 September 1997: Alicante suffers severe flooding during worst storm in history". Sur in English. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ VALLADOLID, P. NIETO/N (2019-09-14). "Las gotas frías más severas que han azotado la Comunitat" [The most severe cold drops that have hit the Community]. Las Provincias (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ "The "Gota Fria"". www.aiguesdebenissa.com. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ Javier Arroyo: TEMPERIE CANARIA: CRONOLOGIA DE EFEMERIDES METEOROLOGICAS. In: ACANMET
- ^ a b Finch, Walter (2024-11-02). "IN PICTURES: Remembering Spain's most catastrophic floods as this week's Valencia disaster goes down in history". Olive Press News Spain. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ "October Storm 2007 - Javea Casas". www.javeacasas.com. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ Visiedo, Víctor (2022-09-28). "Vera sigue con temor a las lluvias diez años después de la riada mortal" [«Vera still fears rain ten years after the deadly flood»]. Diario de Almería (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "La gota fría más trágica de los últimos años" [«The most tragic cold snap of recent years»]. La Verdad (in Spanish). 2012-09-30. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "Suben a seis los muertos por la gota fría tras el hallazgo de un cadáver en Orihuela" [«Deaths from the cold snap rise to six after the discovery of a corpse in Orihuela»]. www.20minutos.es - Últimas Noticias (in Spanish). 2019-09-14. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ Burgos, Rafa (2019-09-17). "Hallado el cadáver del holandés desaparecido el domingo en la gota fría" [«The body of the Dutchman who disappeared on Sunday in the cold drop has been found»]. El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "Así debes solicitar las indemnizaciones al Consorcio de Seguros por los daños de las inundaciones" [This is how you should request compensation from the Insurance Consortium for flood damage]. COPE (in Spanish). 2019-09-16. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "Storm Gloria floods major river delta in eastern Spain". 2020-01-22. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ "Referencia del Consejo de Ministros" [Reference from the Council of Ministers]. www.lamoncloa.gob.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ Schlitt, Anna-Lena (2023-09-04). "Extremwetter in Spanien: Rettungskräfte finden nach Regenfällen zwei weitere Tote" [Rescue workers find two more dead after rainfall]. Die Zeit (in German). ISSN 0044-2070. Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- ^ "Devastating rainfall hits Spain in yet another flood-related disaster". World Meteorological Organization. 2024-10-31. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ L. B. (8 November 2024). "El Gobierno eleva a 223 los fallecidos en España, 215 de ellos en Valencia". 20 Minutos (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 November 2024.