r.avaflow represents an innovative open-source computational tool for routing
rapid mass flows, avalanches, or process chains from a defined release area
down an arbitrary topography to a deposition area. In contrast to most
existing computational tools, r.avaflow (i) employs a two-phase, interacting
solid and fluid mixture model (Pudasaini, 2012); (ii) is suitable for
modelling more or less complex process chains and interactions;
(iii) explicitly considers both entrainment and stopping with deposition,
i.e. the change of the basal topography; (iv) allows for the definition of
multiple release masses, and/or hydrographs; and (v) serves with built-in
functionalities for validation, parameter optimization, and sensitivity
analysis. r.avaflow is freely available as a raster module of the GRASS GIS
software, employing the programming languages Python and C along with the
statistical software R. We exemplify the functionalities of r.avaflow by
means of two sets of computational experiments: (1) generic process chains
consisting in bulk mass and hydrograph release into a reservoir with
entrainment of the dam and impact downstream; (2) the prehistoric Acheron
rock avalanche, New Zealand. The simulation results are generally plausible
for (1) and, after the optimization of two key parameters, reasonably in line
with the corresponding observations for (2). However, we identify some
potential to enhance the analytic and numerical concepts. Further, thorough
parameter studies will be necessary in order to make r.avaflow fit for
reliable forward simulations of possible future mass flow events
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