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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 02, 2012 02:41 UTC (43 seconds ago)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A freshet can refer to one of two things:
A flood resulting from heavy
rain or a spring thaw. Whereas heavy rain often causes a flash flood, a spring
thaw event is generally a more incremental process, depending upon
local climate and topography. The term freshet is
most commonly used to describe a spring thaw resulting from snow
and ice melt in rivers located in the northern latitudes of North America,
particularly Canada, where
rivers are frozen each winter and thaw during the spring. A spring
freshet can sometimes last several weeks on large river systems,
resulting in significant inundation of flood plains as the snow pack melts in the river's watershed. Spring
freshets associated with thaw events are sometimes accompanied by
ice jams
which can cause flash floods.
A stream or river of fresh water which empties into the ocean, usually flowing through an
estuary.