Luis Timbe
University of Cuenca
28 Papers
62 Citations
Luis Timbe is an academic researcher from University of Cuenca. The author has contributed to research in topics: Flood myth & Floodplain. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 25 publications. Previous affiliations of Luis Timbe include Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.
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Papers
Performance assessment of two-dimensional hydraulic models for generation of flood inundation maps in mountain river basins
Juan Pinos,Luis Timbe +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a comparative analysis of the performance of four two-dimensional hydraulic models (HEC-RAS 2D, Iber2D, Flood Modeller 2D and PCSWMM 2D) with respect to the generation of flood inundation maps is presented.
95
Night Irrigation Reduction for Water Saving in Medium-Sized Systems
TL;DR: In this article, a hydrodynamic model was applied, using MIKE 11 as a software tool, to simulate abrupt discharge changes and their travel times along small irrigation canals.
Sampling frequency trade-offs in the assessment of mean transit times of tropical montane catchment waters under semi-steady-state conditions
Edison Timbe,Edison Timbe,David Windhorst,Rolando Célleri,Luis Timbe,Patricio Crespo,Hans Georg Frede,Jan Feyen,Lutz Breuer +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the effect of sampling frequency in the performance of three lumped-parameter distribution functions (exponential-piston flow, linear piston flow and gamma) which were used to estimate mean transit times of waters.
Assessment of microscale economic flood losses in urban and agricultural areas: case study of the Santa Bárbara River, Ecuador
TL;DR: In this paper, an open-access methodology for quantifying flood losses in the inter-Andean region of Ecuador is proposed, which can be applied to microscale analysis, thereby providing quantitative results for flood risk assessment.
14
Mountain Riverine Floods in Ecuador: Issues, Challenges, and Opportunities
Juan Pinos,Luis Timbe +1 more
- 28 Oct 2020
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the issues facing flood risk management (FRM) in the Ecuadorian highlands with a view to finding approaches for overcoming them, focusing on three specific concerns: an assessment of the deficiencies of current FRM, the development of diverse strategies to combat flooding, and the need for an overarching vision for future actions and research.