clivar/pages/ipcc drought implications workshop november 2003

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Floods, Paleofloods, and Drought: Insights from the Upper Tails Katie Hirschboeck Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research University of Arizona CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop November 2003

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Floods, Paleofloods, and Drought: Insights from the Upper Tails Katie Hirschboeck Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research University of Arizona. CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop November 2003. Paleofloods -- Direct Physical Evidence of Extreme Hydrological Events. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Floods, Paleofloods, and Drought:

Insights from the Upper Tails

Katie HirschboeckLaboratory of Tree-Ring Research

University of Arizona

CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop November 2003

Page 2: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Paleofloods --

Direct Physical Evidence of

Extreme Hydrological

Events

Page 3: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
Page 4: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

House, Webb, Baker& Levish (2002)

American Geophysical Union

Page 5: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

PALEOFLOOD (def)

A past or ancient flood event which occurred prior to the time of human observation or direct measurement by modern hydrological procedures.

Recent or modern events may also be studied using paleoflood analytical techniques:

HISTORICAL FLOOD

Flood event documented by human observation and recorded prior to the development of systematic streamflow measurements

EXTREME FLOOD IN UNGAGED WATERSHEDS

Page 6: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Paleofloods: Event-Based Information

-- Paleoflood deposits are not proxy indicators of past conditions in which data are filtered through a biological response.

-- The paleoflood deposits are direct physical evidence of the occurrence of individual extreme hydrologic events and corresponding precipitation events.

-- Slackwater deposits and other types of paleostage indicators selectively preserve evidence of only the largest floods . . .

. . . precisely the information that is lacking in the short gaged discharge records of the observational period

Page 7: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Unlike systematic gaged data, paleoflood information is collected & reported in different formats:

• Paleofloods (w/ stage and/or discharge)

• Thresholds

• Non-exceedence bounds

DataType

s

Page 8: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Types of Paleoflood Information

Threshold level = level below which floods are not preserved(over a specific time internal)

only floods which overtop the threshold level leave evidence

Non-exceedance bound = level which has either:

• never been exceeded, or

• has not been exceeded during a specific time interval

PALEOFLOOD = paleoflood stage or discharge estimate

Page 9: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Regional compilations of paleoflood data

Note temporal clustering & episodic behavior

Page 10: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Lisa Ely’s (1997) comparison of SW paleofloods with various paleoclimate indicators.

Periods with an increased frequency of extreme floods tend to coincide with cool, moist conditions and frequent El Niño events.

NOTE, however, contrast between 13th & 16th century drought periods in #’s of paleofloods

Page 11: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

• extreme floods / paleofloods are intermittent

• cannot be archived as continuous annually resolved chronologies

• in some cases, can be interpreted in context of higher-resolution, continuous proxy chronologies

Verde River, AZ: paleoflood data vs. tree-ring based annual streamflow reconstruction

see House, Pearthree, and Klawon, 2002

1868 peak: corresponding

paleoflood

no corresponding peaks in streamflow reconstruction

Paleofloods of1862 & 1891:

Page 12: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Regional / global compilations of paleoflood data

When further explored and linked to the full spectrum of ocean-atmosphere teleconnections and modes of large-scale atmospheric circulation variability –-- may provide important insights on changes in precipitation intensity and the magnitude and frequency of large floods over past millennia.

Page 13: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Five Insightsfrom the Upper Tails of Flood Distributions

Page 14: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

1. High frequencies of moderate floods and/or occasional extremely large floods can occur in regions undergoing drought.

Page 15: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

• Peaks-above-base: 30+ gaging stations in Arizona

• Synoptic charts + precipitation data causal mechanisms

Page 16: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

WATER YEAR

AV

G #

FL

OO

DS

AVERAGE # OF PARTIAL DURATION SERIES FLOODS in GILA RIVER BASIN, AZ EACH YEAR (per station)

FREQUENCY OF FLOOD PEAKS PER YEAR

Interannual Variability of # of Floods (1950-80)

--- 1950s ---

Page 17: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

IMPLICATIONS

Systematic examinations of the gaged flood record in other regions undergoing drought are needed to explore the hydroclimatic conditions for concurrent flood and drought episodes.

Page 18: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

2. Unusually large floods in drainage basins of all sizes are likely to be associated with circulation anomalies involving quasi-stationary patterns such as blocking ridges and cutoff lows in the middle-level flow.

Page 19: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
Page 20: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Lane Canyon flash flood

Extreme flood events evolve from: • uncommon (or unseasonable) locations of typical circulation features

• unusual combinations of atmospheric processes,

• rare configurations in circulation patterns (e.g. extreme blocking)

• exceptional persistence of a specific circulation pattern.

Page 21: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Spring 1973 Mississippi River Basin floods

Jimmy Camp Creek flood of 1965

Page 22: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Record-breaking floods of winter 1992-93 in Arizona

Page 23: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

IMPLICATIONS (1)

Since the characteristic drought circulation pattern in the United States is a strong middle- and upper-level ridge (and occasional blocking high) . . .

. . . it should not be surprising that extreme flooding and persistent drought occasionally coincide, at least in adjacent regions.

Page 24: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

IMPLICATIONS (2)

Shifts in storm track locations and other anomalous circulation behavior are clearly linked to unusual flood and drought behavior .

They are likely to be the factors most directly responsible for projected increases in hydrologic extremes under a changing climate.

Page 25: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

3. The interaction between storm properties and drainage basin properties plays an important role in the occurrence and magnitude of large floods both regionally and seasonally.

Page 26: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

from Doswell et al. (1996)

-- Slow movement of system -- Large area of high rainfall rate along motion vector -- Both occurring together

Synergistic Combination of Factors

Page 27: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

• Paleoflood information about precipitation extremes is highly basin-specific.

• Basin-specific interactions play much less of a role in the development and magnitude of a regional drought, which generally transcends the influence of drainage divides.

• Regional scale land-surface atmosphere feedbacks are more likely to influence the development and persistence of drought conditions.

IMPLICATIONS

Page 28: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

4. Compilations of paleoflood records combined with gaged records suggest there is a natural, upper physical limit to the magnitude of floods in a given region.

Page 29: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Paleoflood evidence for a natural upper bound to flood magnitudes in the Colorado River Basin Enzel, Ely, House, Baker & Webb (1993) WRR

Page 30: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
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IMPLICATIONS• Paleoflood evidence points to an upper physical limit for intense rainfall events

• This raises important theoretical questions about whether such a limit might continue to hold under a projected warmer climate with a more intense hydrologic cycle.

Page 32: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

5. The identification of hydroclimatically defined mixed distributions in flood records suggests that in regions where floods are produced by several types of meteorological events, different storm types may exhibit unique probability distributions.

Page 33: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Conceptual Framework for Flood Time Series

Time-varying means

Time-varying variances

Both

SOURCE: Hirschboeck, 1988

Mixed frequency distributions may arise from:

• storm types

• synoptic patterns

• ENSO, etc. teleconnections

• multi-decadal circulation regimes

Page 34: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Conceptual Framework transferred to Paleo-record “Time”

b) modified from Knox, 1983

a)

b)

A shift in circulation regime (or anomalous persistence of a given regime) will lead to different theoretical frequency / probability distributions over time

(Hirschboeck , 1988)

Page 35: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
Page 36: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

IMPLICATIONS

For floods or paleofloods, climatic changes can be conceptualized as time-varying atmospheric circulation regimes that generate a mix of shifting streamflow probability distributions over time.

This conceptual framework – -- in tandem with the framework proposed by Trenberth (1998,1999) – provides an opportunity to evaluate streamflow-based hydrologic extremes under a changing climate from complementary perspectives.

Page 37: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

CLOSING COMMENT

Page 38: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

• In the largest and most extreme floods studied, PERSISTENCE was always a factor

• Persistence of INGREDIENTS (e.g., deep moist convection environment) most important at small scales (flash floods)

• Persistence of PATTERN most important at larger scales (basin-wide / regional floods)

Page 39: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

• Persistence bridges meteorological and climatological time scales

• Persistence = underlying factor in atmosphere / basin synergy . . .

AND DROUGHT!!!!

Page 40: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
Page 41: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
Page 42: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

This Paleoflood Databank is a repository for paleoflood data that has been created for use by the paleoflood research community.

It was compiled by researchers at The Arizona Laboratory for Paleohydrological Analysis (ALPHA) and The Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona, under the direction of K.K Hirschboeck with funding from NOAA Office of Global Programs and the US Bureau of Reclamation.

[This is Version 3.1. 2003]

Page 43: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Complete Relationships Diagram for the Data Fields in the Paleoflood Databank,

v. 3.1Basin Publication Contributo

r

EVENT

SiteRiver

Page 44: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
Page 45: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Method of Dating the

Flood / Paleoflood

Page 46: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003
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Methods of discharge or stage calculation:

Techniques usedto indicate

paleostage level:

Page 48: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Example of a QUERY: for a given date, e.g. 1983:

Page 49: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

Example of a DATA

REPORT

Page 50: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

(SOURCE: House & Hirschboeck, 1997)

Largest floods in Lower Colorado River Basin

Regionalization of Extreme

Events

Paleoflood

data

(SOURCE: Jarrett, 1991 from Patton & Baker, 1977)

Flood Frequency Analysis

from Stedinger et al. 1988Gaged record

(censored)

Historical peaks

Statistical Procedures based on combined data:

Systematic (Gaged), Historical & Paleoflood

Page 51: CLIVAR/PAGES/IPCC Drought Implications Workshop  November 2003