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North American Drought: Paleoclimatic and Historic Contexts Greg McCabe USGS, WRD, Denver, CO
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Drought occurs somewhere in the US almost every year and can occur over a large portion of the country.
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Generally, the most spatially extensive droughts are the driest droughts. drier
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Courtesy of Stephen Gray
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1954 Instrumental Tree-Ring PDSI Source: NOAA Paleoclimate web page dry wet Tree rings also capture the spatial variability of climate.
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Uinta Basin Watershed: 50-yr Running Average Why use climate reconstructions? The instrumental record may not include the full range of climate variability. Gray, Jackson, Betancourt (2004) Great Drought Late 16 th Century Megadrought 20 th Cent.
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Significant Cultural Events Coronado’s Entrada 1541 Persistent climate anomalies have had significant socio-economic impacts.
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PHDI Mortality rate (Jamestown and Roanoke colonies) Drought may have been the cause of the lost Jamestown Colony. Stahle et al., Science, 1998 wet dry wet dry
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Krusik & Cook (2004) North American Drought Atlas 8009001000110017001800 19002000 1200 1300 14001500 1600 Western US Drought Area Index (-1 PDSI) 80 yr lowpass Medieval Warm Period Little Ice Age Percent Area of Drought (<-1 PDSI) Current drought occurrence in the western U.S. is approaching that of the Medieval Warm Period.
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Schubert et al., Science, 2005 There is instrumental and model evidence that La Nina is a significant cause of persistent drought in the U.S. La Nina Composite SSTs, 1930’s drought (1932-1938)
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Schubert et al., Science, 2005 There is instrumental and model evidence that La Nina is a significant cause of persistent drought in the U.S. …but there also is a signal in the North Atlantic. La Nina AMO Composite SSTs, 1930’s drought (1932-1938)
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Interaction of Pacific and Atlantic SSTs also may govern centennial-scale trends in western U.S. drought. Courtesy Julio Betancourt Cool Warm Medieval Warm Period AD 900-1300 DRYDRY Cool Warm Little Ice Age AD 1400-1850 WETWET
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Source: Steve Gray, U. Wyo. UCRB The 20 th century included the wettest and 3 rd wettest periods in the UCRB during the past 500 years
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using 1995 estimates of water use
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Increasing water demand is stressing the UCRB water supply, even during one of the wettest centuries. Source: Glen Canyon Institute, March 2005 Million Acre Feet
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Courtesy of Stephen Gray, U. Wyo. Population growth and water demand have increased dramatically in the UCRB during an anomalously wet period. What will happen when the climate is drier?
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Severe-Sustained Drought (SSD) Experiments Harding et al., WRB, 1995
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Effects of Severe-Sustained Drought (dry regime) on Lake Powell Lake Powell Contents SSD Drought vs. Current Conditions 0 5 10 15 20 25 1 47 10131619222528313437 Drought Year Contents, maf SSD Based on 1579-1616 reconstruction of flow at Lees Ferry (1579-1600 drought, 1601-1616 recovery), 1992 water use.
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Harding et al., WRB, 1995 Effects of Severe-Sustained Drought (dry regime) on Lake Powell Recent Based on 1579-1616 reconstruction of flow at Lees Ferry (1579-1600 drought, 1601-1616 recovery), 1992 water use. 1995 2004
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26-year moving average UCRB flow expressed as departures from the mean flow for 1896-1921 (the period used for the Colorado Compact mean flow estimate) The period used to estimate UCRB flows for the Colorado Compact was wet relative to other periods in the 20 th century, as well as to most other periods during the past 500 years. Tree ring reconstruction from Woodhouse et al., WRR, 2006.
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Hydrologic Conditions May 2007 Map of below normal 14-day average streamflow compared to historical streamflow for the day of year (United States)
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Summary - Droughts have significant climatic as well as socio-economic impacts. - Since the end of the little Ice Age drought occurrence in the western US appears to have increased. Will this trend continue? - Persistent US drought may be linked with persistently cool eastern tropical SSTs and warm North Atlantic SSTs. - Climatic variability and change, as well as increased consumptive use of water resources may lead to future water supply problems in the UCRB.
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