Publication | Open Access
Global River Discharge and Floods in the Warmer Climate of the Last Interglacial
71
Citations
79
References
2020
Year
EngineeringGeomorphologyFlood ControlEarth ScienceCatchment ScaleWarmer ClimateWatershed HydrologyHydroclimate ModelingHydrological ModelingClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyLig RunoffDischarge AnomalyLig DischargeGeographyGlobal River DischargeHydrologyClimate DynamicsClimatologyFlash FloodHydrological DisasterHydrological ScienceFlood Risk Management
Abstract We investigate hydrology during a past climate slightly warmer than the present: the last interglacial (LIG). With daily output of preindustrial and LIG simulations from eight new climate models we force hydrological model PCR‐GLOBWB and in turn hydrodynamic model CaMa‐Flood. Compared to preindustrial, annual mean LIG runoff, discharge, and 100‐yr flood volume are considerably larger in the Northern Hemisphere, by 14%, 25%, and 82%, respectively. Anomalies are negative in the Southern Hemisphere. In some boreal regions, LIG runoff and discharge are lower despite higher precipitation, due to the higher temperatures and evaporation. LIG discharge is much higher for the Niger, Congo, Nile, Ganges, Irrawaddy, and Pearl and lower for the Mississippi, Saint Lawrence, Amazon, Paraná, Orange, Zambesi, Danube, and Ob. Discharge is seasonally postponed in tropical rivers affected by monsoon changes. Results agree with published proxies on the sign of discharge anomaly in 15 of 23 sites where comparison is possible.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1