G.A. Hodgkins et al., Climate-driven variability in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe, Journal of Hydrology, Volume 552, September 2017, Pages 704-717
Abstract
Concern over the potential impact of anthropogenic climate change on
flooding has led to a proliferation of studies examining past flood
trends. Many studies have analysed annual-maximum flow trends but few
have quantified changes in major (25–100 year return period) floods,
i.e. those that have the greatest societal impacts. Existing major-flood
studies used a limited number of very large catchments affected to
varying degrees by alterations such as reservoirs and urbanisation. In
the current study, trends in major-flood occurrence from 1961 to 2010
and from 1931 to 2010 were assessed using a very large dataset (>1200
gauges) of diverse catchments from North America and Europe; only
minimally altered catchments were used, to focus on climate-driven
changes rather than changes due to catchment alterations. Trend testing
of major floods was based on counting the number of exceedances of a
given flood threshold within a group of gauges. ***
Evidence for significant
trends varied between groups of gauges that were defined by catchment
size, location, climate, flood threshold and period of record,
indicating that generalizations about flood trends across large domains
or a diversity of catchment types are ungrounded. Overall, the number of
significant trends in major-flood occurrence across North America and
Europe was approximately the number expected due to chance alone.
Changes over time in the occurrence of major floods were dominated by
multidecadal variability rather than by long-term trends.*** There were
more than three times as many significant relationships between
major-flood occurrence and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation than
significant long-term trends. […]
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