CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND FLOOD FREQUENCY ESTIMATION FOR THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI AND LOWER MISSOURI RIVERS1
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Jawra Journal of the American Water Resources Association
- Vol. 35 (6) , 1509-1523
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1752-1688.1999.tb04234.x
Abstract
This paper considers the distribution of flood flows in the Upper Mississippi, Lower Missouri, and Illinois Rivers and their relationship to climatic indices. Global climate patterns including El Niño/Southern Oscillation, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and the North Atlantic Oscillation explained very little of the variations in flow peaks. However, large and statistically significant upward trends were found in many gauge records along the Upper Mississippi and Missouri Rivers: at Hermann on the Missouri River above the confluence with the Mississippi (p = 2 percent), at Hannibal on the Mississippi River (p < 0.1 percent), at Meredosia on the Illinois River (p = 0.7 percent), and at St. Louis on the Mississippi below the confluence of all three rivers (p = 1 percent). This challenges the traditional assumption that flood series are independent and identically distributed random variables and suggests that flood risk changes over time.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Streamflow trends in the United StatesGeophysical Research Letters, 1999
- Secular Trends of Precipitation Amount, Frequency, and Intensity in the United StatesBulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 1998
- Changes in Heavy Rainfall in Midwestern United StatesJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 1997
- Indices of Climate Change for the United StatesBulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 1996
- Trends in high-frequency climate variability in the twentieth centuryNature, 1995
- Hydrologic Trends in the Upper Mississippi River BasinWater International, 1994
- Hydro-Climatological Trends in the Continental United States, 1948-88Journal of Climate, 1994
- Recent Variations of Snow Cover and Snowfall in North America and Their Relation to Precipitation and Temperature VariationsJournal of Climate, 1993
- Hydrological impacts of changing land management practices in a moderate‐sized agricultural catchmentWater Resources Research, 1991
- Fluvial Responses to Small Scale Climate ChangesPublished by Springer Nature ,1984