|
|
Theme for 1996:
A Prehistoric Look at California Rainfall and Floods
Sierra College, Rocklin, CA
Proceedings
This year's proceedings are available in one format:
- Presented paper — clicking on the "Download the paper" link will either download or open the PDF file containing pages from the speaker's paper.
Data on California's Extreme Rainfall from 1862-1995
- Download the paper (PDF*, 7.7 MB)
- Download the maps (PDF*, .6 MB)
- Download the figures (PDF*, .2 MB)
- Download the tables (PDF*, .6 MB)
…
This is an updated version of the paper offered here two years ago. The data base has been expanded and there have been two of California's most costly storms in terms of 1996 dollars, have occurred since the last report. The main deference beside the expanded data base is the up date to include the great storms of 1995. The storm maps showing lines of equal return period which were included in the proceedings of this conference two years ago are not repeated Maps 4 and 5 for the storms of 1995 are included in this study.
The following three papers were summarized at the Symposium by Charles Dailey. They were reprinted in these proceedings with permission.
Paleoclimatic Evolution of Santa Barbara Basin During the Last 20 k.y.: Marine Evidence from Hole 893A
- Download the paper (PDF*, 5 MB)
Hole 893A consists of alternating laminated and nonlaminated (massive) sediment intervals. Laminated intervals were deposited at times of low dissolved oxygen levels in the basin that precluded support of an active benthos. Massive intervals resulted from bioturbation associated with more oxygenated waters. The basin was relatively well ventilated during the glacial to near-glacial intervals (last glacial maximum and Younger Dryas cooling) and poorly ventilated during warm intervals (BØlling/AllerØd lnterstadial and Holocene during the last 11 k.y.). Thus, the sequence records oscillations between two fundamentally different states, one marked by bottom waters with low oxygen content associated with warm intervals, the other with relatively oxygenated waters associated with cold intervals.
We interpret these oscillations in sediment facies to reflect changes in the source of intermediate waters, with a greater proportion of oxygen-rich waters originating from a more proximal source during cooler intervals compared with a distal source of oxygen-poor waters during warmer intervals, including the present day. The stratigraphic records examined here strongly indicate that, as in the North Atlantic, fundamental changes occurred in North Pacific intermediate water circulation during the latest Quaternary. These were closely synchronized with global climate change and with paleoceanographic events in the North Atlantic. It is possible that changing strength of oceanic conveyor circulation, currently transporting waters from the North Atlantic to the North Pacific, may have in part caused changes in oxygen content of upper intermediate waters near the coast of North America, including the Santa Barbara Basin. Alternatively, the inter-ocean paleoceanographic changes were linked directly through global climate change transmitted through the atmosphere rather than through changes in the strength of the oceanic conveyor. In this case, severe cooling during the last glacial maximum and the Younger Dryas episode led to the production of intermediate waters at high latitudes in the Pacific Ocean that influenced Santa Barbara Basin ventilation. Of proximal origin, these were young, well oxygenated waters. A third, more likely, hypothesis is that both factors in combination played a role in influencing the ventilation history of the basin. This investigation indicates the existence of tight coupling between changes in the atmosphere-ocean-cryosphere during the latest Quaternary.
[Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, 1995, vol. 146 (Pt. 2), Kennett, J.P., Baldauf, J.G., and Lyle, M. (Editors)]
A 2000 yr Record of Sacramento-San Joaquin River Inflow to San Francisco Bay Estuary, California
- Download the paper (PDF*, 1.3 MB)
[Geology, April 1996, vol. 24, no. 4, p. 331-33]
Extreme and Persistent Drought in California and Patagonia During Mediaeval Time
- Download the paper (PDF*, 1.9 MB)
[Nature, 16 June 1994, vol. 369, p. 546-549]
Paleohydrologic Bounds and the Frequency of Extreme Floods on the Santa Ynez River, California
- Download the paper (PDF*, 4. MB)
Following the framework introduced by Stedinger and Cohn (1986), this type of flood record spanning hundreds to thousands of years can be input into flood-frequency calculations. These long-term paleohydrologic bounds accurately portray the ability of a specific basin or region to produce extreme floods and significantly narrow the confidence intervals around predicted flood magnitudes at long return periods. Including paleohydrologic bounds in the flood frequency calculations indicates that the flood fiequency curve has a fundamentally different trend at long return periods. That is, extrapolating only from the record of annual peak discharge estimates leads to return periods for large floods that are orders of magnitude shorter than if the paleohydrologic bounds are included. In the case of the Santa Ynez River at Bradbury Dam, this means that a discharge of spillway capacity (160,000 cfs) has a calculated return period of more than 6,000,000 years when paleohydrologic bounds are included in the frequency analysis, as compared with a calculated return period of less than 2000 years when flood frequency is calculated based on the record of annual peak discharge estimates.
For dam safety, the critical issue is not the accurate estimation of a complete record of floods well within the operating range of the structure, but rather the frequency of floods that could challenge the operational capacity of the structure. The key issues are the precision of the frequency estimate of such large floods, and the probability that the operational capacity of the dam will not be exceeded. Floods near the magnitude of the paleohydrologic bounds are direct indicators of the likelihood of large floods that might compromise dam safety. The results of paleoflood studies in California, Oregon, and Utah demonstrate that discharges with calculated annual probabilities of 1 in 10,000 are in the range of five to 20 percent of the hypothetical Probable Maximum Flood (PMF).
A Thousand Year Flood Record from Little Packer Lake, Glenn County, California
- Download the paper (PDF*, .4 MB)
Tree-Ring Reconstructions of California Precipitation Variability
- [Paper not available]
In this study reconstructions of Southern California regional average precipitation and Sacramento Basin riverflow are analyzed to identify variations in the frequency of extreme events over the last four centuries. The reconstructions are also compared with each other to determine the extent to which extreme events have occurred simultaneously in the two regions. The statistical validity of all results is assessed using Monte Carlo simulations to account for reconstruction errors. The results that there have not been major changes in California's precipitation regimes during the last four centuries. While much of the more subtle variability is masked by reconstruction uncertainties, it does appear that the 20th Century climate has been characterized by fewer extreme dry years and more wet years than the preceding three centuries, particularly in Southern California.
Sponsors
- Sierra College Science Center
- Floodplain Management Association
Coordinator
Phone: 530–889–9025
Email: coord@cepsym.info
