- Title
- A 507-year rainfall and runoff reconstruction for the Monsoonal North West, Australia derived from remote paleoclimate archives
- Creator
- Verdon-Kidd D. C.; Hancock, Gregory R.; Lowry, John B.
- Relation
- Global and Planetary Change Vol. 158, Issue November, p. 21-35
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2017.09.003
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2017
- Description
- The Monsoonal North West (MNW) region of Australia faces a number of challenges adapting to anthropogenic climate change. These have the potential to impact on a range of industries, including agricultural, pastoral, mining and tourism. However future changes to rainfall regimes remain uncertain due to the inability of Global Climate Models to adequately capture the tropical weather/climate processes that are known to be important for this region. Compounding this is the brevity of the instrumental rainfall record for the MNW, which is unlikely to represent the full range of climatic variability. One avenue for addressing this issue (the focus of this paper) is to identify sources of paleoclimate information that can be used to reconstruct a plausible pre-instrumental rainfall history for the MNW. Adopting this approach we find that, even in the absence of local sources of paleoclimate data at a suitable temporal resolution, remote paleoclimate records can resolve 25% of the annual variability observed in the instrumental rainfall record. Importantly, the 507-year rainfall reconstruction developed using the remote proxies displays longer and more intense wet and dry periods than observed during the most recent ~ 100 years. For example, the maximum number of consecutive years of below (above) average rainfall is 90% (40%) higher in the rainfall reconstruction than during the instrumental period. Further, implications for flood and drought risk are studied via a simple GR1A rainfall runoff model, which again highlights the likelihood of extremes greater than that observed in the limited instrumental record, consistent with previous paleoclimate studies elsewhere in Australia. Importantly, this research can assist in informing climate related risks to infrastructure, agriculture and mining, and the method can readily be applied to other regions in the MNW and beyond.
- Subject
- paleoclimate; Northern Territory; MNW; rainfall; runoff; floods; droughts
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1395740
- Identifier
- uon:33942
- Identifier
- ISSN:0921-8181
- Language
- eng
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