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Synoptic Categorization and climate variability analysis of historical flood-inducing storms in the Northeast. Johnathan Kirk Northeast Regional Climate Center Cornell University. Introduction. Main focus:
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Synoptic Categorization and climate variability analysis of historical flood-inducing storms in the Northeast Johnathan Kirk Northeast Regional Climate Center Cornell University
Introduction • Main focus: • Synoptic climatology analysis of climate variation across New England and Canadian Maritimes • Given annual maximum stream flow dates at river gauges, identified primary synoptic scale weather cause • Categorized storms by type based on storm track
Introduction • Assessment: • Plotted charts of storm type frequency at each river gauge site on map of the area • Sorted storms by numerous factors • Geographic variability • Time interval • Strong vs. Weak events • NAO & ENSO
Objectives • Assess the potential geographic variation of synoptic causes for annual maximum stream flow dates between river gauges • Do storm type frequencies change with time? • How are potential variations influenced by climate factors? • Is there a relationship between flood intensity and storm type?
Gauge Site Selection • US selected gauges reasonably represent the geographic diversity and average record length (Collins, 2009) • Basin size, topographic, lithologic, & hydroclimatic diversity • Main hydroclimatic differentiators: • Latitude, elevation, & distance from the coast • Canada gauge selection followed same criteria • No major differences in recording techniques in relationship to synoptic climatology
Storm Type Categorization • Categorized storms by two factors: • Storm track • General dynamics • Assessed storm track by majority entrance zone • Distinction was made between Closed Lows and Strong Surface Lows
Storm Type Categorization Scheme * Category associated with geographic tag
Majority Entrance Zones Coastal = Based on (Hirsch, 2001) Great Lakes = Center of low pressure passes over Great Lake OH Valley = Region bounded by other two Canada = Center of low pressure passes over Canada “Cold Front” = Center of low pressure passes over N. Canada
Reference Sources NOAA Central Library U.S. Daily Weather Maps Project NCEP/NCAR 6-Hourly Reanalysis Data Composites Sample Great Lakes Closed Low (May 3, 1972)
Canada-based storms more frequent at gauges closer to US-Canada border
No obvious relationship between geographic proximity and Great Lakes or OH Valley-based storms
Great Lakes-based storm frequency does not significantly change with time
OH Valley-based storms do change with time • Same with Coastal lows, Tropical Cyclones, etc.
Climate Factors - NAO • NAO: • Coastal lows seem to shift east/west in NAO +/- • In absence of coastal lows, Great Lakes and/or OH Valley Lows increase in frequency • Inland stations were more homogeneous • Difference in NAO DJFM & Monthly may not be significant
Overall Great Lakes/OH Valley Lows do not seem to be affected
Strong Events vs. Weak Events • Some stations look to have meaningful trends • Others do not have significant differences • Exemplifies need for more thorough statistical analysis for numerical significance • Both to defend trends and lack of significant difference • Could exaggerate variations • Z-scores: more “weak” events, less “strong” events
Moving Forward • What are the relationships between storm type frequencies? • Do some storm frequencies in/decrease as a result of the lack of another? • Are these findings statistically significant? • Increasing sample size by adding 11 more stations from Canadian Maritimes • Are the findings skewed by variability? • Some stations may be outliers • Could explain contradictory findings
Acknowledgments • I would like to thank the following individuals for their assistance on this project: • Dr. Art DeGaetano, NRCC/Cornell University • Matt Collins, NOAA Restoration Center/NMFS • Contributors and advisors from the NCDC • Dr. Thomas Peterson • Sam McCown • Tiffany Means