Medieval drought in the upper Colorado River Basin

[1] New tree-ring records of ring-width from remnant preserved wood are analyzed to extend the record of reconstructed annual flows of the Colorado River at Lee Ferry into the Medieval Climate Anomaly, when epic droughts are hypothesized from other paleoclimatic evidence to have affected various parts of western North America. The most extreme low-frequency feature of the new reconstruction, covering A.D. 762-2005, is a hydrologic drought in the mid-1100s. The drought is characterized by a decrease of more than 15% in mean annual flow averaged over 25 years, and by the absence of high annual flows over a longer period of about six decades. The drought is consistent in timing with dry conditions inferred from tree-ring data in the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau, but regional differences in intensity emphasize the importance of basin-specific paleoclimatic data in quantifying likely effects of drought on water supply.

[1]  M. Stokes,et al.  An Introduction to Tree-Ring Dating , 1996 .

[2]  K. Kipfmueller,et al.  Reconstructed Temperature And Precipitation On A Millennial Timescale From Tree-Rings In The Southern Colorado Plateau, U.S.A. , 2005 .

[3]  E. Cook,et al.  Tree-ring standardization and growth-trend estimation , 1990 .

[4]  M. Hughes,et al.  Cool‐season precipitation in the southwestern USA since AD 1000: comparison of linear and nonlinear techniques for reconstruction , 2002 .

[5]  Ronald D. Snee,et al.  Validation of Regression Models: Methods and Examples , 1977 .

[6]  M. Kashgarian,et al.  Holocene multidecadal and multicentennial droughts affecting Northern California and Nevada , 2002 .

[7]  Connie A. Woodhouse,et al.  Tree-ring footprint of joint hydrologic drought in Sacramento and Upper Colorado river basins, western USA , 2005 .

[8]  M. Hughes,et al.  Extremes of moisture availability reconstructed from tree rings for recent millennia in the great basin of western north America , 1998 .

[9]  E. Cook,et al.  THE SMOOTHING SPLINE: A NEW APPROACH TO STANDARDIZING FOREST INTERIOR TREE -RING WIDTH SERIES FOR DENDROCLIMATIC STUDIES , 1981 .

[10]  Edward R. Cook,et al.  Tree-ring data document 16th century megadrought over North America , 2000 .

[11]  Edward R. Cook,et al.  The 'segment length curse' in long tree-ring chronology development for palaeoclimatic studies , 1995 .

[12]  P. Jones,et al.  Adjusting variance for sample-size in tree-ring chronologies and other regional-mean timeseries , 1997 .

[13]  D. Meko Dendroclimatic Reconstruction with Time Varying Predictor Subsets of Tree Indices , 1997 .

[14]  T. Wigley,et al.  On the Average Value of Correlated Time Series, with Applications in Dendroclimatology and Hydrometeorology , 1984 .

[15]  S. Stine,et al.  Extreme and persistent drought in California and Patagonia during mediaeval time , 1994, Nature.

[16]  E. Cook,et al.  Long-Term Aridity Changes in the Western United States , 2004, Science.

[17]  Connie A. Woodhouse,et al.  Updated streamflow reconstructions for the Upper Colorado River Basin , 2006 .

[18]  Lisa J. Graumlich,et al.  A 1000-Year Record of Temperature and Precipitation in the Sierra Nevada , 1993, Quaternary Research.

[19]  Malcolm K. Hughes,et al.  SACRAMENTO RIVER FLOW RECONSTRUCTED TO A.D. 869 FROM TREE RINGS 1 , 2001 .