大洪水
洪水(心理学)
气候变化
自然灾害
环境科学
全球变暖
气候学
危害
自然地理学
重现期
地理
地质学
气象学
生态学
海洋学
心理学
考古
心理治疗师
生物
作者
Bruno Wilhelm,William Rapuc,Benjamin Amann,Flavio S. Anselmetti,Fabien Arnaud,Juliette Blanchet,Achim Brauer,Markus Czymzik,Charline Giguet‐Covex,Adrian Gilli,Lukas Glur,Martín Grosjean,Ralf Irmler,Marie Nicolle,Pierre Sabatier,Tina Swierczynski,Stefanie B. Wirth
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41561-021-00878-y
摘要
Flooding is a pervasive natural hazard—costly in both human and economic terms—and climate change will probably exacerbate risks around the world. Mountainous areas, such as the densely populated European Alps, are of particular concern as topography and atmospheric conditions can result in large and sudden floods. In addition, the Alps are experiencing a high warming rate, which is probably leading to more heavy rainfall events. Here, we compile palaeoflood records to test the still uncertain impact these climatic trends might have on flood frequency and magnitude in the European Alps. We demonstrate that a warming of 0.5–1.2 °C, whether naturally or anthropogenically forced, led to a 25–50% decrease in the frequency of large (≥10 yr return period) floods. This decreasing trend is not conclusive in records covering less than 200 years but persistent in those ranging from 200 to 9,000 years. By contrast, extreme (>100 yr) floods may increase with a similar degree of warming in certain small alpine catchments impacted by local intensification of extreme rainfall. Our results show how long, continuous palaeoflood records can be used to disentangle complex climate–flooding relationships and assist in improving risk assessment and management at a regional scale.
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