Weekly Hydrometeorological Signatures - Characterization of Urban-Induced Streamflow and Rainfall Variability
Abstract
About half of all humans alive today live in cities, with that number projected to grow to 70% by 2050. Because most people live in cities, urban streamflow patterns and precipitation events have a large impact on the global population. Urban environments can alter natural streamflow and precipitation patterns in a localized area. This study introduces a novel way to characterize this interference: the weekly hydrometeorological signature. Daily streamflow and precipitation data is collected from USGS gages around three climatically-different major American cities: Chicago, Los Angeles, and Charlotte. The following hypothesis is tested: a persistent weekly pattern (Monday through Sunday) exists in the hydrometeorological data which is unique to each city. All three cities appear to exhibit a persistent weekly pattern which is unique to that city for various climatological, industrial, and topographic reasons. Further study is needed; however these findings have important implications for understanding urban weather and can serve as a unique identifier, or fingerprint, for human interference to local streamflow and precipitation patterns.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2014
- Bibcode:
- 2014AGUFM.H41D0855S
- Keywords:
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- 1880 Water management;
- HYDROLOGY;
- 1894 Instruments and techniques: modeling;
- HYDROLOGY;
- 6319 Institutions;
- POLICY SCIENCES;
- 6344 System operation and management;
- POLICY SCIENCES