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Increased drought severity tracks warming in the United States’ largest river basin

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Justin T. Martin, Gregory T. Pederson, Connie A. Woodhouse, Edward R. Cook, Gregory J. McCabe, Kevin J. Anchukaitis, Erika K. Wise, Patrick J. Erger, Larry Dolan, Marketa McGuire, Subhrendu Gangopadhyay, Katherine J. Chase, Jeremy S. Littell, Stephen T. Gray, Scott St. George, Jonathan M. Friedman, David J. Sauchyn, Jeannine-Marie St-Jacques, and John King, Increased drought severity tracks warming in the United States’ largest river basin: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Summary

Abstract (from PNAS): Recent decades have seen droughts across multiple US river basins that are unprecedented over the last century and potentially longer. Understanding the drivers of drought in a long-term context requires extending instrumental data with paleoclimatic data. Here, a network of new millennial-length streamflow reconstructions and a regional temperature reconstruction from tree rings place 20th and early 21st century drought severity in the Upper Missouri River basin into a long-term context. Across the headwaters of the United States’ largest river basin, we estimated region-wide, decadal-scale drought severity during the “turn-of-the-century drought” ca. 2000 to 2010 was potentially unprecedented over the last millennium. [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • North Central CASC

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Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
Water, Coasts and Ice
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journalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
parts
typeissn
value0027-8424
typedoi
value10.1073/pnas.1916208117

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