Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland

Abstract Only a few studies have attempted to link climate variability to glaciofluvial sediment transport, and none has incorporated atmospheric circulation changes quantitatively. This is the first attempt to do this. Using a statistical approach for three Icelandic basins, we establish some hypot...

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Published in:Hydrological Processes
Main Authors: Lawler, D. M., McGregor, G. R., Phillips, I. D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.1383
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spelling crwiley:10.1002/hyp.1383 2024-06-02T08:09:03+00:00 Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland Lawler, D. M. McGregor, G. R. Phillips, I. D. 2003 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.1383 https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fhyp.1383 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hyp.1383 en eng Wiley http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor Hydrological Processes volume 17, issue 16, page 3195-3223 ISSN 0885-6087 1099-1085 journal-article 2003 crwiley https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.1383 2024-05-03T11:47:12Z Abstract Only a few studies have attempted to link climate variability to glaciofluvial sediment transport, and none has incorporated atmospheric circulation changes quantitatively. This is the first attempt to do this. Using a statistical approach for three Icelandic basins, we establish some hypothesized interactions forming a chain of causality running from recent atmospheric circulation changes in the North Atlantic, through regional climate implications in southern Iceland, likely glaciological, nival and geomorphological impacts, hydrological responses, and finally to influences on suspended sediment fluxes. Furthermore, to provide some form of experimental control, the three glacierized basins chosen (the Jökulsá á Sólheimasandi, the Holmsá and the Skógá in southern Iceland) exhibit minimal anthropogenic disturbance and negligible land‐use change over the study period (1973–92). This helps to avoid the problem of disentangling the effects on sediment loads of concurrent land‐use change and climate change, which often affect this type of study. We develop the study beyond the annual and seasonal patterns and focus on subseasonal (monthly) and daily event time scales, for which useful instrumental records are available. Suspended sediment loads in the Jökulsá á Sólheimasandi and Holmsá basins are high, but have declined significantly at a semi‐logarithmic rate over the 1973–92 period, typically from 14·6 to 7·6 kg s −1 and from 40 to 10 kg s −1 respectively. Decreases are most notable in spring and autumn. Declines are related to significant river flow reductions driven by significant cooling in spring and decreases in heavy daily precipitation events in autumn, which are only modestly offset by increases in flow and suspended sediment transport in summer and January. The annual melt‐season thus appears to be starting later and becoming more compressed. In particular, spring cooling through the 1973–92 period (e.g. April air temperatures decline at 0·99 °C decade −1 ) is linked to a switch to a positive ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland North Atlantic Wiley Online Library Skógá ENVELOPE(-19.550,-19.550,63.506,63.506) Hydrological Processes 17 16 3195 3223
institution Open Polar
collection Wiley Online Library
op_collection_id crwiley
language English
description Abstract Only a few studies have attempted to link climate variability to glaciofluvial sediment transport, and none has incorporated atmospheric circulation changes quantitatively. This is the first attempt to do this. Using a statistical approach for three Icelandic basins, we establish some hypothesized interactions forming a chain of causality running from recent atmospheric circulation changes in the North Atlantic, through regional climate implications in southern Iceland, likely glaciological, nival and geomorphological impacts, hydrological responses, and finally to influences on suspended sediment fluxes. Furthermore, to provide some form of experimental control, the three glacierized basins chosen (the Jökulsá á Sólheimasandi, the Holmsá and the Skógá in southern Iceland) exhibit minimal anthropogenic disturbance and negligible land‐use change over the study period (1973–92). This helps to avoid the problem of disentangling the effects on sediment loads of concurrent land‐use change and climate change, which often affect this type of study. We develop the study beyond the annual and seasonal patterns and focus on subseasonal (monthly) and daily event time scales, for which useful instrumental records are available. Suspended sediment loads in the Jökulsá á Sólheimasandi and Holmsá basins are high, but have declined significantly at a semi‐logarithmic rate over the 1973–92 period, typically from 14·6 to 7·6 kg s −1 and from 40 to 10 kg s −1 respectively. Decreases are most notable in spring and autumn. Declines are related to significant river flow reductions driven by significant cooling in spring and decreases in heavy daily precipitation events in autumn, which are only modestly offset by increases in flow and suspended sediment transport in summer and January. The annual melt‐season thus appears to be starting later and becoming more compressed. In particular, spring cooling through the 1973–92 period (e.g. April air temperatures decline at 0·99 °C decade −1 ) is linked to a switch to a positive ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lawler, D. M.
McGregor, G. R.
Phillips, I. D.
spellingShingle Lawler, D. M.
McGregor, G. R.
Phillips, I. D.
Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland
author_facet Lawler, D. M.
McGregor, G. R.
Phillips, I. D.
author_sort Lawler, D. M.
title Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland
title_short Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland
title_full Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland
title_fullStr Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern Iceland
title_sort influence of atmospheric circulation changes and regional climate variability on river flow and suspended sediment fluxes in southern iceland
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2003
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.1383
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fhyp.1383
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hyp.1383
long_lat ENVELOPE(-19.550,-19.550,63.506,63.506)
geographic Skógá
geographic_facet Skógá
genre Iceland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Iceland
North Atlantic
op_source Hydrological Processes
volume 17, issue 16, page 3195-3223
ISSN 0885-6087 1099-1085
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.1383
container_title Hydrological Processes
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