European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ...

The Lakagígar eruption in Iceland during 1783 was followed by the severe winter of 1783/1784, which was characterised by low temperatures, frozen soils, ice-bound watercourses and high rates of snow accumulation across much of Europe. Sudden warming coupled with rainfall led to rapid snowmelt, resul...

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Main Authors: Brazdil, Rudolf, Demaree, Gaston R., Deutsch, Mathias, Garnier, Emmanuel, Kiss, Andrea, Luterbacher, Juerg, Macdonald, Neil, Rohr, Christian, Dobrovolny, Petr, Kolar, Petr, Chroma, Katerina
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Springer 2010
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/5755
https://boris.unibe.ch/5755/
id ftdatacite:10.48350/5755
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spelling ftdatacite:10.48350/5755 2024-09-15T18:14:00+00:00 European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ... Brazdil, Rudolf Demaree, Gaston R. Deutsch, Mathias Garnier, Emmanuel Kiss, Andrea Luterbacher, Juerg Macdonald, Neil Rohr, Christian Dobrovolny, Petr Kolar, Petr Chroma, Katerina 2010 https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/5755 https://boris.unibe.ch/5755/ unknown Springer https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00704-009-0170-5 open access publisher holds copyright http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Text ScholarlyArticle article-journal journal article 2010 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.48350/575510.1007/s00704-009-0170-5 2024-09-02T10:17:31Z The Lakagígar eruption in Iceland during 1783 was followed by the severe winter of 1783/1784, which was characterised by low temperatures, frozen soils, ice-bound watercourses and high rates of snow accumulation across much of Europe. Sudden warming coupled with rainfall led to rapid snowmelt, resulting in a series of flooding phases across much of Europe. The first phase of flooding occurred in late December 1783–early January 1784 in England, France, the Low Countries and historical Hungary. The second phase at the turn of February–March 1784 was of greater extent, generated by the melting of an unusually large accumulation of snow and river ice, affecting catchments across France and Central Europe (where it is still considered as one of the most disastrous known floods), throughout the Danube catchment and in southeast Central Europe. The third and final phase of flooding occurred mainly in historical Hungary during late March and early April 1784. The different impacts and consequences of the above ... Text Iceland DataCite
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language unknown
description The Lakagígar eruption in Iceland during 1783 was followed by the severe winter of 1783/1784, which was characterised by low temperatures, frozen soils, ice-bound watercourses and high rates of snow accumulation across much of Europe. Sudden warming coupled with rainfall led to rapid snowmelt, resulting in a series of flooding phases across much of Europe. The first phase of flooding occurred in late December 1783–early January 1784 in England, France, the Low Countries and historical Hungary. The second phase at the turn of February–March 1784 was of greater extent, generated by the melting of an unusually large accumulation of snow and river ice, affecting catchments across France and Central Europe (where it is still considered as one of the most disastrous known floods), throughout the Danube catchment and in southeast Central Europe. The third and final phase of flooding occurred mainly in historical Hungary during late March and early April 1784. The different impacts and consequences of the above ...
format Text
author Brazdil, Rudolf
Demaree, Gaston R.
Deutsch, Mathias
Garnier, Emmanuel
Kiss, Andrea
Luterbacher, Juerg
Macdonald, Neil
Rohr, Christian
Dobrovolny, Petr
Kolar, Petr
Chroma, Katerina
spellingShingle Brazdil, Rudolf
Demaree, Gaston R.
Deutsch, Mathias
Garnier, Emmanuel
Kiss, Andrea
Luterbacher, Juerg
Macdonald, Neil
Rohr, Christian
Dobrovolny, Petr
Kolar, Petr
Chroma, Katerina
European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ...
author_facet Brazdil, Rudolf
Demaree, Gaston R.
Deutsch, Mathias
Garnier, Emmanuel
Kiss, Andrea
Luterbacher, Juerg
Macdonald, Neil
Rohr, Christian
Dobrovolny, Petr
Kolar, Petr
Chroma, Katerina
author_sort Brazdil, Rudolf
title European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ...
title_short European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ...
title_full European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ...
title_fullStr European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ...
title_full_unstemmed European floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'Little Ice Age' ...
title_sort european floods during the winter 1783/1784: scenarios of an extreme event during the 'little ice age' ...
publisher Springer
publishDate 2010
url https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/5755
https://boris.unibe.ch/5755/
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00704-009-0170-5
op_rights open access
publisher holds copyright
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48350/575510.1007/s00704-009-0170-5
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