Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach

Graduate The atmospheric drivers of winter and summer surface climate in western Canada are evaluated using a synoptic climatological approach. Winter snow accumulation provides the largest contribution to annual streamflow of the north-flowing Mackenzie and east-flowing Saskatchewan Rivers, while s...

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Main Author: Newton, Brandi Wreatha
Other Authors: Prowse, Terry Donald
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5116
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:5116 2023-05-15T15:09:00+02:00 Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach Newton, Brandi Wreatha Prowse, Terry Donald 2013-12-24 http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5116 en eng 5116 http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5116 other UVic’s Research and Learning Repository scipo envir Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2013 fttriple 2023-01-22T18:40:12Z Graduate The atmospheric drivers of winter and summer surface climate in western Canada are evaluated using a synoptic climatological approach. Winter snow accumulation provides the largest contribution to annual streamflow of the north-flowing Mackenzie and east-flowing Saskatchewan Rivers, while summer water availability is primarily a product of basin-wide precipitation and evapotranspiration. A catalogue of dominant synoptic types is produced for winter (Nov-Apr) and summer (May-Oct) using the method of Self-Organizing Maps. Water availability, quantified through high-resolution gridded temperature and precipitation data, associated with these synoptic types is then determined. The frequency of dominant types during positive/negative phases of the Southern Oscillation Index, Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and Arctic Oscillation reveal the atmospheric processes through which these teleconnections influence surface climate. Results from the winter analysis are more coherent than summer, with strong relationships found between synoptic types, teleconnections, and surface climate. Although not as strong, links between summer synoptic types and water availability also exist. Additionally, time-series analysis of synoptic type frequencies indicates a trend toward circulation patterns that produce warmer, drier winters as well as an earlier onset and extension of the summer season. This study increases our understanding of the atmospheric processes controlling the distribution of water resources in western Canada. bwnewton@uvic.ca 0388 0725 0368 Thesis Arctic Unknown Arctic Canada Pacific
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topic scipo
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spellingShingle scipo
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Newton, Brandi Wreatha
Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach
topic_facet scipo
envir
description Graduate The atmospheric drivers of winter and summer surface climate in western Canada are evaluated using a synoptic climatological approach. Winter snow accumulation provides the largest contribution to annual streamflow of the north-flowing Mackenzie and east-flowing Saskatchewan Rivers, while summer water availability is primarily a product of basin-wide precipitation and evapotranspiration. A catalogue of dominant synoptic types is produced for winter (Nov-Apr) and summer (May-Oct) using the method of Self-Organizing Maps. Water availability, quantified through high-resolution gridded temperature and precipitation data, associated with these synoptic types is then determined. The frequency of dominant types during positive/negative phases of the Southern Oscillation Index, Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and Arctic Oscillation reveal the atmospheric processes through which these teleconnections influence surface climate. Results from the winter analysis are more coherent than summer, with strong relationships found between synoptic types, teleconnections, and surface climate. Although not as strong, links between summer synoptic types and water availability also exist. Additionally, time-series analysis of synoptic type frequencies indicates a trend toward circulation patterns that produce warmer, drier winters as well as an earlier onset and extension of the summer season. This study increases our understanding of the atmospheric processes controlling the distribution of water resources in western Canada. bwnewton@uvic.ca 0388 0725 0368
author2 Prowse, Terry Donald
format Thesis
author Newton, Brandi Wreatha
author_facet Newton, Brandi Wreatha
author_sort Newton, Brandi Wreatha
title Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach
title_short Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach
title_full Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach
title_fullStr Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the Distribution of Water Resources in Western Canada using a Synoptic Climatological Approach
title_sort evaluating the distribution of water resources in western canada using a synoptic climatological approach
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5116
geographic Arctic
Canada
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op_source UVic’s Research and Learning Repository
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http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5116
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