articleJournal of HydrometeorologyDec 1, 2005Closed access

Twentieth-Century Drought in the Conterminous United States

University of Washington

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Abstract

Abstract Droughts can be characterized by their severity, frequency and duration, and areal extent. Depth–area–duration analysis, widely used to characterize precipitation extremes, provides a basis for the evaluation of drought severity when storm depth is replaced by an appropriate measure of drought severity. Gridded precipitation and temperature data were used to force a physically based macroscale hydrologic model at 1/2° spatial resolution over the continental United States, and construct a drought history from 1920 to 2003 based on the model-simulated soil moisture and runoff. A clustering algorithm was used to identify individual drought events and their spatial extent from monthly summaries of the…

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Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Precipitation
  • Environmental science
  • Surface runoff
  • Climatology
  • Storm
  • Hydrological modelling
  • Water content
  • Hydrology (agriculture)
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