The Central Chile Mega Drought (2010–2018): A climate dynamics perspective
Universidad de Santiago de Chile · Center for Climate and Resilience Research · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract Central Chile, home to more than 10 million inhabitants, has experienced an uninterrupted sequence of dry years since 2010 with mean rainfall deficits of 20–40%. The so‐called Mega Drought (MD) is the longest event on record and with few analogues in the last millennia. It encompasses a broad area, with detrimental effects on water availability, vegetation and forest fires that have scaled into social and economical impacts. Observations and reanalysis data reveal that the exceptional length of the MD results from the prevalence of a circulation dipole‐hindering the passage of extratropical storms over central Chile—characterized by deep tropospheric anticyclonic anomalies over the subtropical Pacific…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 40.88
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 89
Authors
6- RGRené GarreaudCorresponding
Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Center for Climate and Resilience Research, University of Chile
- JPJuan Pablo Boisier
Center for Climate and Resilience Research, University of Chile
- RRRoberto Rondanelli
Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Center for Climate and Resilience Research, University of Chile
- AMAldo Montecinos
University of Concepción
- HHHéctor H. Sepúlveda
University of Concepción
Topics & keywords
- Climatology
- Anticyclone
- Forcing (mathematics)
- Subtropics
- Rossby wave
- Environmental science
- Atmospheric circulation
- Climate model
- Life below water