Title: Modeling the History of the
1Modeling the History of the Great Rivers of the
World
- R. A. Bryson, A. H. Ruter, and K. A. McEnaney
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
International Conference on Rivers and
Civilization June 25-28, 2006 in La Crosse, WI
2Archaeoclimatology Macrophysical Climate
Modeling (MCM)
- Based on circulation of the atmosphere
- Jet stream, sub tropical highs, ITC
- Relationship of circulation to local climate
- Circulation controlled by incoming solar
radiation modulated by volcanic aerosols and
surface conditions
3Archaeoclimatology Macrophysical Climate
Modeling (MCM)
- Stream discharge integrates climate over the
catchment - Modern gauging data as input
- Robust hypotheses
4The Nile River
- The Model matches the proxy record quite well
5Mississippi Amazon Rivers
- Northern vs. Southern Hemisphere circulation
6Congo and Zambezi Rivers
- Some rivers are affected by both northern and
southern regimes
7Tigris and Euphrates
- Even neighboring rivers have different histories
8Yenisey River, Russia
- The spring freshet has gotten later in Siberia -
but not linearly so
9Fitzroy River, Australia
- Seasonality Wet vs. Dry Months
10Conclusions
- These models provide specific hypotheses
- Robust compared to field data
- Explanations for timing / size of changes
- Geomorphologically testable
- Global applicability
- Cannot generalize between rivers
- Work is underway on 100-yr resolution
- 250 Rivers modeled. Contact
rabryson_at_wisc.edu
11Bryson, R. A., K.A. McEnaney, and A.H. Ruter
2006 Modeling the History of the Great Rivers
of the World. Paper presented at the
International Conference on Rivers and
Civilization, June 25-28, La Crosse, WI.