2015
DOI: 10.1002/esp.3853
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A hydrogeomorphic assessment of twenty‐first century floods in the UK

Abstract: The occurrence of devastating floods in the British uplands during the first two decades of the twenty-first century poses two key questions: (1) are recent events unprecedented in terms of their frequency and magnitude; and (2) is climate and/or land-use change driving the apparent upturn in flooding? Conventional methods of analysing instrumental flow records cannot answer these questions because upland catchments are usually ungauged, and where records do exist they rarely provide more than 30-40 years of d… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(30 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
(120 reference statements)
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“…This adds to the current debate on the relation between (anthropogenic) climate change and a possible increase in (and clustering of) extreme events in the last decades (e.g. Milly et al , ; Mudelsee et al , ; Foulds and Macklin, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This adds to the current debate on the relation between (anthropogenic) climate change and a possible increase in (and clustering of) extreme events in the last decades (e.g. Milly et al , ; Mudelsee et al , ; Foulds and Macklin, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, event‐scale flood and storm data extending back centuries (or millennia in some cases) are now available in a growing number of upland (e.g. Macklin and Rumsby, ; Foulds and Macklin, ) and lowland (River Severn, UK: Jones et al , ; River Rhine, Germany: Toonen et al , ) riverine, lacustrine (European Alps: Swierczynski et al ., ) and coastal environments (northwest Spain: Feal‐Pérez et al , ). Multi‐centennial length Holocene flood‐rich and flood‐poor periods have also been identified, and precisely dated, in Europe and North Africa (Benito et al , ), the American southwest (Harden et al , ) and on an interhemispheric basis (Macklin et al , ).…”
Section: The Geomorphic Evidence Of Changing Storminessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are very rarely more than 100 years in length and typically span less than 50 years (Jones et al , ). Palaeoflood records by contrast do show both short‐ and long‐term trends in extreme flood events and, most importantly, reveal regional and local variability in river and coastal response and flooding to recent climate changes influenced by El Niño‐Southern Oscillation (ENSO, Maas et al , ), North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO, Feal‐Pérez et al , ; Benito et al , ; Foulds and Macklin, ) and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO, Greenbaum et al , ). A single flood or storm can result in the complete transformation of river and coastal landscapes, which resets boundary conditions and strongly influences geomorphic evolution over multi‐decadal and longer periods (e.g.…”
Section: The Geomorphic Evidence Of Changing Storminessmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Documentary, epigraphic, and sedimentological evidence of past floods in the United Kingdom can be used to extend systematic gauged flood records by many hundreds, and in some cases even thousands of years (Foulds & Macklin, ; Macklin & Rumsby, ; Macklin, Rumsby, & Heap, ). Information on historical floods can be found from a variety of documentary sources and can be compiled for most locations in the United Kingdom (Kjeldsen, Macdonald, et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%