R. Suppiah et Kj. Hennessy, TRENDS IN THE INTENSITY AND FREQUENCY OF HEAVY RAINFALL IN TROPICAL AUSTRALIA AND LINKS WITH THE SOUTHERN OSCILLATION, Australian meteorological magazine, 45(1), 1996, pp. 1-17
Daily rainfall data for 53 stations in the Australian tropics have bee
n used to investigate interannual changes in the intensity of the 90th
and 95th percentiles and the frequency of events exceeding a long-ter
m average of the 90th and 95th percentiles, The analysis considers rai
nfall in the months between September and April from 1910 to 1989. Inc
reasing trends in the 90th and 95th percentile rainfall intensity and
frequency occur at most stations, but few are statistically significan
t, Some stations with negative trends are located south of the Gulf of
Carpentaria, Strong positive correlations exist between total summer
half-year rainfall and both the intensity and frequency of heavy rainf
all Relationships between the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) and the
se heavy rainfall parameters were stronger during the period from 1950
-1989 relative to 1910-1949, suggesting a change in large-scale atmosp
heric circulation patterns, In eastern tropical Australia, the winter
SOI is well correlated with heavy rainfall parameters in the summer ha
lf-year, so there is potential to foreshadow heavy rainfall events two
seasons in advance.