CLIMATIC VARIABILITY OF SOIL-WATER IN THE AMERICAN MIDWEST .2. SPATIOTEMPORAL ANALYSIS

Citation
Kp. Georgakakos et Dh. Bae, CLIMATIC VARIABILITY OF SOIL-WATER IN THE AMERICAN MIDWEST .2. SPATIOTEMPORAL ANALYSIS, Journal of hydrology, 162(3-4), 1994, pp. 379-390
Citations number
8
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Civil","Water Resources","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
00221694
Volume
162
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
379 - 390
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-1694(1994)162:3-4<379:CVOSIT>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
A study of the model-estimated soil water, aggregated over three large drainage basins of the Midwestern USA, is reported. The basin areas a re in the range from 2000 km(2) to 3500 km(2), and allow the study of mesoscale (1000-10 000 km(2)) soil water features. In each case, a con ceptual hydrologic model was used to produce upper and lower soil wate r estimates that are consistent with the atmospheric forcing of daily precipitation, potential evapotranspiration and air temperature, and w ith the observed daily streamflow divergence over a 40 year period. It is shown that the water contents of the upper and lower soil reach pe aks in different months, with the soil column being most saturated in June, when the area is prone to serious flooding. Temporal and spatial features of the variability of model-estimated soil water content are identified. The autocorrelation function of monthly averaged soil wat er shows that the upper soil water remains persistent for about a seas on, whereas the persistence of the lower soil water extends to several seasons. The soil water estimates of the three study basins exhibit s trong similarities in annual cycles and interannual variability. It is shown that the frequency of significant positive (wet) soil water ano malies that extend over a 2 degrees x 2 degrees region is lower than t hat of significant negative (dry) ones of the same extent in this regi on of the USA.