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      Historical archives reveal record rainfall and severe flooding in December 1867 resulting from an atmospheric river and snowmelt, western Washington, USA

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      PLOS Climate
      Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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          Abstract

          The flooding of 1861-1862 in California and Oregon is the most severe flood event documented in the far western USA and stands as a benchmark for a worst-case atmospheric-river flooding event. In western Washington, historical data are sparser, and 19th-century flood events have consequently not been well documented. We found that rainfall observations from five locations spanning western Washington had no detectable bias when compared to nearby 20th and 21st-century comparator stations. Time series of the four-day precipitation sum revealed an event in December 1867 that was greater than any of the last century at three locations, and in the top two events at the other two locations. Summing over all locations, the regional three-day or four-day peak precipitation in 1867 exceeded the 150-yr recurrence magnitude by nearly 150 mm, indicative of non-stationarity of precipitation extremes. Newspapers and historical accounts document flood damage to settlements, farms, and bridges from the Columbia River to central Puget Sound. Reported high water levels at two locations indicate floodplains under more than a meter of water. Reanalysis data (20CRv3) is poorly spatially constrained in 1867, and underestimates the magnitude of this event, but it clearly shows the atmospheric-river cause of the event and supports snowmelt as a significant contributor to flooding. Compared to the most recent extensive flooding in 1996, the 1867 floods were likely of a similar extent but centered further north, and with notably more precipitation and enhanced by snowmelt. The 1867 rainfall amounts were also greater than those produced by the 2006 atmospheric river, though flooding in 2006 was not enhanced by snowmelt and record stream discharges were limited to mountain catchments. The combined rainfall and flood evidence from 1867 shows the potential for events more extreme than have occurred in recent history in the major urban corridors of western Washington.

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          Most cited references37

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          Flooding in Western Washington: The Connection to Atmospheric Rivers*

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            Towards a more reliable historical reanalysis: Improvements for version 3 of the Twentieth Century Reanalysis system

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              Rain-on-Snow Events in the Western United States

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                PLOS Climate
                PLOS Clim
                Public Library of Science (PLoS)
                2767-3200
                December 19 2023
                December 19 2023
                : 2
                : 12
                : e0000324
                Article
                10.1371/journal.pclm.0000324
                5927d021-b257-43ec-8a0e-79f0a217ca4e
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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