Abstract

Hydrological extremes in the water cycle can significantly affect surface water engineering design, and represents the high-impact response of surface water and groundwater systems to climate change. Statistical analysis of these extreme events provides a convenient way to interpret the nature of, and interaction between, components of the water cycle. This study applies three probability density functions (PDFs), Gumbel, stable, and stretched Gaussian distributions, to capture the distribution of extremes and the full-time series of storm properties (storm duration, intensity, total precipitation, and inter-storm period), stream discharge, lake stage, and groundwater head values observed in the Lake Tuscaloosa watershed, Alabama, USA. To quantify the potentially non-stationary statistics of hydrological extremes, the time-scale local Hurst exponent (TSLHE) was also calculated for the time series data recording both the surface and subsurface hydrological processes. First, results showed that storm duration was most closely related to groundwater recharge compared to the other storm properties, while intensity also had a close relationship with recharge. These relationships were likely due to the effects of oversaturation and overland flow in extreme total precipitation storms. Second, the surface water and groundwater series were persistent according to the TSLHE values, because they were relatively slow evolving systems, while storm properties were anti-persistent since they were rapidly evolving in time. Third, the stretched Gaussian distribution was the most effective PDF to capture the distribution of surface and subsurface hydrological extremes, since this distribution can capture the broad transition from a Gaussian distribution to a power-law one.

Highlights

  • Low probability and high impact extremes in hydrology, such as storms, play an important role in characterizing the hydrologic system and affecting water infrastructure design [1,2,3,4]

  • The lake is fed by four major streams which have U.S Geological Survey (USGS) gauge stations—North Creek, Binion Creek, Bush Creek, and Carroll Creek—which represent most of the surface flow into the lake, as well as many smaller streams that do not significantly contribute to the lake

  • Duration and total precipitation had similar trends with highs coming in the winter season and lows in the summer

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Low probability and high impact extremes in hydrology, such as storms, play an important role in characterizing the hydrologic system and affecting water infrastructure design [1,2,3,4]. Understanding how the subtle properties of one system’s extreme events can affect the other interconnected systems requires more in-depth analysis and use of advanced statistical techniques. These basic statistical techniques often rely on assumptions or major simplifications of properties for water systems, such as stationarity in both space and time, which may not always be valid for real world dynamics [13,14,15]. The lake sits primarily in the Pottsville Formation, a Pennsylvanian aged sandstone interbedded with shale and siltstone, as well as the lower Coker

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call