American Association of Geographers American Association of Geographers
2009 Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV Online Program
Paper Session:

3554 Hydroclimatology II

is scheduled on Tuesday, 3/24/09, from 3:10 PM - 4:50 PM in North Hall N115, Las Vegas Convention Center

Sponsorship(s):
Climate Specialty Group
Water Resources Specialty Group
Cryosphere Specialty Group

Organizer(s):
Timothy W Hawkins - Shippensburg University
Steven Quiring - Texas A&M University

Chair(s):
Steven Quiring - Texas A&M University

Abstract(s):
 
3:10 PM   Author(s): *Simon N Gosling - Walker Institute for Climate System Research, University of Reading, UK
Nigel W Arnell - Walker Institute for Climate System Research, University of Reading, UK

 Abstract Title: The implications of defined climate change scenarios and climate model structural uncertainty for water resource stresses across the global domain.

3:30 PM   Author(s): *Michael A. Palecki - National Climatic Data Center

 Abstract Title: The U.S. Climate Reference Network: Detecting Climate Change and Monitoring Drought

3:50 PM   Author(s): *Andrew W Ellis - Arizona State
Timothy W Hawkins - Shippensburg University
Gregg M Garfin - University of Arizona

 Abstract Title: Drought index verification in the Colorado River Basin, USA

4:10 PM   Author(s): *Lei Meng - Texas A&M University
Steven M Quiring - Texas A&M University

 Abstract Title: Observational Relationship between Precedent Soil Moisture and Summer Precipitation in the U.S. Great Plains

4:30 PM   Author(s): *Steven Quiring - Texas A&M University
Daria B. Kluver - University of Delaware

 Abstract Title: Relationship Between Winter/Spring Snowfall and Summer Precipitation in the Northern Great Plains of North America




Session Description: Presented are papers focusing on any aspect of hydroclimatology, including measurement/observation, analysis, modeling, and remote sensing of various aspects of precipitation (both rain and snow), soil moisture, evapotranspiration, runoff, and stream flow. Papers that address advances in monitoring, modeling, or predicting extreme hydrologic events (e.g., droughts and floods) are also of interest.
  

(54) 2009 Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV