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@article{899453, author = {Glaser, Ruediger and Riemann, Dirk and Schonbein, Johannes and Barrieandos, Mariano and Brázdil, Rudolf and Bertolin, Chiara and Camuffo, Dario and Deutsch, Mathias and Dobrovolný, Petr and van Engelen, Aryan and Enzi, Silvia and Bělínová, Monika and Koenig, Sebastian and Kotyza, Oldřich and Limanowka, Danuta and Burianová, Jarmila and Sghedoni, Mirca and Martin, Brice and Himmelsbach, Iso}, article_location = {Dordrecht-Boston-London}, article_number = {1-2}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10584-010-9816-7}, keywords = {Historical Floods; Documentary Evidence; Reconstruction; Europe}, language = {eng}, issn = {0165-0009}, journal = {Climatic Change}, title = {The variability of European floods since AD 1500}, url = {https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-010-9816-7}, volume = {101}, year = {2010} }
TY - JOUR ID - 899453 AU - Glaser, Ruediger - Riemann, Dirk - Schonbein, Johannes - Barrieandos, Mariano - Brázdil, Rudolf - Bertolin, Chiara - Camuffo, Dario - Deutsch, Mathias - Dobrovolný, Petr - van Engelen, Aryan - Enzi, Silvia - Bělínová, Monika - Koenig, Sebastian - Kotyza, Oldřich - Limanowka, Danuta - Burianová, Jarmila - Sghedoni, Mirca - Martin, Brice - Himmelsbach, Iso PY - 2010 TI - The variability of European floods since AD 1500 JF - Climatic Change VL - 101 IS - 1-2 SP - 235-256 EP - 235-256 PB - Kluwer Academic Publishers SN - 01650009 KW - Historical Floods KW - Documentary Evidence KW - Reconstruction KW - Europe UR - https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-010-9816-7 L2 - https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-010-9816-7 N2 - The paper presents a qualitative and quantitative analysis of flood variability and forcing of major European rivers since AD 1500. We compile and investigate flood reconstructions which are based on documentary evidence for twelve Central European rivers and for eight Mediterranean rivers. Flood variability and underlying climatological causes are reconstructed by using hermeneutic approaches including critical source analysis and by applying a semi-quantitative classification scheme. The paper describes the driving climatic causes, seasonality and variability of observed flood events within the different river catchments covering the European mainland. Historical flood data are presented and recent research in the field of historical flood reconstructions is highlighted. Additionally, the character of the different flood series is discussed. A comparison of the historical flood seasonality in relation to modern distribution is given and aspects of the spatial coherence are presented. The comparative analysis points to the fact that the number of flood events is predominately triggered by regional climatic forcing, with at most only minor influence on neighbouring catchments. The only exceptions are extreme, supra-regional climatic events and conditions such as anomalous cold winters, similar to that of 1784, which affected large parts of Europe and triggered flood events in several catchments as a result of ice-break at the beginning of the annual thaw. Four periods of increased occurrence of flooding, mostly affecting Central European Rivers, have been identified; 1540-1600, 1640-1700, 1730-1790, 1790-1840. The reconstruction, compilation and analysis of European-wide flood data over the last five centuries reveal the complexity of the underlying climatological causes and the high variability of flood events in temporal and spatial dimension. ER -
GLASER, Ruediger, Dirk RIEMANN, Johannes SCHONBEIN, Mariano BARRIEANDOS, Rudolf BRÁZDIL, Chiara BERTOLIN, Dario CAMUFFO, Mathias DEUTSCH, Petr DOBROVOLNÝ, Aryan VAN ENGELEN, Silvia ENZI, Monika BĚLÍNOVÁ, Sebastian KOENIG, Oldřich KOTYZA, Danuta LIMANOWKA, Jarmila BURIANOVÁ, Mirca SGHEDONI, Brice MARTIN a Iso HIMMELSBACH. The variability of European floods since AD 1500. \textit{Climatic Change}. Dordrecht-Boston-London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2010, roč.~101, 1-2, s.~235-256. ISSN~0165-0009. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10584-010-9816-7.
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