4.2 Article

Palaeoflood activity and climate change over the last 1400 years recorded by lake sediments in the north-west European Alps

Journal

JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 189-199

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.2609

Keywords

climate change; flood frequency; flood intensity; lake sediment; last millennium

Funding

  1. Assemblee des Pays de Savoie
  2. Communaute de Communes du Gresivaudan
  3. French National Research Agency [ANR BLAN07-2_204489]

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A high-resolution sedimentological and geochemical study of a high-altitude proglacial lake (Lake Blanc, Aiguilles Rouges, 2352m a.s.l.) revealed 195 turbidites, 190 of which are related to flood events over the last 1400 years. We used the coarsest sediment fraction of each turbidite as a proxy for the intensity of each flood event. Because most flood events at this locality are triggered by localized summer convective precipitation events, the reconstructed sedimentary record reveals changes in the frequency and intensity of such events over the last millennium. Comparisons with other temperature, palaeohydrological and glacier reconstructions in the region suggest that the most intense events occurred during the warmest periods, i.e. during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (AD 8001300) and the current period of global warming. On a multi-decadal time scale, almost all the flood frequency peaks seem to correspond to warmer periods, whereas multi-centennial variations in flood frequency appear to follow the regional precipitation pattern. Consequently, this new Alpine flood record provides further evidence of a link between climate warming and an increase in the frequency and intensity of flooding on a multi-decadal time scale, whereas the centennial variability in flood frequencies is related to regional precipitation patterns. Copyright (c) 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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