Trends in extreme rainfall events in Tasmania, Australia

Orpita U. Laz, Ataur Rahman

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperConference Paperpeer-review

    Abstract

    Climate change will affect various aspects of hydrological cycle such as rainfall. A change in rainfall will affect flood magnitude and frequency in future which will affect the design and operation of hydraulic structures. In this paper, trends in subhourly, sub-daily, and daily extreme rainfall events from 18 rainfall stations located in Tasmania, Australia are examined. Two nonparametric tests (Mann-Kendall and Spearman’s Rho) are applied to detect trends at 10%, 5%, and 1% significance levels. Sub-hourly (6, 12, 18, and 30 minutes) annual maximum rainfall events have been found to experience statistically significant upward trends at 10% level of significance. However, sub-daily durations (1 hour, 3 and 12 hours) exhibit decreasing trends and no trends exists for longer duration rainfall events (e.g. 24 and 72 hours). Some of the durations (e.g. 6 minutes and 6 hours) show similar results (with upward trends) for both the tests. For 12, 18, 60 minutes and 3 hours durations both the tests show similar downward trends. This finding has important implication for Tasmania in the design of urban infrastructure where shorter duration rainfall events are more relevant for smaller urban catchments such as parking lots, roof catchments and smaller sub-divisions.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationInternational Journal of Environmental, Ecological, Geological and Geophysical Engineering: Vol. 8, No. 12, 2014: Proceedings of ICESSE 2014: XII International Conference on Environmental Systems Science and Engineering, 15-16 December 2014, Sydney, Australia
    PublisherWorld Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology
    Pages744-748
    Number of pages5
    Publication statusPublished - 2014
    EventInternational Conference on Environmental Systems Science and Engineering -
    Duration: 15 Dec 2014 → …

    Publication series

    Name
    ISSN (Print)1307-6892

    Conference

    ConferenceInternational Conference on Environmental Systems Science and Engineering
    Period15/12/14 → …

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