Climate Variability and Change—Hydrological Impacts (Proceedings of the Fifth FRIEND World
Conference held at Havana, Cuba, November 2006), IAHS Publ. 308, 2006, 128–133.
Propagation of drought in a groundwater fed
catchment, the Pang in the UK
LENA M. TALLAKSEN1, HEGE HISDAL1 & HENNY A. J. VAN LANEN2
1 Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo, PO Box 1047 Blindern, NO-0316 Oslo, Norway
lena.tallaksen@geo.uio.no
2 Hydrology and Quantitative Water Management Group, Wageningen University, Nieuwe Kanaal 11, 6709 PA Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract Regional drought
characteristics, such as the area covered by drought and the total deficit over
that area, are important measures of the severity of a drought event. Gridded,
monthly data from the Pang catchment, UK, are analysed here to study the
spatial aspects of the drought as it propagates from a meteorological drought,
through a drought in the groundwater system and finally appears as a drought in
discharge at the catchment outlet. Drought events are derived separately for
each grid cell and variable (rainfall, recharge and hydraulic head) using the
threshold level method, and combined to yield regional or catchment-specific
drought characteristics. The results demonstrate the catchment control in
modifying the drought signal from a series of short duration droughts in
rainfall covering large parts of the catchment, through fewer and longer
droughts in groundwater recharge, head and discharge. The most severe
hydrological droughts in the period 1961–1997 occurred in 1975–1977 and
1991–1992. The average area covered by drought is smaller for groundwater
recharge than hydraulic head. Hydraulic head and discharge exhibit similar
drought behaviour, which can be expected in a groundwater fed catchment.
Key words regional drought characteristics; hydrological
drought; groundwater; rainfall; spatial aspects; Pang catchment, UK