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Trends in evaporation and surface cooling in the Mississippi River basin

January 1, 2001

A synthesis of available data for the Mississippi River basin (area 3 ?? 106 km2) reveals an upward trend in evaporation during recent decades, driven primarily by increases in precipitation and secondarily by human water use. A cloud-related decrease in surface net radiation appears to have accompanied the precipitation trend. Resultant evaporative and radiative cooling of the land and lower atmosphere quantitatively explains downward trends in observed pan evaporation. These cooling tendencies also reconcile the observed regional atmospheric cooling with the anticipated regional "greenhouse warming." If recent high levels of precipitation (which correlate with the North Atlantic Oscillation) are mainly caused by an internal climatic fluctuation, an eventual return to normal precipitation could reveal heretofore-unrealized warming in the basin. If, instead, they are caused by some unidentified forcing that will continue to grow in the future, then continued intensification of water cycling and suppression of warming in the basin could result.

Publication Year 2001
Title Trends in evaporation and surface cooling in the Mississippi River basin
DOI 10.1029/2000GL012321
Authors P. C. D. Milly, K.A. Dunne
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geophysical Research Letters
Index ID 70023586
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse