The ARkStorm: California's coming great deluge
For thirty days and thirty nights the rain fell in unending torrents. By the end of the biblical deluge, rivers of water ten feet deep flowed through the streets of Sacramento, and an astounding 29.28 inches of rain had fallen on San Francisco. According to wunderground's weather historian, Christopher C. Burt, in the Sierras, the moist flow of air from Hawaii--often called an "atmospheric river" or the "Pineapple Express"--hit the steeply sloping mountainsides and rose upwards. The air expanded and cooled, causing truly prodigious rains, with the mining town of Sonora receiving 8.5 feet of rain over a 2-month period. The resulting floods inundated California's Central Valley with a lake 300 miles long and 20 miles wide.
The above event occurred in January 1862, and similar extreme rain events have deluged in California seven times in the past 2,000 years--about once every 300 years. Great storms like the flood of 1862 will happen again. If the planet continues to warm, as expected, the odds of such an event will at least double by 2100, due to the extra moisture increased evaporation from the oceans will add to the air. A group of scientists, emergency managers, and policy makers gathered in Sacramento, California earlier this month to discuss how the state might respond to a repeat of the 1862 rain event--the ARkStorm Scenario. The "AR" stands for "Atmospheric River", the "k" for 1,000 (like a 1-in-1000 year event), and of course "ARkStorm" is meant to summon visions of biblical-scale deluge, similar to the great flood of 1862. The team's final report envisions the most expensive disaster in world history, with direct damages and loss of economic activity amounting to $725 billion.
"Atmospheric Rivers" was a term coined in the 1990s to describe plumes of moisture that ride up out of the subtropics into the mid-latitudes along the axis of a cold front. Traditional water vapor satellite imagery does not show these plumes very well, and it was only when microwave satellite imagery from polar orbiting satellites became available in the late 1990s that the full importance of these Atmospheric Rivers came to be revealed. Atmospheric Rivers account for a significant portion of California's cold season rainfall and snowfall, and an entire session was devoted to them at the December 2010 American Geophysical Union (AGU) meeting in San Francisco, the world's largest Earth Science meeting.

Figure 1. The total amount of rainfall one could get if all the moisture in the air were condensed and fell out as rain is called the Total Precipitable Water (TPW). Here, TPW values from microwave satellite measurements are plotted, and show a plume of very moist air connecting the subtropics near Hawaii with Southern California. TPW vales in excess of 20 mm (about 0.8 inches, blue and warmer colors) are "Atmospheric Rivers", and are often associated with heavy rainfall events capable of causing flooding. This Atmospheric River occurred on December 21, 2010, and brought very heavy flooding rains to Southern California. Image credit: University of Wisconsin CIMSS.
California's Delta Region levees at high risk of failure
Much of Central California's water supply and agricultural areas are protected by an antiquated and poorly maintained set of levees along the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers that are in serious danger of failure during an extreme flood or major earthquake. The 1,600 miles of levees protect 500,000 people, 2 million acres of farmland, and structures worth $47 billion. Of particular concern is the delta at the confluence of California's Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, about 80 miles inland from San Francisco Bay. The Delta Region receives runoff from more than 40% of California, and is the hub of California's water supply system, supplying water to 25 million people and 3 million acres of farmland. Key transportation and communication lines cross the region. The Delta Region is home to dozens of islands with highly productive farms that have subsided to elevations as much as 25 feet below sea level. Jeffrey Mount, director of the Center for Integrated Watershed Science and Management at the University of California at Davis, said in a recent interview with MSNBC, "The chances of a catastrophic flood occurring in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta sometime in the next 50 years are about two out of three." He called Sacramento, which is only protected to a 1-in-80 year flood by its levees, "the most at-risk large metropolitan area in the country, with less than half the protection that New Orleans had. It is at extreme risk due to levee failure and subsidence."" The most serious catastrophe for the levees in the Delta Region would be a major earthquake occurring during the dry season. Such a quake would allow salt water to intrude from San Francisco Bay, shutting off the fresh water supply for millions of Californians for months. Collapse of the levees during the wet season would be less devastating, as water pressure from the relatively high flow rates of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers would keep salt water from intruding into the Delta Region. There are no good solutions to California's Delta Region water vulnerabilities, but a new $10 billion dollar canal that would route fresh water around the region is being proposed as a possible way Califoria could avoid losing its fresh water supply if a catatrophic failure of the Delta Region levees allowed salt water intrusion to occur.
A 2009 study by the California Department of Water Resources concluded:
The Delta Region as it exists today is unsustainable. Seismic risk, high water conditions, sea level rise and land subsidence threaten levee integrity. A seismic event is the single greatest risk to levee integrity in the Delta Region. If a major earthquake occurs, levees would fail and as many as 20 islands could be flooded simultaneously. This would result in economic costs and impacts of $15 billion or more. While earthquakes pose the greatest risk to Delta Region levees, winter storms and related high water conditions are the most common cause of levee failures in the region. Under business-as-usual practices, high water conditions could cause about 140 levee failures in the Delta over the next 100 years. Multiple island failures caused by high water would but could still be extensive and could cause approximately $8 billion or more in economic costs and impacts. Dry-weather levee failures [also called sunny-day events] unrelated to earthquakes, such as from slumping or seepage, will continue to occur in the Delta about once every seven years. Costs to repair a single island flooded as the result of a dry-weather levee failure are expected to exceed $50 million. The risk of flooding in the Delta Region will only increase with time if current management practices are not changed. By the year 2100, Delta levee failure risks due to high water conditions will increase by 800 percent. The risk of levee failure from a major earthquake is projected to increase by 93 percent during the same period.
The ARkStorm scenario and Great Flood of 1862 are discussed in much more detail by weather historian Christopher C. Burt in his latest post.

Figure 2. Levee failure on the Upper Jones Tract in the Delta Region on June 4, 2004. Image credit: California Department of Water Resources. A 1997 flood in the Delta Region did $510 million damage, damaged or destroyed 32,000 homes and businesses, and left 120,000 homeless.
Wilma pounding New Zealand; Australia eyes two potential new tropical cyclones
With February nearly upon us, the traditional peak of the Southern Hemisphere tropical cyclone season is here. Activity has picked up markedly this week, with the formation of the year's first two Category 4 tropical cyclones, Tropical Cyclone Wilma and Tropical Cyclone Bianca. Wilma passed over American Samoa as a strong tropical storm, and hit Tonga as a Category 3 storm, causing substantial damage to the islands, but no deaths or injuries. Wilma is currently pounding New Zealand's North Island with heavy rains and strong winds, and is the strongest tropical cyclone to affect that country in fourteen years, according to weatherwatch.co.nz. Tropical Cyclone Bianca is expected to skirt the west coast of Australia over the next few days and rapidly weaken, but could bring heavy rains to the coast near Perth when it makes landfall on Sunday as a tropical storm. Of much greater concern for Australia are two potential tropical cyclones that could hit the flood-ravaged state of Queensland next week. Both the European Center and GFS models predict that the remains of Tropical Cyclone Anthony will regenerate into a tropical storm and hit Queensland early next week. A second and potentially more powerful storm is forecast by the European model to form next week in the islands to the east of Australia, and threaten Queensland at the end of the week. The GFS model has backed off on its prediction of such a storm forming. If the cyclone were to form, it would be a serious blow for Queensland, which is struggling to recover from record floods. As reported in the latest Bureau of Meteorology climate statement and flood summary, the past four months (September - December) have been the rainiest such period in Queensland's history, and the resulting flooding disaster has been Australia's most expensive natural disaster in history.

Figure 3. Tropical Cyclone Bianca, the globe's second major tropical cyclone of 2011, as seen at 06:30 GMT on January 28, 2011 by NASA's Aqua satellite. Biana is expected to rapidly weaken and hit the Australian coast near Perth as a tropical storm on Sunday. Image credit: NASA.
Have a great weekend, and I'll be back Monday with a new post.
Jeff Masters
Reader Comments
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LOL
(I'm just WNW of the radar site, ~18 miles)
And obs from nearby:
And other obs: The yard is squishy. (technical quantitative precipitation jargon, sorry)
;-)
Lot's of "I's" in that, perhaps some therapy might help with your issues with basic nature and its biological functions? Just sayin you think everything is yours to control/? Should we take guidance from you based upon who you are? Is that what you are saying? Someone who cannot get the basic functional principles of life in order? Ya think, I am gonna lead my life, and my family, based upon your deviation of such?
No, I don't think so..........
out >>>>>>>>
hahahahahahahahahaha thats good
thats considered chilly? its been below 40 degrees most of January here, and the average is 47!
I gotta move...
What about a system in March??? Only one system in the DB history...
The 1908 Atlantic hurricane season ran from June 1 to November 30 in 1908. These dates conventionally delimit the year in which most tropical cyclones form in the Atlantic basin. However, this season got off to a very early start, with a Category 2 hurricane forming on March 6, making it the earliest hurricane on record to form in the Atlantic Basin. Another hurricane formed and existed during the last week of May, and became the earliest hurricane to hit the U.S. in recorded history. Cape Hatteras got affected by two hurricanes and one tropical storm this year. Overall, this season was near average with 10 tropical storms forming.
Our local met is forecasting upper 70s and lower 80s for our highss this week, and I'm hoping that comes true. I'm tired of highs of 70 degrees. I'm not eager to get back to the 90s, either, but an afternoon without a jacket or long sleeves would be great.
Anyway, I hope somebody gets to enjoy some ideal weather this week, and I sure hope we don't see cat 4 Yasi hitting the QLD coast later this week....
Chilly?
Fascinating.
(raised Eyebrow),..checks tri-corder scale
your name says it all
whats a tri-corder scale? lol
Good example, though, thanks.
I touched on it back in November I think. I'll be looking into it closer during February and March.
Use da Google,...
Everybody's doin it..
I had one somewhere years ago that was a Prop someone made..
Though we certainly weren't tracking invests back before 1964, which was the last time the AMO was warm. Since 1995 we've been having warmer SSTs earlier in the season to allow invests to perk up "early." In reality, there is a different climatological Atlantic hurricane season for each phase of the AMO.
Evening, folks.
im way to young for that... hahaha thanks
:)
for real, i would be grabbing the shorts and tshirts if 70 was in the forecast. I cant wait to put away these heavy clothes
NAEFS agrees:
Cold, Ice, Snow, Rain, Sleet, Wind, Fire, Earthquakes. All brought to you by global warming, no such thing as a "natural event" anymore to some people...
No way lol. I've been a Trekkie for years.
All the Floridians are afraid of frostbite if it gets under 60 :p
Gathering some context. Agreed to your previous.
Nice, Press.
yeahhh, never got into it myself, whenever it was on t.v. it was way to slow and boring. Just changed it and became a sports junkie haha
National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville Illinois
903 PM CST sun Jan 30 2011
Setting the stage for the impending winter storm will be a
persistent northeast winds Tuesday morning. A broad surface ridge
will become centered across the northern plains and stretching
northeast into southern Ontario. This will aid in tightening the
pressure gradient across the southern Great Lakes region...and
producing breezy conditions for northern Illinois/northwest in. Expect the
better wind gradient to arrive after noon Tuesday with a steady ramping
up in the winds and tightening pressure gradient. Surface low has
continued to wobble between a Memphis/Indianapolis/Toledo...with the
850mb low tracking just to the northwest of this path. As the surface
low continues to strengthen across eastern Texas/Arkansas...Gulf
moisture is expected to entrain into this system.
It appears that during the day Tuesday a lull in the snow will
occur...primarily between 12z and 18z. By the afternoon hours the low should
lift north to Memphis with light snow overspreading the County warning forecast area from south
to north. The caveat will be that with the persistent NE flow off of
Lake Michigan...we may See Lake effect snow begin for the immediate
Lakeshore counties midday Tuesday.
Conditions will continue to deteriorate Tuesday night as the low
steadily lifts north/northeast. Instability aloft appears decent
with cape values at 850mb prognosticated around 200-400j/kg late Tuesday night.
This coupled with strength of 850mb low...could produce snowfall
rates for a period Tuesday night between 2-3in/hr. 850mb jet continues to
be prognosticated between 40-50kts and a mixed layer should easily touch and
filter to the surface this core of winds Tuesday night into Wednesday. So expect
sustained winds Tuesday night of 20 to 30 miles per hour...with gusts up to 45 miles per hour.
This combined with high snowfall rates will produce life threatening
situations with white out conditions.
Another by-product is the
considerable blowing and drifting snow. Total snowfall is currently
forecasted for the event in excess of one foot to some locations
receiving up to two feet. There continues to be a few model
solutions that have suggested snow ratios would be slightly
higher...which could lead to storm totals much higher. Confidence
going above the current forecast is much lower with this forecast
pkg.
LOL
Loved the movies. The one when they went back in time to save the humpback whales is my favorite.
Oh I think that is my favorite too. One of the funniest parts is when Spock tries to cuss...
Is it bad i liked the newest one? had the most action :p
btw thanks for taking mcnabb off our hands.
Love, Eagles Fans :D
Agreed, Geoff.
"What does it mean, exact change?"
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