The major droughts and floods in the Hanjiang River Basin, central China, have a significant impact on flood prevention and control in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River and water resources management in the areas of the South–North Water Diversion Middle Line Project. However, there is a lack of understanding of the multi-decadal to centennial-scale patterns of extreme droughts and floods in the area. Applying the yearly drought and flood records from historical documents and precipitation data in the period of instrumental measurements, this study constructs a time series of extreme droughts and floods in the Hanjiang River Basin from 1426–2017 and analyzes the temporal and spatial characteristics of the extreme drought and flood event variations. The results show that there were a total of 45 extreme droughts and 52 extreme floods in the basin over the past 592 years. Extreme droughts and floods were highly variable on a multi-decadal to centennial scale, and the frequencies were higher in the first and last 100 years or so of the study period and lower in between. Spatially, the frequencies of extreme droughts and floods were generally higher in the middle and lower reaches than in the upper reaches. It was also found that there is a good correlation of drought and flood frequencies between the upper Hanjiang River Basin and North China. These results are informative for the study of mechanisms and predictability of multi-decadal to centennial-scale variability of extreme hydroclimatic events in the river basin.
Extreme droughts and floods often severely impact agricultural production, people's livelihoods, and socioeconomic development. Throughout the history of human development, there have been “almost no years without disaster” (Deng, 2011). In the historical records of natural disasters in China, droughts and floods dominate in particular, showing their tremendous impact on society and the economy.
Global climate warming has been affirmed in academic circles, and the global
surface temperature increase in the 21st century will probably exceed
1.5–2.5
An essential scientific question currently facing the academic community is how extreme precipitation, droughts, and floods will change in East Asia in the future under global climate warming and what the differences are in future extreme precipitation events in different large river basins in eastern China's monsoon region. Climate model simulations and observational studies based on historical series of precipitation, drought, and flood data are the primary means for understanding the patterns and mechanisms of decadal- to century-scale variability in precipitation as well as droughts and floods. Meanwhile, understanding the patterns and mechanisms of past precipitation variability is a prerequisite for predicting future precipitation and extreme precipitation. In particular, long series of climate data can be used to study patterns of historical precipitation as well as drought and flood variation, and they are also essential for testing the climate models used for projecting future climate. Therefore, long-term observations or proxy data of the past hundred to several hundred years at different spatial scales are first required to meet the demand of studies.
In most parts of the world, including eastern China's monsoon region, however, the duration of instrumental meteorological data is less than 100 years. Furthermore, instrumental observations are extremely scarce in the early 20th and late 19th centuries, and only sporadic climatic records before the mid-19th century were available, making it impossible to satisfy studies of historical precipitation as well as drought and flood variability. Therefore, using long-term high-resolution historical drought and flood records to reconstruct the sequence of extreme precipitation, drought, and flood events at basin and regional scales is scientifically essential for studying the patterns and mechanisms of climate variation in historical periods (Mikami, 2008; Cook et al., 2010; Machado et al., 2011; IPCC, 2012, 2014; Fenby and Gergis, 2013; Shi et al., 2018, 2019).
China has a wealth of continuous historical documents that provide precious material for studying climate change in historical periods, with the greatest wealth of records for historical droughts and floods (Zheng et al., 1993). Since the 1970s, Chinese scholars have used historical data on droughts and floods to reconstruct time series of the past climate and extreme climate, achieving fruitful research results (e.g., Zhao and Wang, 1979; Zhang and Gong, 1979; Central Meteorological Bureau, 1981; Zhang, 1989; Hao et al., 2010; Zheng et al., 2020). These studies laid a good foundation for further investigating the multi-decadal to centennial-scale variability of historical droughts and floods in the country. However, most of the above studies only examined characteristics of precipitation or drought and flood variations from a large spatial perspective. There are few studies using historical drought and flood records to explore the extreme precipitation patterns and mechanisms at a regional level, particularly in a medium- to small-scale river basin (e.g., Chen, 1987; Zhang et al., 2004; Ren et al., 2015b). Due to the comprehensive influence of multiple factors such as topography and geomorphology, long-term precipitation variation characteristics in different regions and basins are usually not similar. Even within a medium- to small-scale basin, there are big spatial differences in precipitation as well as drought and flood events in historical periods. In the climatic transition zones, the spatial characteristics of climate change and variability are more complex (Zheng et al., 1993; Liu et al., 2010; Wan et al., 2018; Mei et al., 2019).
The Hanjiang River is one of the major tributaries of the Yangtze River. Located in the northern subtropical climate zone to the south of the Qinling Mountains and in the transition zone between China's northern and southern climates, the Hanjiang River Basin (HRB) is sensitive to climate and environmental change (Zhu, 1958; Miao et al., 2009). On the other hand, drought and flood control as well as water supply in the basin are of great importance in national socioeconomic development and ecological restoration. As the water source area of the South–North Water Diversion Middle Line Project and a key river basin for flood control in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River, the Hanjiang River has a wide range of socioeconomic impacts in terms of precipitation as well as drought and flood variability (Liu et al., 2018; Wang et al., 2021). Therefore, there is an urgent need for research on precipitation as well as drought and flood variability at multi-decadal to centennial scales in the HRB.
There were a few of previous studies on the HRB's historical precipitation, but most of them were focused on the upper Hanjiang River region (Yin et al., 2010, 2013; Huang et al., 2013; Peng et al., 2013; Zhou et al., 2014, 2016; Yin, 2015; Mao et al., 2016; Tan et al., 2018); there were relatively few relevant studies on the entire basin (Zhou et al., 2006; Ding and Zheng, 2020). An in-depth understanding of the multi-decadal to centennial-scale variability of historical droughts and floods is thus lacking. Therefore, research on the reconstruction of the high-resolution drought and flood series as well as their variation patterns in the HRB's historical period still needs deepening and refinement.
This paper reports a reconstruction and analysis of high-resolution historical extreme drought and flood time series over the HRB from 1426 to 2017. The results presented in the paper could be helpful for understanding the multi-decadal to centennial variability of extreme precipitation as well as drought and flood events in the important branch of the Yangtze River.
The study area is the HRB (Fig. 1). The Hanjiang River originates at the
southern foot of the Qinling Mountains. It flows through Shaanxi, Henan, and
Hubei provinces before merging into the Yangtze River at Wuhan, with a total
length of 1577 km, a basin area of 159 000
Study area and locations of the eight prefecture capitals
used for reconstruction of droughts and floods
Four datasets were used in this work. These include the historical drought and flood records of the HRB (this study), the drought and flood index series in North China (the Yellow River and the North China Plain, 1470–2000), the Asian monsoon index series, and the chronologies of strong El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events.
The information used in this study to reconstruct the drought and flood
sequences was divided into two parts: historical data and instrumental data.
Sources of historical data included local chronicles and Qing Dynasty archives
(memorials, Shangyu). The primary historical data source included A Compendium
of Chinese Meteorological Records of the Last 3000 Years (Zhang, 2004).
This collection of materials systematically compiles various kinds of
written records on weather and climate in China for more than 3000 years
from the 13th century BCE to 1911 CE. In addition, other datasets were
also collected and used, including The Historical Documents on Flood and
Waterlogging of Southwest International Rivers in the Yangtze River Basin in
Qing Dynasty (1636–1912 CE) (Yang and Guo, 1991), The Disaster Annals in
Modern China, The Continuation of Disaster Annals in Modern China
(1919–1949) (Li, 1990, 1993), Zaixu Xingshuijinjain: Yangtze River
Volume (Wu and Zhao, 2004), and Compilation of the Memorials to the Throne
in Qing Dynasty: Agriculture
In terms of the overall distribution of information, the records of droughts and floods in the local chronicles are more continuous and complete. They can also reflect information on the extent of disasters and disaster relief in each prefecture and county, effectively showing a disaster's spatial distribution and temporal change. The archival information is of the highest credibility (Ge and Zhang, 1990). It provides a primary basin-wide picture of droughts and floods with a clearer spatial and temporal resolution accurate to the county level.
The instrumental data (started in 1951) come from the monthly China National Ground Meteorological Station Homogenized Precipitation Data Set (V1.0) (Yang and Li, 2014). This set of precipitation observations was quality-controlled, tested, and adjusted for inhomogeneity caused by non-climatic factors such as the relocation of stations and instrumentation. This study uses precipitation data from eight meteorological stations (Hanzhong, Ankang, Yunxi, Nanyang, Xiangyang, Zhongxiang, Qianjiang, and Wuhan) in the HRB (Fig. 1).
Drought and flood index series in North China (the Yellow River and the North China Plain, 1470–2000) were used to compare the result of this analysis with those of other regions. The data are from The Atlas of Drought and Flood Distribution in China in the Last 500 Years (hereafter referred to as the Atlas; Central Meteorological Bureau, 1981), and the drought and flood grades of North China were read out from the Atlas.
Based on the criteria provided in the Atlas, single-station and regional drought and flood series were established using the grading method. The degree of drought and flood or precipitation was divided into five grades: grade 1 – flood, grade 2 – mild flood, grade 3 – normal, grade 4 – mild drought, grade 5 – drought. The drought and flood grades at each site indicated the degree of regional precipitation anomalies within a specific administrative range (i.e., including several counties and cities) represented by that site. Historical drought and flood grades were mainly based on historical records. In assessing the drought and flood grades for a region based on several drought and flood records for a given year, the primary considerations were the precipitation conditions in spring, summer, and autumn, as well as the timing, extent, and severity of their occurrence. If droughts and floods occurred successively at the same site in the same year, for instance spring droughts and summer floods or summer droughts and autumn floods, the summer condition was considered prevailing. If there were droughts and floods within the representative area (i.e., the site), the judgment would be based on most counties' or cities' situations. If a site has a gap in records of less than 3 years, it is considered to have no drought or flood and was graded 3; a site with a gap in records of more than 3 years was not graded.
In order to take into account the frequency of occurrence of each grade, the ideal frequency criteria of 10 % (grade 1 – flood; grade 5 – drought), 20 %–30 % (grade 2 – mild flood; grade 4 – mild drought), and 30 %–40 % (grade 3 – normal) (Central Meteorological Bureau, 1981) were used to adjust the classification of drought and flood grades in the HRB throughout the study period. Moreover, when precipitation records were available, the May–September precipitation for the area where the site is located was used to be consistent with the frequency of drought and flood grades obtained from historical data (Central Meteorological Bureau, 1981). Table 1 shows the division criteria in the HRB into various grades and their typical descriptions in historical sources (the criteria for judging the historical sources according to the Atlas) as well as the criteria for grading precipitation (Central Meteorological Bureau, 1981).
Criteria for classifying droughts and floods in the HRB and their typical descriptions in historical sources as well as criteria for grading precipitation in modern time.
Based on the above methods and the characteristics of the spatial and temporal distribution of drought and flood historical data in HRB, and following the principle of uniform spatial distribution and the abundance of historical data, a total of eight sites were determined for constructing drought and flood grade series. These sites are Hanzhong, Ankang, Yunxi, Nanyang, Xiangyang, Zhongxiang, Qianjiang, and Wuhan, which also possess stations for modern meteorological observations within the HRB (Fig. 1). Among them, four were used in the Atlas, but the data have been renewed with additional records from the documents. The grade data for the four new sites were completely developed in this study. The name of each site is the name of the county and municipality. However, the droughts and floods the site represents were not limited to the administrative area to which its name refers and encompassed a particular geographical area around it (Table 2).
Eight sites of drought and flood grade sequence and the spatial ranges (regions) they represented in the HRB during 1426–1950.
A total of 4328 records of droughts and floods in the HRB from 1426–1950 were collected from the abovementioned historical documents. Historical documents have the common feature of “the closer to the present day, the more detailed and richer the record; the further from the present day, the less documented” (Zheng et al., 2014). Simultaneously, there are also sudden jumps in the number of records, which were mainly due to dynastic changes and technological progresses.
In order to evaluate and correct the nonuniformity of the number of records over time, we counted the number of local chronicles and archives before 1951 in the study area with reference to the method reported in Yang and Han (2014). On this basis, a homogeneity test of the number of available data at 95 % confidence level was performed to determine whether there were systematic biases in the available records. It was revealed that there was a significant abrupt change in the number of records in 1812, indicating a significant increase in the number of local records and archival materials in the 1810s. Furthermore, after 1951, with the construction and development of the modern meteorological observation network, the number of meteorological observation stations in the HRB increased significantly, and precipitation observation began to enter the period of instrumental measurement, which represents a radical change in data category. Therefore, 1812 and 1951 were regarded as the time nodes of discontinuity in the temporal distribution of the data. The whole period of 1426–2017 was thus divided into three time stages: 1426–1812, 1813–1950, and 1951–2017. The eight sites' average recording rates during these three time periods were 61.11 %, 91.28 %, and 100 %, respectively (Fig. 2).
Proportion of drought and flood records in different periods at various sites.
The key to this method is a phased evaluation approach, which constructs a platform for comparison between historical periods and historical as well as instrumental data. That is, because of the nature of “concerning only disasters but not normal conditions” in the historical documents (Zheng et al., 2014), the average recording rates suggest that a significant proportion of drought and flood events were recorded in the HRB from 1426–1950. Even in the period when the average rate of data recording at a single site was lowest (42.6 % for Ankang during 1426–1812), it was greater than 20 % (i.e., the ideal frequency of extreme droughts and floods) and therefore still met the needs of the study.
Precipitation anomaly percentages were calculated for May–September of 1951–2017. The method is annual May–September precipitation minus average May–September precipitation divided by average May–September precipitation (both annual and average May–September precipitation is calculated based on precipitation data for each site from May–September for 1951–2017, and average May–September precipitation is the mean of annual May–September accumulated precipitation in the whole period). The precipitation anomaly percentages at the eight sites were then averaged to give the basin-averaged precipitation anomaly percentages for the HRB. Figure 3 shows a comparison of the drought and flood grades established in this study and the precipitation anomaly percentages during the period of 1951–2017. The drought and flood grades and the precipitation anomaly percentages were highly consistent in interannual to decadal-scale variability, and their correlation passed the 0.01 significance test. Therefore, the drought and flood grades of the instrumental measurement period calculated using the method in the Atlas are able to indicate the precipitation change well, and they can be directly connected with the drought and flood grades of the historical period for use in the following analysis. The applicability of the procedure was also confirmed in previous studies (Wang and Zhao, 1979; Fang et al., 2014).
The comparison of drought and flood grades
In addition, there were missing data records at each site in historical periods; the more documented periods usually have richer records of droughts and floods and vice versa. However, the lack of data would not significantly impact the proportion of droughts and floods in the available drought and flood records. Therefore, the following standards were used to identify extreme drought and flood events in the basin (Hao et al., 2010): firstly, the number of sites with a drought or flood grade of 3 (i.e., a normal year) out of the total number of sites recorded in the same year does not exceed 25 % of the total number of sites recorded. Secondly, among the sites with records of droughts and floods (i.e., except for sites with a drought or flood grade of 3), at least 75 % of the sites have droughts or floods at the same time; meanwhile, at least two of these adjacent sites were experiencing either severe drought (i.e., grade 5 drought) or severe flood (i.e., grade 1 flood) at the same time. If the above two conditions were met, the year could be identified as a year of extreme drought or flood in the basin.
The inverse distance weighted (IDW) method creates a weighted average using the distance between the interpolation point and the sample point as a parameter. The closer the sample point to the interpolation point, the greater the weight given. Xie et al. (2018) used four spatial interpolation methods with the upper Sangamon basin and analyzed the accuracy of the interpolation results separately. They found that IDW had the highest interpolation accuracy when the study area was small and the number of meteorological observation stations was relatively small (nine sites of observational stations in their analysis; Xie et al., 2018). In this study, we used ArcGIS10.6 with the IDW built in to map the data for the study sites and to visualize the spatial variability of the drought and flood grades (Vicente-Serrano et al., 2003; Xie et al., 2018).
Statistics on historical extreme droughts and floods per century for 1426–2017.
Change in the frequency of extreme droughts and floods during
1430–2009 (times per decade).
There were 45 extreme drought events and 52 extreme flood events identified
in the period 1426–2017 (Table 3). They account for 7.6 % and 8.8 % of
the total number of years, respectively, equivalent to an extreme drought
event every 13 years and an extreme flood event every 11 years. The occurrence
probability of extreme flood years is marginally higher than that of extreme
drought years. During this period, extreme drought and flood events had
prominent phased and clustering characteristics of occurrences. Figure 4
shows the statistical results (frequency) of the extreme drought and flood
events per decade (1430–2009), and the following features can be generalized.
High-incidence periods of extreme drought events occurred in the 15th to early 16th, 17th, and 20th centuries and lasted around 100 years. Previous studies showed that the frequency of drought disasters in the HRB was highest in the 1480s and 1630s (Wang and Guo, 2010); 1628–1641 and 1900–1970 were the two periods with a high occurrence of mega-drought disasters in the upper HRB, occurring once every 1.67 and 3.33 years, respectively, on average (Yin, 2015). Furthermore, 1441–1442, 1479–1480, 1689–1690, and 1941–1942 were consecutive years of extreme droughts. These continuous extreme events had a more severe impact on agricultural and social life. For example, during 1941–1942, the HRB suffered extremely rare successive years of summer and autumn drought without any soaking rain, and the seedlings withered without harvest. This tremendous northern drought, centered on Henan province (Dong et al., 2014), not only led to crop failures and food shortages but also caused millions of refugees to die as a result of famine (Li, 2019). The 20th century saw the highest incidence of extreme drought events, occurring about once every 7 years. There was a severe drought in eastern
northwest China in 1928, with annual precipitation comparable to that during the Ming Chongzhen drought (the extreme drought that occurred from
1637–1643 affected more than 20 provinces in northern China; Tan, 2003).
There are many records in the HRB regarding the drought in 1928.
“The sun is harsh in the summer, and the rivers are parched” (Shaanxi
Volume; Wen, 2005b). “The victims had eaten all the bark and grass within hundreds of miles and recently had to dig the soil in the mountains to eat, causing many of them to die from dry stools” (Henan Volume; Wen, 2005a). “Last year (1928), a severe drought affected a vast area within a thousand However, there were no extreme drought events in some of the historical
periods. These years included the 1460s, 1510s, 1530s, 1550–1600s,
1620–1630s, 1660s, 1700–1750s, 1790–1800s, 1820–1840s, 1860s,
1880–1890s, 1930s, and 1980s. In these periods, the HRB experienced
relatively normal climate conditions or extreme rainstorms and floods. The high-incidence periods of extreme flood events occurred in the 16th to 17th centuries and the 19th to 20th centuries and lasted around 200 years. The 19th to 20th centuries saw the highest incidence of extreme flood events, occurring once every 8 years. The recently more frequent extreme floods have been reported in previous studies. Yin and Huang (2012) showed that severe floods with flow rates greater than 15 000 During the first high-incidence period of extreme floods, extreme
rainstorms and flood events occurred once every 10 years, which is a little bit less
frequent than those in the second period of extreme floods, but still more
frequent than other historical periods. Previous studies showed that, after
1550, the climate in the Yangtze River Basin was very wet, and there were
many severe floods in the following 70 years (Ge, 2011). For example, in
1560, there was a basin-wide extreme flood in the Yangtze River Basin second
only to 1870 (Ge, 2011). The HRB was seriously affected, and there were many
records of this flood. “There was a severe flood and access to the
city was only possible by boat from August onwards, a situation that lasted
until winter” (Zhang, 2004). “There was a severe flood and many people and
livestock were drowned” (Zhang, 2004). During the Northern Wei
Dynasty (386–534), Lake Taibai (currently located in Xiantao, Hubei
province) was formed by the convergence of tributaries of the Hanjiang River
and became the largest lake in the Jianghan Plain in the 16–17th
centuries. However, it soon began to be silted up, probably mainly due to the
Yangtze and Hanjiang rivers frequently flooding as well as human activities, which led
to a sharp increase in sediment, finally becoming a low-lying swamp by the
end of the 19th century (Yao, 1991). There were consecutive years of extreme floods in history, which
led to more severe disasters in the basin. These include the years
1516–1517, 1607–1608, 1676–1677, 1831–1832, 1909–1910, and 1979–1980.
However, there were no extreme flood events in the years 1430s–1450s,
1480–1490s, 1520–1540s, 1570–1580s, 1620s, 1660s, 1680–1710s, 1730s,
1750–1810s, 1860s, 1940s, and 1960s. The 18th century was a period of relatively few extreme drought or flood events, with three extreme drought events, two extreme flood events, and approximately one extreme drought or flood event every 2 decades. The sparsity of extreme droughts and floods in this century was reported in a previous study applying historical documents (Wang and Guo, 2010). The stalagmite records from central China and the hydrographic stone inscription from the Three Gorges area of the Yangtze River also suggest fewer droughts and floods in the 18th century (Qin et al., 2020). Liu et al. (2011) applied high-resolution stalagmite The 20th century was a common period of highly frequent extreme drought and flood events, with 14 extreme droughts and 15 extreme floods occurring, as well as approximately 1 extreme drought or flood event every 3–4 years. Previous studies showed that annual precipitation in the Hanjiang River Basin has decreased since 1960, and drought disasters have increased. At the same time, flood disasters became more frequent because precipitation was more concentrated in the summer, and interannual fluctuations in precipitation also increased significantly (Yin et al., 2010). For example, floods occurred in the Tangbai River Basin, a tributary of the HRB, in 1919 and 1953, but the floods were followed by 2 months of no rain and then a severe drought (Institute of Geography of Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1957). Tree-ring reconstruction studies (Liang et al., 2003; Zhang et al., 2005) indicated that the monsoon precipitation variability in northern China over the last 100 years has been high, with significant wet and dry changes and widespread extreme drought events. Ding et al. (2007) and Ren et al. (2010) pointed out that in the context of global warming, the frequency and intensity of extreme precipitation events and the extent of drought in China increased during the 20th century; especially in the past half-century, extreme precipitation in northwestern and central China has increased significantly. However, the drought events in northern, northeastern, and southwestern China have also increased significantly in frequency and severity. The analysis results of this study are in good agreement with the previous research conclusions but at the same time show the uniqueness of the 20th extreme precipitation change in the history of the last centuries. The frequency of extreme droughts was relatively high in the 20th century, especially after the 1930s. Historically, however, the frequency of extreme drought in the 20th century did not appear to be the highest, with a similar frequency of extreme drought events also occurring in the mid-15th century. The decline in the frequency of extreme droughts during the 18th–19th centuries amid the Little Ice Age is equally evident in Fig. 4. The extreme flood frequency appears to have been higher in the 20th century and significantly more frequent than in the 17th and 19th centuries when the HRB also underwent a high frequency of extreme flood events.
The frequency of grade 1 floods and grade 5 droughts at each site is shown in Table 4, and the distributions of frequency are plotted as a scatterplot using ArcGIS 10.6 in Fig. 5. The spatial patterns of the frequency of the extreme droughts and floods in the HRB varied significantly. The high-frequency centers of extreme floods and extreme droughts are both distributed in the middle and lower reaches of the HRB. The Zhongxiang site in the middle reaches of the HRB had a total of 60 extreme droughts, while those at the Nanyang site are relatively less frequent, with a total of 30. The Qianjiang site in the lower reaches of the HRB had a total of 67 extreme floods, and the Ankang site, which is in the upper reaches, experienced relatively fewer extreme floods (40). The frequency of both extreme floods and extreme droughts is generally higher in the middle and lower reaches than that in the upper reaches.
The counts of extreme (grade 5) droughts and extreme (grade 1) floods at each site in the HRB during 1426–2017.
Spatial distribution of the total years of extreme (grade
5) droughts
According to previous studies (Institute of Geography of Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1957; Water Resources Commission of the Ministry of Water Resources, 2002), the upper reaches of the HRB are more water-scarce and relatively less resistant to drought than the middle and lower reaches. However, the frequency of drought is the highest in the hilly and mountainous areas in the middle reaches of the HRB. That is because the hilly and mountainous areas in the middle reaches have highly arable land but a relatively low ground water table and river flow and also fewer springs, so in the event of drought, the damage is more serious (Institute of Geography of Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1957). That may be the reason why the drought near the Zhongxiang site in the historical period is relatively more abundantly documented. From Fig. 5, it can also be seen that the frequency of droughts and floods is higher in the middle and lower HRB and plain areas and lower in the mountainous areas in the upper HRB. This is probably because the middle and lower reaches of the HRB were economically developed earlier, with a more concentrated population and more arable land than in the upper reaches. During the Ming and Qing dynasties (1368–1912), the middle reaches of the Yangtze River Plain (including the Jianghan Plain) centered on Hubei province and Hunan province were developed into a national commodity grain supply base. The central government paid a lot of attention to these areas (Zhu, 2018; Lu, 2019), so the lower reaches of the HRB have documental records in more quantity and detail during the historical period relative to the upper reaches (Fig. 2), which may have an influence on the statistical results (Zheng et al., 2014).
Furthermore, the sensitivity of different regions to droughts and floods
cannot be ignored. The years of the severest drought and floods were
identified for each of the centuries from the 15th–20th
centuries (1426–1999). The years of the severest floods in
each century are 1474, 1516, 1647, 1742, 1889, and 1931; the years of the
severest droughts in each century are 1433, 1528, 1690, 1768, 1877, and
1928. The average drought and flood grades for each site in the above years
were calculated separately and spatially interpolated using the IDW. Each
site's drought and flood grades were then plotted using ArcGIS10.6 (i.e.,
Figs. 6 and 7). From the two figures, it was found that the sites of
Ankang, Nanyang, and Qianjiang were relatively more likely to be affected by
severe drought, while those of Ankang, Xiangyang, and Zhongxiang were
relatively more likely to suffer from severe flood. In particular, the
sensitivity of Ankang to both droughts and floods is high. Previous
studies have shown that the Ankang region is one of the most frequently
flooded regions in the northwest (Department of Geography, Shaanxi Normal
University, 1986; Ankang City Local History Compilation Committee, 2004),
with a highly uneven distribution of precipitation over four seasons. After
1950, although the overall upper HRB was drought-prone and the frequency of
floods tended to decrease, the frequency of large floods increased
significantly, among which flood events with peak flows exceeding 19 000
Distribution of average drought grades for each site corresponding to the severest drought years in each century. The color bar indicates the grade of drought and flood.
Distribution of average flood grades for each site corresponding to the severest flood years in each century. The color bar indicates the grade of drought and flood.
In order to examine the association of the droughts and floods of the HRB
with the severe droughts and floods in other regions, we made a compound
analysis of drought and flood grades in the HRB when severe droughts
occurred in North China (including the lower reaches of the Yellow River and the
North China Plain) and severe floods occurred in the Yangtze River. Figure 8
show the results for five representative severe droughts of North China
(1637–1643, 1689–1692, 1877–1878, 1928–1930, and 1942–1943 were
selected based on Tan, 2003; and Qu et al.,
2018) and five representative severe floods in the Yangtze River (1788, 1849,
1935, 1954, and 1998 were selected based on Tao et al., 1998;
Luo, 2006; Yang and Zheng, 2008; and Li and Zhou, 2020). It was found that
the middle and lower HRB was more sensitive to floods in the Yangtze River
Basin, while the upper HRB was more correlated with droughts in North China.
In order to verify the correlation between the HRB and North China, the
drought and flood grades of the eight sites in the HRB were correlated with
the average grade series of North China (Fig. 9; Central Meteorological
Bureau, 1981). Significant positive correlations can be seen for each of the
eight sites in Fig. 9. Among them, seven sites have significant
correlations at the
The spatial distribution of average drought and flood grades in the HRB during severe droughts in North China (1637–1643, 1689–1692, 1877–1878, 1928–1930, and 1942–1943) and severe floods in the Yangtze River Basin (1788, 1849, 1935, 1954, and 1998). The color bar indicates the grade of drought and flood.
Spatial distribution of Pearson's correlation coefficients of drought and flood grades between eight sites of the HRB and North China on average (1470–2000). The correlation coefficients for Hanzhong, Ankang, Yuxi, Nanyang, Xiangyang, Zhongxiang, and Qianjiang are significant at the 0.01 level, and that for Wuhan is significant at the 0.05 level.
The South–North Water Diversion Middle-Route Project, which transfers water from the Danjiangkou Reservoir in the upper HRB to the North China Plain, is a huge hydro-project for supporting North China's sustainable development. Therefore, the synchronous probability of rich–poor precipitation between the water source area in the upper HRB and the water-receiving area in the North China Plain is an important issue for inter-basin water resources deployment, which is directly related to the operability and benefit of the South–North Water Diversion Project (Chen et al., 2007; Gu et al., 2012). Since the mid-20th century, unfortunately, the probability of co-drought in each basin of the South-to-North Water Diversion Middle-Route Project's water source and recipient areas has been at a historical high, and the water transfer from the Danjiangkou Reservoir to the North China Plain has been under great pressure (Ren et al., 2011; Qin et al., 2021).
Previous studies have also shown that the frequency of the synchronous occurrence of droughts between the water source and the water-receiving area is the highest in the non-flood season (Yan et al., 2007). However, the precipitation in the water source area in the non-flood season is much smaller than the precipitation in the flood season, so the amount of dry-season water that can be transferred north is minimal (Yan et al., 2007). On an annual scale, when the most desirable water-transfer scenarios were taken as a premise, the synchronous probability of rich–poor precipitation in the North China Plain and the upper HRB was only 24 % (Zheng and Liu, 2000). In addition, the probability of co-drought events in the upper HRB and the Haihe River Basin (The largest water system in North China) shows an increasing trend throughout the year under two future climate change scenarios of RCP4.5 and RCP8.5. In particular, the probability of experiencing co-drought in the flood season and co-severe drought in the non-flood season may increase significantly (Yu et al., 2018).
However, most previous studies were focused on analyses of instrumental precipitation data, and a comparative study of more than 100 years between the HRB and North China was needed. This study shows that drought conditions in the upper HRB and North China also have a positive correlation over a long time period of nearly 600 years. Therefore, it is urgent and necessary to take measures for scientific regulation and reasonable configuration of the South–North Water Diversion Middle Line Project so that the unfavorable impact of the synchronous probability of rich–poor precipitation between the water source and the water-receiving area could be reduced as much as possible.
It is generally accepted that the amount of precipitation over most of China is clearly influenced by the variability of the Asian monsoon (especially the Asian summer monsoon, i.e., East Asian summer monsoon and South Asian summer monsoon) and by ENSO (i.e., El Niño and La Niña) events (Zhu, 1934; Niu et al., 2004; Hao et al., 2008; Gao et al., 2017; Wang et al., 2020). In terms of monsoon influence, because the HRB is located at the junction of central, northern, and northwestern China, it may be affected by both the East Asian and South Asian summer monsoon (Su, 1981; Yin, 2015).
Figure 10 shows a comparison of extreme drought and flood events every 30 years in the HRB (the first time period is 1426–1429 and the last is 2000–2017) with the East Asian summer monsoon index and the South Asian summer monsoon index (i.e., Asian summer monsoon index). From the multi-decadal to century scale, the following correspondence can be found.
Comparison of the HRB extreme drought and flood years with
the East Asian summer monsoon index and South Asian summer monsoon index as
indicated by
(1) In the 15–17th century, when the Asian summer monsoon was generally weak, there were 24 extreme drought events and 22 extreme flood events in the HRB, and extreme drought events were relatively more likely to occur. The weak Asian monsoon seems to be in favor of extreme drought occurrence on multi-century to century scales.
(2) In the 18–19th century, when the Asian summer monsoon gradually strengthened, there were 6 extreme drought events and 12 extreme flood events in the HRB, which were generally lower than those in the previous period in terms of the occurrence of extreme drought and flood events. Specifically, there were relatively few extreme events in the 18th century and an increase in extreme events in the 19th century, with 10 extreme floods and 3 extreme droughts in the 19th century, which is more than 3 times as many extreme floods as extreme droughts. This sharp contrast between extreme droughts and extreme floods may illustrate that the increased Asian summer monsoon on multi-century to century scales was conductive to more rainstorms and floods in the HRB. However, the correspondence of the stronger summer monsoon and the low occurrence of both extreme droughts and floods in the 18th century may indicate the complexity of the mechanisms by which the extreme drought and flood events in the basin occur.
(3) The second half of the 19th century and the 20th century saw a significant strengthening until the early 20th century, and then a slight weakening afterward, of the Asian summer monsoon and a marked increase in extreme drought and flood events, with 16 extreme drought events and 21 extreme flood events occurring in the study region. Interestingly, in the strengthening stage of the monsoon, the extreme floods increased more obviously, and in the weakening stage of the monsoon, the extreme droughts came more, indicating once more that a strengthened monsoon was generally favorable for more rainstorms and floods, and a weakened monsoon could possibly cause more extreme droughts. Other studies (Huang et al., 1999; Lu, 2002; Niu et al., 2004) showed that, in the second half of the 20th century, abrupt changes in Asian atmospheric circulation and a weakening of the summer monsoon led to an increase in drought events in northern China. Ye and Zhao (1995) found that extreme droughts and floods in the 20th century have broadly evolved through a process of major floods followed by a shift to more droughts, which is also consistent with the results of this analysis.
The correlation between the average of extreme drought and flood grades in the
HRB and the average of Asian summer monsoon indices (i.e., the average of the
East Asian summer monsoon index and South Asian summer monsoon index) at a
30-year time window was analyzed. There was a significant negative
correlation between them (
The correlation coefficients between the frequencies of strong ENSO events
(every 30 years) as well as extreme droughts and floods (every 30 years) in the HRB were
also calculated for the period of 1530–1979. We found that extreme floods
are significantly positively correlated with strong El Niño events at a
multi-decadal scale, and the correlation passed the significance test
(
Correlation of extreme floods in the HRB and strong El
Niño frequency (every 30 years) during 1530–1979.
Yin (2015) found that the upper Hanjiang River was more prone to flood disasters in years with stronger El Niño at the end of the previous year or at the beginning of the same year and in years when El Niño was switched to La Niña. They also found that, during the weak Asian summer monsoon, the rain belt hovers over the Yangtze River and its south, and drought is more likely to occur in the HRB, especially in the upper reach. Conversely, during the strong Asian summer monsoon, the upper HRB is prone to heavy rainfall, even floods, in summer and continuous rain or floods in autumn (Yin, 2015).
Therefore, as a transitional zone between northern and southern China and between the subtropical and warm temperate zones, to a certain extent, the HRB is influenced by the variability of Asian monsoon strength. In addition, as one of the strong signals of interannual variability in sea–air interactions, ENSO events strongly influence the strength of the Asian summer monsoon (Wang et al., 2020), leading to an abnormal pattern of the HRB summer rainfall. However, precipitation as well as extreme droughts and floods are also affected by other environmental factors and the complex interactions among the different factors, such as volcanic eruptions, AMO, and PDO. The association of the Asian monsoon and ENSO as well as the HRB extreme drought and flood events in history is not straightforward. This may be the reason why the correspondence between precipitation and monsoon is still controversial in proxy data and modeling studies (e.g., Lu et al., 2019; Shi et al., 2021). It is also worth indicating that, due to space limitations, this study provides only a very preliminary discussion of the relationship of extreme droughts and floods in the HRB with the Asian summer monsoon and ENSO. There may also be a difference in the monsoon's impact on precipitation between the upper and lower reaches of the Hanjiang River. Therefore, the relationship of historical basin-wide extreme droughts and floods in the HRB with the Asian monsoon index and ENSO events on decadal to multi-decadal scales obviously needs to be further investigated in the future.
Although great effort has been made to collect historical documents and reconstruct the extreme droughts and floods of approximately the last 6 centuries in the HRB, the methods used in this study to reconstruct the historical drought and flood grade series has the following two limitations.
First of all, the reconstruction method of the Atlas is to take the year as a unit, combine the drought and flood disasters in spring, summer, and autumn within that year, and base the grading on the most severe disasters recorded. When both droughts and floods occur in a given year, the disaster situation in summer tends to be selected for our statistics. Most of China, including the HRB, is influenced by the Asian summer monsoon, which is more prone to droughts and floods with the relatively high and variable precipitation in summer. Meanwhile, summer is also a critical season for planting and growing crops in the HRB, which affects people more severely in the event of droughts and floods (Chen, 2020). Therefore, the definition used in this study is overall suitable for the reconstruction of historical droughts and floods in the HRB. However, droughts and floods are also frequent in the HRB in other seasons (Ding and Zheng, 2020), which result in the neglect of climate abnormality in other seasons. Meanwhile, not all drought and flood disasters in historical documents clearly indicate the time of occurrence (season, month, etc.), so it is possible that certain extreme events in spring and autumn were wrongly assigned as disasters occurring in summer (Chen, 2020).
Secondly, the method of dividing time points according to the amount of historical period material also suffers from the unavoidable uncertainty of using proxy data for reconstruction work. In this study, the uncertainties are mainly in the subjective description of historical information, which is unavoidable in grading. Because historical materials include a variety of information, there are complex relationships between different carriers and different records, which may lead to subjectivity and ambiguity. This cannot be avoided entirely even if we do not base the grading on the linguistic descriptions of historical materials alone when selecting the available historical materials (Yang and Han, 2014).
This study investigated the multi-decade to centennial-scale variation of extreme drought and flood over the HRB based on the eight-site precipitation grade reconstruction for 1426–2017. The main conclusions are as follows.
A total of 45 extreme drought events and 52 extreme flood events occurred from 1426–2017, equivalent to an extreme drought event every 13 years and an extreme flood event every 11 years. Extreme flood events occurred slightly more frequently than extreme drought events. Relatively more frequent extreme drought events occurred in the 15th century to the early 16th century, the 17th century, and the 20th century. The highest frequency of extreme drought events occurred in the 20th century, while the 18th century saw the lowest frequency of extreme drought events. More frequent extreme flood events occurred in the 16th to 17th centuries and the 19th to 20th centuries. The highest frequency of extreme flood events was in the 19th and 20th centuries, while the 18th century underwent the lowest frequency of extreme flood events. The frequency of both extreme drought and flood events was low in the 18th century, when there was probably a more favorable climate in the HRB compared to other periods. However, the 20th century saw a high frequency and increased risk of both extreme drought and flood events in the HRB. The historical high-frequency extreme droughts are centered in the middle reaches of the HRB, and the high-frequency extreme floods are centered in the lower reaches. The frequency of extreme droughts and floods was higher in the middle and lower reaches than in the upper reaches. The occurrence of extreme droughts and floods in the upper HRB are more strongly positively correlated with those in North China.
All reconstructed data for the identification of
extreme drought and flood events used in this study are available in the Supplement. Datasets for the East Asian summer monsoon are available at
The supplement related to this article is available online at:
GR and BH designed the research and guided the writing; YY and ZH guided the development of the methods; XZ conducted the analysis, and PZ guided the technical part; XZ reconstructed the drought and flood grade series, analyzed the data, drew the figures, and drafted the paper.
The contact author has declared that none of the authors has any competing interests.
Publisher's note: Copernicus Publications remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
This study was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (2018YFA0605603). Thanks are due to Xiuqi Fang for his instructive advice. The authors also thank Guowei Yang, Qin Yun, and Jiajun He for their technical assistance in drafting the paper.
This research has been supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China (grant no. 2018YFA0605603).
This paper was edited by Chantal Camenisch and reviewed by three anonymous referees.