This paper revisits a widely cited study of the Boyne catchment in east Ireland that attributed greater streamflow from the mid-1970s to increased precipitation linked to a shift in the North Atlantic Oscillation. Using the method of multiple working hypotheses we explore a wider set of potential drivers of hydrological change. Rainfall-runoff models are used to reconstruct streamflow to isolate the effect of climate, taking account of both model structure and parameter uncertainty. The Mann-Kendall test for monotonic trend and Pettitt change point test are applied to explore signatures of change. Contrary to earlier work, arterial drainage and simultaneous onset of field drainage in the 1970s and early 1980s are now invoked as the predomin...
Attribution of trends in streamflow is complex, but essential, in identifying optimal management opt...
Attribution of trends in streamflow is complex, but essential, in identifying optimal management opt...
Uncertainties in projected future flood risk and challenges of detecting signals of change from obse...
This paper revisits a widely cited study of the Boyne catchment in east Ireland that attributed grea...
Climate change is expected to alter catchment hydrology through changes in extremes of flooding an...
Several large flooding events in recent years have led to increased concerns that climate change may...
There is a burgeoning international literature on hydro-climatic trend detection, motivated by the n...
A combination of statistical hypothesis testing methods (Mann-Whitney, Mann-Kendall and Spearman’s r...
We investigate the evidence for changes in the magnitude of peak river flows in Great Britain. We fo...
This study attempts to assess the uncertainty in the hydrological impacts of climate change using a ...
An understanding of multi-annual behaviour in streamflow allows for better estimation of the risks a...
This paper provides an overview of key findings from the EPA funded HydroDetect project which estab...
Streamflow observations from near-natural catchments are of paramount importance for detection and a...
Attribution of trends in streamflow is complex, but essential, in identifying optimal management opt...
Attribution of trends in streamflow is complex, but essential, in identifying optimal management opt...
Uncertainties in projected future flood risk and challenges of detecting signals of change from obse...
This paper revisits a widely cited study of the Boyne catchment in east Ireland that attributed grea...
Climate change is expected to alter catchment hydrology through changes in extremes of flooding an...
Several large flooding events in recent years have led to increased concerns that climate change may...
There is a burgeoning international literature on hydro-climatic trend detection, motivated by the n...
A combination of statistical hypothesis testing methods (Mann-Whitney, Mann-Kendall and Spearman’s r...
We investigate the evidence for changes in the magnitude of peak river flows in Great Britain. We fo...
This study attempts to assess the uncertainty in the hydrological impacts of climate change using a ...
An understanding of multi-annual behaviour in streamflow allows for better estimation of the risks a...
This paper provides an overview of key findings from the EPA funded HydroDetect project which estab...
Streamflow observations from near-natural catchments are of paramount importance for detection and a...
Attribution of trends in streamflow is complex, but essential, in identifying optimal management opt...
Attribution of trends in streamflow is complex, but essential, in identifying optimal management opt...
Uncertainties in projected future flood risk and challenges of detecting signals of change from obse...