Paleohydrology
Overview

Paleohydrology refers to information about streamflows that occurred prior to the existence of observed or gaged records. In the Colorado River Basin, the primary source of paleohydrology is the ring widths of moisture-sensitive trees. Tree-ring reconstructions of streamflows have been developed for several dozen gages within the basin, extending the perspective of hydrologic variability back up to 1200 years. While some information about sub-annual features of climate and hydrology can be extracted from tree rings, the streamflow reconstructions that have been developed for the basin are almost exclusively for annual (water-year) flows.
Tree-ring reconstructions of streamflow have been used by many water management entities using Colorado River water in their long-range planning, to provide system stress tests that are more extreme than the observed hydrology, but are still physically plausible, as they have already occurred in the past. Since most water system models operate on daily or monthly timescales, the annual reconstructed streamflows need to be processed to allow them to be input into system models.
The most influential and widely used reconstructions in the basin have been those developed for the Lees Ferry gage, which because of its importance to basin water supply has been reconstructed by several research teams, beginning in the 1970s. The longest recent reconstruction was developed by David Meko and others (Meko et al. 2007), and extends from 762-2005 (Fig. 1). This reconstruction was used by Reclamation in analyses to support the 2007 Interim Guidelines, and several subsequent reports.
A consistent finding from the Lees Ferry reconstruction and other basin tree-ring reconstructions is that the period prior to 1900 contains a broader range of variability than that seen in the observed records, notably drought events worse that are more severe than the worst-case droughts since 1900 (Fig. 1). The most severe and sustained of these paleo-droughts have been termed "megadroughts." The tree-ring reconstructions also show that the 20th century had overall more favorable hydrology than the preceding 3-10 centuries, with two multi-decadal pluvials or wet periods, from 1905-1930 and from 1982-1999. The earlier of those two periods may have been the wettest multi-decadal period in the past 500 years.
Data and Tools
TreeFlow
The TreeFlow resource provides access to data, metadata, and plots of nearly all existing tree-ring reconstructions of streamflow for the Colorado River Basin, as well as other river basins throughout the U.S. Currently there are 31 gages in the Upper Basin and 4 gages in the Lower Basin for which reconstructions are available.
- Meko et al. 2007 reconstruction of Lees Ferry gage (762-2005)
PaleoFlow
The Paleoflow tool provides additional analysis and plotting options for the Colorado River Basin reconstructions that are available on TreeFlow, including dynamic time-series plots, analysis of extreme events, and comparisons of distributions (probability density functions) between two periods. Make sure Time Resolution = Annual to see the full list of reconstructions.
Additional Resources
Colorado River Basin Climate and Hydrology: State of the Science report
Chapter 10 of the State of the Science report (Paleohydrology) covers many aspects of tree-ring reconstructions of streamflow in detail: methodology, the multiple reconstructions for Lees Ferry, data uncertainties, and applications of the reconstructions.
Wiki Library: Tree-ring paleohydrology
The Wiki library lists 40 publications on tree-ring paleohydrology and paleoclimate in the context of the Colorado River Basin and adjacent regions.