“This risk increases and was already underrated,” said Daniel Swain, one of two study authors and professor of atmospheric sciences at university of California in Los Angeles. “We want get ahead of of It.”
In such an event a little in Sierra Nevada could end up with 25 to 34 feet of snow and most of California’s major highways will be washed out out or become unavailable.
Swain works with officials of the Office of Emergency Management and the National Weather Service, explaining that this is not a question of whether a megaflood will occur, but when.
“it already It happened in 1862, and this happened probably about five times a millennium before that,” he said. “On the scale of human time 100 or 200 years sounds like for a long time. But it’s pretty regular incidents.”
His paper built on in work of other scientists who tested layers of sediments along the coastline to determine how mega-floods often occurred. They are found proof of extreme freshwater runoff that washed away soil and rocky materials out in the sea. These layers of material was buried under the years of sand. Depth of layers and sizes of pebbles and more material contained in they give an idea of the seriousness of past floods.
“That did not happen in recent memory so it’s a bit ‘out of vision, out of mind,” said Swain. “But [California is] a region that is in Ideal area … in climatological and geographic context”.
The west coast usually has atmospheric rivers or streams. of rich in moisture air at intermediate levels of atmosphere with connections with the deep tropics. For a megaflood in California to occur you would need almost stationary zone of low pressure in the Pacific Northeast, leading to a succession of upscale atmospheric rivers to the California coastline.
“These will be atmospheric river families,” Swain said. “You are getting one of these semi-persistent [dips in the jet stream] over the Pacific Northeast, which oscillates around for a few weeks and allows winter storm after winter storm across the Pacific Northeast to California.”
Paper warns of “extraordinary consequences” and reports that such an episode could “[transform] the Sacramento and San Joaquin inland valleys transition into a temporary but vast inland sea for almost 300 miles in length and [inundate] a lot of of now densely populated coastal plain in modern Los Angeles and Orange County.
Impact of monthly mess of soaked storms can be catastrophic, but Swain points out that this possible have an advance warning.
“This is what we will see in three to five days. out and I hope a week, maybe 2 weeks out, with probabilistic type of prediction,” Swain said. “We would have a decent amount of warning for It.”
Swain’s simulation showed the odds of ongoing megafloods are much larger in El Niño prevails in winter than in winters under the influence of La Niña. El Niño is a large scale atmospheric-ocean chain reaction that can dominate the atmosphere. for several years in a row, and usually begins with higher- than usual sea surface temperature in eastern tropical Pacific.
“If you look at the eight highest monthly rainfall totals, in simulators, eight out of eight happened in El Niño years,” Swain said.
Influence of human-caused changing of the climate also plays role: Swain says it raises the ceiling in megaflood.
“We have several scenarios. AT future one much larger, more stable with [climate change],” he said. “In the historical scenario, the smaller the individual parts of Sierra Nevada see 50 to 60 inches of equivalent liquid precipitation … but in in future event some places see 70 to 80 and some see 100 in 30 day period. Even places like San Francisco and Sacramento could see 20 to 30 inches. of rain and it just in one month.”
Independent study published in Scientific reports on Friday came to the conclusion that the man-caused climate change will amplify atmospheric rivers and may double or triple their economic damage in in the Western United States by the 2090s.
A warmer atmosphere has a greater ability store moisture. In the absence of of storm means air Can more dries quickly up landscape – hence the prolonged drought in California – but should rain occur the deck is designed to promote exceptional event.
“Moisture is not a limiting factor in California,” Swain said. “There are many of humidity all around in dry years. Absence is lack of mechanism. it’s a disadvantage of storms, not damp.”
Until they can tell when next Mega floods will hit California, forecasters are sure that this will happen. There from 0.5 to 1.0 percent chance of it happens in any given year.
Swain said one goal of his work is to push officials to prepare. He offered to work with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration”run through simulations like real table on ground disaster scenarios.
“Well work through where points of failure actually it would be because one of things that we want make it get ahead of curve, he said.

