A worst-case scenario devised by US researchers shows that the American southwest could experience a 60-year stretch of heat and drought unseen since the 12th century.
Researchers at the University of Arizona examined studies of temperature changes and droughts in the region over the past 1,200 years and used them to project future climate models in the hope that water resource managers could use the information to plan ahead.
An examination of the past, through human-kept records but also via rings in the cores of trees that can show periods of wetness or drought, showed that dry spells of earlier centuries were much worse than any we have seen in modern times.
"Major 20th century droughts pale in comparison to droughts documented in paleoclimatic records over the past two millennia," the researchers wrote, noting that high temperatures coincided with lengthy dry spells in medieval times.
"We're not saying future droughts will be worse than what we see in the paleo record, but we are saying they could be as bad," said lead author Connie Woodhouse, an associate professor of geography and regional development.
"However, the effects of such a worst-case drought, were it to recur in the future, would be greatly intensified by even warmer temperatures."
In the mid-12th century, a six-decade-long heat and dry spell covered most of the western United States and northern Mexico, the researchers found.
During 25 years of that period, the Colorado River - an important tributary that today feeds seven US states including the big cities of Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Denver, Phoenix, Tucson and Albuquerque - flowed at a rate of 15 percent below normal.
Over the past decade, sampling of the Colorado shows the river is at its lowest point since measurement records were first kept in 1906.
"As this drought unfolds you can't really evaluate it until you're looking back in time," said Woodhouse.
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