
Overview
Background
Professor Hamish McGowan is a Geographer and Professor of Atmospheric and Climate Sciences with research interests in: Local and regional scale windfields in complex terrain, Severe weather (thunderstorms, bushfire meteorology), Earth surface – atmosphere energy and trace gas exchanges, Aeolian dust transport (meteorological controls on wind erosion, dust transport and the impacts on regional and global climate dynamics), Palaeoclimate reconstructions, Mountain meteorology and hydroclimate. He leads the Atmospheric Observations Research Group https://sites.google.com/view/uqaorg/home
Hamish received his PhD from the University of Canterbury in 1995. His research interests are in the fields of:
- Meteorological hazards
- Earth surface - atmosphere interactions and energetics
- The Weather and Climates of Alpine and Mountainous Regions
- Long Range Dust Transport and Climate Impacts
- Climate dynamics
- Palaeoclimate reconstruction
Availability
- Professor Hamish McGowan is:
- Available for supervision
Qualifications
- Bachelor of Science, University of Canterbury
- Masters (Research) of Science, University of Canterbury
- Doctor of Philosophy, University of Canterbury
Research interests
-
Earth surface – atmosphere energetics
This field of research investigates Earth surface – atmosphere interactions over complex terrain in marine, coastal, mountain and desert environments. Collectively, this research aims to shed new light on thermodynamic behaviour of the lower atmosphere under different weather patterns, teleconnection variability, and the effects of land use heterogeneity. The research has involved significant collaborations with the Centre for Atmospheric Research, University of Canterbury, NZ; the Byrd Polar Research Centre, Ohio State University; Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, USA and the Geological Survey of Israel. At UQ collaboration has been with the School of Civil Engineering and Advanced Water Management Centre. Notable research in this field has resulted in fundamental advances in understanding of Earth-surface – atmosphere interactions in the McMurdo Dry Valleys (MDV), Antarctica including identification of foehn winds as the cause of air temperature increases > 50°C in 3 to 4 hours. The origin of these winds had remained a mystery since Scott’s exploration of the MDVs almost 100 years ago. On the Great Barrier Reef, Australia, a multi-year investigation that I initiated and led quantified for the first time by direct measurement energy and trace gas fluxes over coral reefs using eddy covariance. Results include first direct measurements of reef-water-atmosphere energy exchanges including during a coral bleaching event, and the first direct measurements of CO2 exchanges. This research has been published widely in journals of the American Meteorological Society and the American Geophysical Union [see: https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JD029830]. Research in this thematic area is expanding further with research initiatives investigating the atmospheric boundary layer energetics of severe thunderstorms and bushfires in eastern Australia. New projects in this area are also seeking to quantify the energy balance of the Australian seasonal snow pack and energy and trace gas exchanges over coral reefs in the Red Sea.
-
Climate Variability
Research I lead under this theme focuses on identifying and unpacking the relevant drivers of climate variability and their associated scales of effect, which are used to develop new climate forecasting tools. I have led research that has improved accuracy and confidence of predictions of future climate which has shown for the first time terrestrial impacts in Australia of Northern Hemisphere climate reversals, and confirmed the causes of inter-annual to inter-centennial drought in eastern Australia. Research in this theme area using peat cores from the remote Kimberley of northwest Australia showed El Niño as the likely cause of catastrophe change in Aboriginal culture during the past 6000 years and confirmed that breakdown of deep water circulation in the North Atlantic under a warming world would likely result in severe and devastating drought in eastern Australia. Collaborations in this area have been with researchers in Australia (Griffith University; NSW Office of Environment and Heritage; CSIRO; University of Wollongong; Kimberley Foundation of Australia), and with international researcher partners at the Planetary Science Institute, USA; Oxford of University; Trinity College, Dublin and United States Geological Survey. A very significant applied aspect of this research theme over the past 15 years has been on identifying cause(s) of variability in the hydrometeorology of south-eastern Australia and the application of this knowledge to enhance water management in the catchments of the Snowy Mountains Hydroelectric Scheme, where releases of water underwrite > $3 billion of agricultural product annually. Research in this area has grown significantly and has led to the development of new interannual hydrometeorological forecasting tools. This research involves substantial collaboration with UWA-Perth including co-supervision of PhD candidates.
-
Severe Weather
This field of research is focused on thunderstorm and bushfire meteorology in eastern Australia - an ideal natural thunderstorm hotspot, and the bushfire prone states of Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria. It involves substantial collaborations with research partners including the Bureau of Meteorology, NSW Rural Fire Service, Victoria Country Fire Authority and Queensland Fire and Emergency Services. Our team’s severe weather research is distinguished internationally by the innovative application of our portable dual polarised x-band Doppler radar (UQ-XPOL) as highlighted in the invited article by Soderholm et al (2016) [https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00212.1] published in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. Japanese Radar manufacture Furuno is supporting our group’s R&D in this area providing technical support and software upgrades to enable novel radar scanning patterns to observe storm and smoke plume dynamics. We believe this work will have far-reaching application as we develop mobile radar specifically designed for real-time wildfire observation and nowcasting of pyro-convective plume dynamics and atmosphere-fire ground coupling.
Works
Search Professor Hamish McGowan’s works on UQ eSpace
2019
Other Outputs
Reconstructed inflows to the headwater catchments of the Murray River, Australia from 1474 - 2005.
McGowan, Hamish, Marx, SK, Denholm, J, Soderholm, J and Kamber, B.K (2019). Reconstructed inflows to the headwater catchments of the Murray River, Australia from 1474 - 2005.. The University of Queensland. (Dataset) doi: 10.14264/uql.2019.157
2019
Other Outputs
Bribie Island CO2_Topt Data
Lowry, Andrew, McGowan, Hamish and Gray, Michael (2019). Bribie Island CO2_Topt Data. The University of Queensland. (Dataset) doi: 10.14264/uql.2019.687
2019
Other Outputs
Alpine temperature and snowcover reconstructions for the Snowy Mountains, Australia
McGowan, Hamish, Callow, Nik, Soderholm, Joshua and Campbell, Micheline (2019). Alpine temperature and snowcover reconstructions for the Snowy Mountains, Australia. The University of Queensland. (Dataset) doi: 10.14264/uql.2019.154
2018
Journal Article
Energy balance and snowmelt drivers of a marginal subalpine snowpack
Bilish, Shane P., McGowan, Hamish A. and Callow, John Nikolaus (2018). Energy balance and snowmelt drivers of a marginal subalpine snowpack. Hydrological Processes, 32 (26), 3837-3851. doi: 10.1002/hyp.13293
2018
Journal Article
Impacts of fire and flood on land-surface–atmosphere energetics in a sub-tropical barrier island freshwater swamp
Gray, Michael A., McGowan, Hamish A., Guyot, Adrien and Lockington, David A. (2018). Impacts of fire and flood on land-surface–atmosphere energetics in a sub-tropical barrier island freshwater swamp. Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 171 (1), 129-149. doi: 10.1007/s10546-018-0414-y
2018
Journal Article
Coherent patterns of environmental change at multiple organic spring sites in northwest Australia: evidence of Indonesian-Australian summer monsoon variability over the last 14,500 years
Field, Emily, Tyler, Jonathan, Gadd, Patricia S., Moss, Patrick, McGowan, Hamish and Marx, Sam (2018). Coherent patterns of environmental change at multiple organic spring sites in northwest Australia: evidence of Indonesian-Australian summer monsoon variability over the last 14,500 years. Quaternary Science Reviews, 196, 193-216. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.07.018
2018
Journal Article
Mobile X-pol radar: a new tool for investigating pyroconvection and associated wildfire meteorology
McCarthy, Nicholas, McGowan, Hamish, Guyot, Adrien and Dowdy, Andrew (2018). Mobile X-pol radar: a new tool for investigating pyroconvection and associated wildfire meteorology. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 99 (6), 1177-1195. doi: 10.1175/BAMS-D-16-0118.1
2018
Journal Article
Palaeo-dust records: a window to understanding past environments
Marx, Samuel K., Kamber, Balz S., McGowan, Hamish A., Petherick, Lynda M., McTainsh, Grant H., Stromsoe, Nicola, Hooper, James N. and May, Jan-Hendrik (2018). Palaeo-dust records: a window to understanding past environments. Global and Planetary Change, 165, 13-43. doi: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2018.03.001
2018
Journal Article
Teleconnection influence of precipitation-bearing synoptic types over the Snowy Mountains region of south-east Australia
Theobald, Alison, Mcgowan, Hamish and Speirs, Johanna (2018). Teleconnection influence of precipitation-bearing synoptic types over the Snowy Mountains region of south-east Australia. International Journal of Climatology, 38 (6), 2743-2759. doi: 10.1002/joc.5457
2018
Journal Article
Co-authorship analysis of the speleothem proxy-climate community: working together to tackle the big problems
Campbell, Micheline L., Callow, John N., McGrath, Gavan S. and McGowan, Hamish A. (2018). Co-authorship analysis of the speleothem proxy-climate community: working together to tackle the big problems. International Journal of Speleology, 47 (2), 165-172. doi: 10.5038/1827-806X.47.2.2159
2018
Journal Article
Global warming in the context of 2000 years of Australian alpine temperature and snow cover
McGowan, Hamish, Callow, John Nikolaus, Soderholm, Joshua, McGrath, Gavan, Campbell, Micheline and Zhao, Jian-Xin (2018). Global warming in the context of 2000 years of Australian alpine temperature and snow cover. Scientific Reports, 8 (1) 4394, 4394. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-22766-z
2018
Journal Article
Untangling geochronological complexity in organic spring deposits using multiple dating methods
Field, Emily, Marx, Sam, Haig, Jordahna, May, Jan-Hendrik, Jacobsen, Geraldine, Zawadzki, Atun, Child, David, Heijnis, Henk, Hotchkis, Michael, McGowan, Hamish and Moss, Patrick (2018). Untangling geochronological complexity in organic spring deposits using multiple dating methods. Quaternary Geochronology, 43, 50-71. doi: 10.1016/j.quageo.2017.10.002
2017
Journal Article
A multimethod approach to inform epikarst drip discharge modelling: Implications for palaeo-climate reconstruction
Campbell, Micheline, Callow, John Nikolaus, McGrath, Gavan and McGowan, Hamish (2017). A multimethod approach to inform epikarst drip discharge modelling: Implications for palaeo-climate reconstruction. Hydrological Processes, 31 (26), 4734-4747. doi: 10.1002/hyp.11392
2017
Journal Article
Surface energy exchanges over contrasting vegetation types on a sub-tropical sand island
Gray, Michael A., McGowan, Hamish A., Lowry, Andrew L. and Guyot, Adrien (2017). Surface energy exchanges over contrasting vegetation types on a sub-tropical sand island. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 249, 81-99. doi: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2017.11.018
2017
Journal Article
ENSO weather and coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia
McGowan, Hamish and Theobald, Alison (2017). ENSO weather and coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Geophysical Research Letters, 44 (20), 10601-10607. doi: 10.1002/2017GL074877
2017
Journal Article
Diurnal Preconditioning of Subtropical Coastal Convective Storm Environments
Soderholm, Joshua S., Mcgowan, Hamish A., Richter, Harald, Walsh, Kevin, Wedd, Tony and Weckwerth, Tammy M. (2017). Diurnal Preconditioning of Subtropical Coastal Convective Storm Environments. Monthly Weather Review, 145 (9), 3839-3859. doi: 10.1175/MWR-D-16-0330.1
2017
Journal Article
A late Quaternary record of monsoon variability in the northwest Kimberley, Australia
Field, Emily, McGowan, Hamish A., Moss, Patrick T. and Marx, Samuel K. (2017). A late Quaternary record of monsoon variability in the northwest Kimberley, Australia. Quaternary International, 449, 119-135. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2017.02.019
2017
Conference Publication
The use of spectrum width radar data for bushfire model verification
McCarthy, N. F., Guyot, A., McGowan, H. and Dowdy, A. (2017). The use of spectrum width radar data for bushfire model verification. 22nd International Congress on Modelling and Simulation (MODSIM2017), Hobart, TAS, Australia, 3-8 December 2017. Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand Inc. (MSSANZ).
2017
Journal Article
An 18-year climatology of hailstorm trends and related drivers across southeast Queensland, Australia
Soderholm, J. S., McGowan, H., Richter, H., Walsh, K., Weckwerth, T. M. and Coleman, M. (2017). An 18-year climatology of hailstorm trends and related drivers across southeast Queensland, Australia. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 143 (703), 1123-1135. doi: 10.1002/qj.2995
2016
Journal Article
Evidence of increased tropical moisture in southeast Australian alpine precipitation during ENSO
Theobald, Alison and McGowan, Hamish (2016). Evidence of increased tropical moisture in southeast Australian alpine precipitation during ENSO. Geophysical Research Letters, 43 (20), 10,901-10,908. doi: 10.1002/2016GL070767
Funding
Current funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Hamish McGowan is:
- Available for supervision
Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.
Supervision history
Current supervision
-
Doctor Philosophy
Unlocking the Archives of Australia's Palaeoclimate
Principal Advisor
-
Doctor Philosophy
Reconstructing the palaeoclimate of Australia: Using downscaled climate models to provide insights into the palaeoclimate of Australia
Principal Advisor
-
Doctor Philosophy
Bushfire Meteorological Hazard Identification by Mobile Weather Radar
Principal Advisor
-
Doctor Philosophy
Unlocking the environmental archives of the Kimberley's past
Principal Advisor
-
Doctor Philosophy
Designing Farming Systems with Whole Farm Models
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Dongxue Zhao, Professor Daniel Rodriguez
-
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding the changing risk of severe thunderstorms by novel stochastic modelling of extreme hail and wind hazards
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Matthew Mason
-
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding the changing risk of severe thunderstorms by novel stochastic modelling of extreme hail and wind hazards
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Matthew Mason
Completed supervision
-
2023
Doctor Philosophy
Radar-based methods for quantifying hailfall across varied spatial scales in Australia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Matthew Mason
-
2021
Doctor Philosophy
Influence of bushfire on Australian snowpack hydrometeorology within Snow Gum forests
Principal Advisor
-
2020
Doctor Philosophy
Bushfire Thunderstorms: Radar Analysis of Fire-Driven Convection in Australia
Principal Advisor
-
2019
Doctor Philosophy
The surface-atmosphere energetics of a sub-tropical sand island in eastern Australia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor D Lockington
-
2018
Doctor Philosophy
Unlocking the Kimberley's past: The applicability of organic spring deposits for reconstructing late Quaternary climatic and environmental change
Principal Advisor
-
-
2016
Doctor Philosophy
A synoptic climatology of inflow-generating precipitation for the Snowy Mountains, south-eastern Australia
Principal Advisor
-
2014
Doctor Philosophy
Quantification of Evaporation from a Small Subtropical Water Storage using Eddy Covariance, Scintillometry and Modelling Techniques
Principal Advisor
-
2013
Doctor Philosophy
Exploring the Significance of Aerosol on Cloud Development and Rainfall in South-east Queensland
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Stuart Phinn
-
2013
Doctor Philosophy
The Micrometeorology of a Coral Reef: Heron Reef, Australia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Stuart Phinn
-
2012
Doctor Philosophy
The Termination of the Last Glacial Stage in eastern Australia: A High Resolution, Multiproxy Analysis
Principal Advisor
-
-
2007
Doctor Philosophy
A HOLOCENE RECORD OF TRANS-TASMAN DUST TRANSPORT: QUANTIFYING DUST EMISSIONS FROM EASTERN AUSTRALIA USING GEOCHEMICAL PROXIES
Principal Advisor
-
2006
Master Philosophy
A 25000 YEAR RECORD OF AEOLIAN SEDIMENTATION FROM EASTERN AUSTRALIA: A PROXY FOR CLIMATE VARIABILITY
Principal Advisor
-
2008
Doctor Philosophy
Modelling Land Susceptibility to Wind Erosion in Western Queensland, Australia
Joint Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Stuart Phinn
-
2016
Doctor Philosophy
The fate of atmospheric metal pollutants in the landscape, Snowy Mountains, south-eastern Australia
Associate Advisor
-
2004
Doctor Philosophy
CLIMATE IMPACTS OF AUSTRALIAN LAND COVER CHANGE
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Stuart Phinn
Media
Enquiries
For media enquiries about Professor Hamish McGowan's areas of expertise, story ideas and help finding experts, contact our Media team: