The Paleo‐Serchio River: history of floods between Lucca and Pisa during the Roman period
Monica Bini, Alberto Caroti, Federico Cantini, Fabio Fabiani, Marco Fiorentini, Antonio Fornaciari, Ilaria Isola, Marco Lazzarotti, Marco Luppichini, Scott Mensing, Jordan Palli, Gianluca Piovesan, Giovanni ZanchettaABSTRACT
The reconstruction of flood frequency beyond the Instrumental Era is challenging and mostly based on historical sources, but it rarely covers more than the last 1000 years when abundant documentation is preserved. To investigate the long‐term trends in flooding and obtain insight into current climatic changes it is necessary to extend these data to a larger number of rivers beyond the Instrumental Era and available period of historical documentation. In this paper we reconstruct the paleoflood record for the Roman Period of the Serchio River (Auser in antiquity, located in Northern Tuscany, Central Italy) using geoarcheological data. The complex hydrological evolution of the river and the development of the important cities of Lucca and Pisa on the river bank allowed an important collection of data, showing a prominent peak in flood activity during the 1st century