Swiss tree rings reveal warm and wet summers during medieval times
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Description
We present a 1200 year drought reconstruction for the European Alpine region based on carbon isotope variations of tree rings from living larch trees and historic timber. The carbon isotope fractionation at the study site is sensitive to summer precipitation, temperature, and irradiance, resulting in a stable and high correlation with a drought index for interannual to decadal frequencies and possibly beyond (r(2)=0.58 for 1901-2004, July/August). When combining this information with maximum latewood density-derived summer temperature, a strongly reduced occurrence of summer droughts during the warm A.D. 900-1200 period is evident, coinciding with the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA), with a shift to colder and drier conditions for the subsequent centuries. The warm-wet MCA contrasts strongly with the climate of the drought-prone warm phase of the recent decades, indicating different forcing mechanism for these two warm periods and pointing to beneficial conditions for agriculture and human well-being during the MCA in this region.
Date of Publication
2014
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Kress, Anne | |
Hangartner, Sarah | |
Bugmann, Harald | |
Frank, David C. | |
Siegwolf, Rolf T.W. | |
Saurer, Matthias |
Series
Geophysical Research Letters
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
ISSN
0094-8276
Access(Rights)
open.access