This helps provide a longer
history of climate shifts that took place in the tropics and some sense of the
duration. The follow up is to complete a
similar mapping to cover the whole of the regions indicated in much finer
resolution. Even better, is to try to
avoid conclusions until we have such data.
What is clear is that the variation
is comparable to today’s extremes without I assume any reliance on human
activity although that may turn out to be wrong even back one thousand years. At most though, we simply do not know.
It is pleasing to see that detail
is been slowly provided and a 2500 year span is meaningful whereas a five
hundred year span is only enough to pick up a single trend or two.
Climate Record Suggesting Severe Tropical Droughts as
Northern Temperatures Rise
by Staff Writers
A 2,300-year climate record University of Pittsburgh researchers
recovered from an Andes Mountains lake reveals that as temperatures in the
Northern Hemisphere rise, the planet's densely populated tropical regions will
most likely experience severe water shortages as the crucial summer monsoons
become drier. The Pitt team found that equatorial regions of South America already are receiving less rainfall than at
any point in the past millennium.
The researchers report in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (PNAS) that a
nearly 6-foot-long sediment core from
Laguna Pumacocha in Peru
contains the most detailed geochemical record of tropical climate fluctuations
yet uncovered. The core shows pronounced dry and wet phases of the South
American summer monsoons and corresponds with existing geological data of
precipitation changes in the surrounding regions.
Paired with these sources, the sediment record illustrated that
rainfall during the South American summer monsoon has dropped sharply since
1900-exhibiting the greatest shift in precipitation since around 300 BCE-while
the Northern Hemisphere has experienced warmer temperatures.
"This model suggests that tropical regions are dry to a point we
would not have predicted," Abbott said. "If the monsoons that are so
critical to the water supply in
tropical areas continue to diminish at this pace, it will have devastating
implications for the water resources of a huge swath of the planet."
The sediment core shows regular fluctuations in rainfall from 300 BCE
to 900 CE, with notably heavy precipitation around 550. Beginning in 900,
however, a severe drought set in for the next three centuries, with the driest
period falling between 1000 and 1040.
This period correlates with the well-known demise of regional Native
American populations, Abbott explained, including the Tiwanaku and Wari that
inhabited present-day Boliva , Chile , and Peru .
After 1300, monsoons increasingly drenched the South American tropics.
The wettest period of the past 2,300 years lasted from roughly 1500 to the
1750s during the time span known as the Little Ice Age,
a period of cooler global temperatures.
Around 1820, a dry cycle crept in briefly, but quickly gave way to a
wet phase before the rain began waning again in 1900. By July 2007, when the
sediment core was collected, there had been a steep, steady increase in dry
conditions to a high point
not surpassed since 1000.
To create a climate record from the sediment core, the team analyzed
the ratio of the oxygen isotope delta-O-18 in each annual layer of lake-bed
mud.
This ratio has a negative relationship with rainfall: Levels of
delta-O-18 are low during the wetter seasons and high when monsoon rain is
light. The team found that the rainfall history suggested by the lake core
matched that established by delta-O-18 analyses from Cascayunga
Cave in the Peruvian lowlands and the
Quelccaya Ice Cap located
high in the Andes .
The Pumacocha core followed the climatological narrative of these
sources between the years 980 and 2006, but provided much more detail, Abbott
said.
The team then established a connection between rainfall and Northern
Hemisphere temperatures by comparing their core to the movement of the
Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ),
a balmy strip of thunderstorms near the equator where winds from the Northern
and Southern Hemispheres meet.
Abbott and his colleagues concluded that warm Northern temperatures
such as those currently recorded lure the ITCZ-the main source of
monsoons-north and ultimately reduce the rainfall on which tropical areas rely.
The historical presence of the ITCZ has been gauged by measuring the
titanium concentrations of sea sediment, according to the PNAS report. High
levels of titanium in the Cariaco Basin north of Venezuela show that the ITCZ
lingered in the upper climes at the same time the South American monsoon was at
its driest, between 900 and 1100.
On the other hand, the wettest period at Pumacocha-between 1400 and
1820, which coincided with the Little Ice Age-correlates with the ITCZ's
sojourn to far south of the equator as Northern Hemisphere temperatures cooled.
Study coauthor Mark Abbott, a professor of geology and planetary
science in Pitt's School
of Arts and Sciences who
also codesigned the project, said that he and his colleagues did not anticipate
the rapid decrease in 20th-century rainfall that they observed. Abbott worked
with lead author and recent Pitt graduate Broxton Bird; Don Rodbell, study
codesigner and a geology professor at Union College in Schenectady, N.Y.;
recent Pitt graduate Nathan Stansell; Pitt professor of geology and planetary
science Mike Rosenmeier; and Mathias Vuille, a professor of atmospheric and
environmental science at the State University of New York at Albany. Both Bird
and Stansell received their PhD degrees in geology from Pitt in 2009.
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