This is very instructive. We see specific confirmation of the warm
period as been a period of low El Nina activity that is finally followed by a
decline to the little Ice Age that appears more and more precipitous than
overly gradual. I come back to understanding
that we get an abrupt temperature drop every eleven hundred years or so which
informs us that we are looking at a complete comparable with this data.
Again the important event is the
drop in temperature that then takes most of three centuries to reverse
fully. The actual causation is likely to
be an unstable aberration of the Antarctic currents dumping a major shot of
cold waters into the Atlantic system.
The evidence suggests a sudden but brief event that then takes three
hundred years to overcome.
It actually makes great deal of sense as that acts as an
adjustment switch for the global climate itself and allows everything to go
back to some form of equilibrium until it needs adjustment 1100 years later. Thus the Holocene has and will never actually
go off the tracks.
Tree rings tell a 1,100-year history of El Nino
by Staff Writers
Manoa HI (SPX) May 10, 2011
Bristlecone trees, such as this over a thousand-year-old tree in the Great Basin National Park , contributed to the
tree-ring record on El Nino. Credit: Image courtesy International Pacific
Research Center
El Nino and its partner La Nina, the warm and cold phases in the eastern half of the tropical Pacific, play havoc with climate worldwide. Predicting El Nino events more than several months ahead is now routine, but predicting how it will change in a warming world has been hampered by the short instrumental record.
An international team of climate scientists has now shown that annually
resolved tree-ring records from North America, particularly from the US
Southwest, give a continuous representation of the intensity of El Nino events
over the past 1100 years and can be used to improve El Nino prediction in
climate models.
The study, spearheaded by Jinbao Li, International
Pacific Research
Center , University of Hawai'i
at Manoa, is published in the May 6 issue of Nature Climate Change.
Tree rings in the US
Southwest, the team found, agree well with the 150-year instrumental sea
surface temperature records in
the tropical Pacific. During El Nino, the unusually warm surface
temperatures in the eastern Pacific lead to changes in the atmospheric
circulation, causing unusually wetter winters in the US Southwest, and thus
wider tree rings; unusually cold eastern Pacific temperatures during La Nina
lead to drought and narrower rings.
The tree-ring records, furthermore, match well existing reconstructions
of the El Nino-Southern Oscillation and correlate highly, for instance, with
d18O isotope concentrations of both living corals and corals that lived
hundreds of years ago around Palmyra in the central Pacific.
"Our work revealed that the towering trees on the mountain slopes
of the US Southwest and the colorful corals in the tropical Pacific both listen
to the music of El Nino, which shows its signature in their yearly growth
rings," explains Li. "The coral records, however, are brief, whereas
the tree-ring records from North America supply us with a continuous El Nino
record reaching back 1100 years."
The tree rings reveal that the intensity of El Nino has been highly variable,
with decades of strong El Nino events and decades of little activity. The
weakest El Nino activity happened during the Medieval Climate Anomaly in the
11th century, whereas the strongest activity has been since the 18th
century.
These different periods of El Nino activity are related to long-term
changes in Pacific climate. Cores taken from lake sediments in
the Galapagos Islands, northern Yucatan , and
the Pacific Northwest reveal that the
eastern-central tropical Pacific climate swings between warm and cool
phases, each lasting from 50 to 90 years.
During warm phases, El Nino and La Nina events were more intense than
usual. During cool phases, they deviated little from the long-term average as,
for instance, during the Medieval Climate Anomaly when the eastern tropical
Pacific was cool.
"Since El Nino causes climate extremes
around the world, it is important to know how it will change with global
warming," says co-author Shang-Ping Xie.
"Current models diverge in their projections of its future
behavior, with some showing an increase in amplitude, some no change, and some
even a decrease. Our tree-ring data offer key observational benchmarks for
evaluating and perfecting climate models and
their predictions of the El Nino-Southern Oscillation under global
warming."
Citation: Jinbao Li, Shang-Ping Xie, Edward R. Cook, Gang Huang,
Rosanne D'Arrigo, Fei Liu, Jian Ma, and Xiao-Tong Zheng, 2011: Interdecadal
modulation of El Nino amplitude during the past millennium. Nature Climate
Change.
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