4.5 Article

French summer droughts since 1326 CE: a reconstruction based on tree ring cellulose delta O-18

Journal

CLIMATE OF THE PAST
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages 1101-1117

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/cp-12-1101-2016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. PALEOMEX-ISOMEX program of the CNRS-INSU
  2. EU [EVK2-CT-2002-00147]

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The reconstruction of droughts is essential for the understanding of past drought dynamics and can help evaluate future drought scenarios in a changing climate. This article presents a reconstruction of summer droughts in France based on annually resolved, absolutely dated chronologies of oxygen isotope ratios (delta O-18) in tree ring cellulose from Quercus spp. Samples were taken from living trees and timber wood from historic buildings at two sites: Fontainebleau (48 degrees 23'N, 2 degrees 40'E; 1326-2000 CE) and Angouleme (45 degrees 44'N, 0 degrees 18'E; 1360-2004 CE). Cellulose delta O-18 from these sites proved to be a good proxy of summer climate, as the trees were sensitive to temperature and moisture availability. However, offsets in average delta O-18 values between tree cohorts necessitated a correction before joining them to the final chronologies. Using the corrected delta O-18 chronologies, we developed models based on linear regression to reconstruct drought, expressed by the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI). The significant correlations between the SPEI and cellulose delta O-18 (r approximate to -0.70), as well as the verification of the models by independent data support the validity of these reconstructions. At both sites, recent decades are characterized by increasing drought. Fontainebleau displays dominantly wetter conditions during earlier centuries, whereas the current drought intensity is not unprecedented in the Angouleme record. While the delta O-18 chronologies at the two studied sites are highly correlated during the 19th and 20th centuries, there is a significant decrease in the correlation coefficient between 1600 and 1800 CE, which indicates either a weaker climate sensitivity of the tree ring proxies during this period, or a more heterogeneous climate in the north and the south of France. Future studies of tree ring isotope networks might reveal if the seasonality and spatial patterns of past droughts can explain this decoupling. A regional drought reconstruction based on a combination of the two sites shows good agreement with historical records of grape harvest dates in France, which provide another proxy of summer climate.

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