4.3 Article

Tree-ring width and density data around the Northern Hemisphere: Part 2, spatio-temporal variability and associated climate patterns

Journal

HOLOCENE
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages 759-789

Publisher

ARNOLD, HODDER HEADLINE PLC
DOI: 10.1191/0959683602hl588rp

Keywords

dendroclimatology; tree-ring density; regional climate; summer-temperature patterns; circulation modes; Northern Hemisphere; late Holocene

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Pattern, of summer temperature over the Northern Hemisphere. obtained from a calibration of a tree-ring network, are presented for every year from 1600 to 1877. The network of tree-ring density chronologies is shown to exhibit spatially coherent modes of variability. These modes closely match summer half-year temperature variations, in terms of similar spatial patterns and similar temporal evolution during the instrumental period, They can, therefore. be considered to be proxies for the temperature patterns, and time series for the eight most dominant patterns are presented back to the late seventeenth century. The first pattern represents spatially coherent alarming or cooling and it appears to respond to climate forcings. especially volcanic eruptions. Most other patterns appear to be related to atmospheric pressure anomalies and them can be partially explained by heat advection associated with anomalous atmospheric circulation. This provides the potential for reconstructing past variations in atmospheric circulation for the surinner half-year. To investigate this potential modes of summer-pressure variability are defined. and an attempt is made to reconstruct them using principal components regression. Poor verification statistics and high sensitivity to the design of the regression procedure provide little confidence in the reconstructions presented. which are regarded as being preliminary only. A repeat study using instrumental temperature predictors shoals that the poor performance is attributable mainly to the bleakness of the relationship between air temperature over land and atmospheric circulation during summer: though a relationship exists. it is not strong enough to field reliable regression models when only a relatively short overlap period (55 years in this studs) exists for calibration and verification. Further attempts to reconstruct large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns that include precipitation-sensitive networks of tree-ring data are likely to produce improved results.

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