Filling the Eastern European gap in millennium-long temperature reconstructions
Time Factors
Ecology
Geography
Climate
Climate Change
Temperature
Larix
15. Life on land
Wood
01 natural sciences
Trees
13. Climate action
Humans
Europe, Eastern
Seasons
Ecosystem
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1211485110
Publication Date:
2013-01-15T04:55:05Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
Tree ring–based temperature reconstructions form the scientific backbone of the current global change debate. Although some European records extend into medieval times, high-resolution, long-term, regional-scale paleoclimatic evidence is missing for the eastern part of the continent. Here we compile 545 samples of living trees and historical timbers from the greater Tatra region to reconstruct interannual to centennial-long variations in Eastern European May–June temperature back to 1040 AD. Recent anthropogenic warming exceeds the range of past natural climate variability. Increased plague outbreaks and political conflicts, as well as decreased settlement activities, coincided with temperature depressions. The Black Death in the mid-14th century, the Thirty Years War in the early 17th century, and the French Invasion of Russia in the early 19th century all occurred during the coldest episodes of the last millennium. A comparison with summer temperature reconstructions from Scandinavia, the Alps, and the Pyrenees emphasizes the seasonal and spatial specificity of our results, questioning those large-scale reconstructions that simply average individual sites.
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