• Title of article

    Five centuries of Central European temperature extremes reconstructed from tree-ring density and documentary evidence

  • Author/Authors

    Battipaglia، نويسنده , , Giovanna and Frank، نويسنده , , David and Büntgen، نويسنده , , Ulf and Dobrovoln‎، نويسنده , , Petr and Brلzdil، نويسنده , , Rudolf and Pfister، نويسنده , , Christian and Esper، نويسنده , , Jan، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    182
  • To page
    191
  • Abstract
    Future climate change will likely influence the frequency and intensity of weather extremes. As such events are by definition rare, long records are required to understand their characteristics, drivers, and consequences on ecology and society. Herein we provide a unique perspective on regional-scale temperature extremes over the past millennium, using three tree-ring maximum latewood density (MXD) chronologies from higher elevations in the European Alps. We verify the tree-ring-based extremes using documentary evidences from Switzerland, the Czech Republic, and Central Europe that allowed the identification of 44 summer extremes over the 1550–2003 period. These events include cold temperatures in 1579, 1628, 1675, and 1816, as well as warm ones in 1811 and 2003. Prior to 1550, we provide new evidence for cold (e.g., 1068 and 1258) and warm (e.g., 1333) summers derived from the combined MXD records and thus help to characterize high-frequency temperature variability during medieval times. Spatial coherence of the reconstructed extremes is found over Switzerland, with most signatures even extending across Central Europe. We discuss potential limitations of the tree-ring and documentary archives, including the (i) ability of MXD to particularly capture extremely warm temperatures, (ii) methodological identification and relative definition of extremes, and (iii) placement of those events in the millennium-long context of low-frequency climate change.
  • Keywords
    Maximum latewood density , documentary evidence , European Alps , palaeoclimatology , Temperature extremes , Central Europe
  • Journal title
    Global and Planetary Change
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Global and Planetary Change
  • Record number

    2368606