1300 years of climatic history for Western Central Asia inferred from tree-rings
- 1 April 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Holocene
- Vol. 12 (3) , 267-277
- https://doi.org/10.1191/0959683602hl543rp
Abstract
More than 200 000 ring-width measurements from 384 trees were obtained for 20 individual sites ranging from the lower to upper local timber-lines in the Northwest Karakorum of Pakistan and the Southern Tien Shan of Kirghizia. Samples were obtained predominantly from juniper species (Juniperus) and were analysed to reconstruct regional climatic variation patterns in Western Central Asia since ad 618. Site distri bution represents diverse ecological conditions (e.g., combinations of temperature and moisture stress) within the Karakorum and Tien Shan mountains, permitting both intra-montane and inter-montane comparisons of chronologies. Three different types of chronologies reflecting interannual-, decadal- and centennial-scale ring- width variations were calculated: a statistic skeleton-plotting technique was used to identify ring-width pointer years (interannual); a 101-year kernel filter was used to identify decadal-scale variations; and, for a subset of long-lived trees, the mean ring-width of the entire single series was used to identify centennial trends. After extracting and calibrating each of these three distinct wavelengths in ring-width variation, the results were combined into a comprehensive reconstruction reflecting primarily temperature fluctuations in Western Central Asia since ad 618. The nature and the temporally changing strength of the climatic signals of this reconstruction are discussed in detail. A maximum latewood density record of Pinus tienschanica from Central Tien Shan was used as a predictor series to calibrate and validate tree-ring-width variation. In so doing, we link our results to the circumpolar maximum latewood-density network (Briffa et al., 1998a; 1998b; Schweingruber and Briffa, 1996).Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dendroclimatic Reconstruction of April–May Temperature Fluctuations in the Western Himalaya of India Since A.D. 1698Quaternary Research, 1997
- Preliminary Results of A Tibetan Stable C-Isotope Chronology Dating from 1200 To 1994Isotopes in Environmental and Health Studies, 1997
- Mongolian Tree Rings and 20th-Century WarmingScience, 1996
- Was there a ?medieval warm period?, and if so, where and when?Climatic Change, 1994
- Detecting the aerial fertilization effect of atmospheric CO2 enrichment in tree‐ring chronologiesGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1993
- Constrained Growth, Cambial Mortality, and Dendrochronology of Ancient Thuja occidentalis on Cliffs of the Niagara Escarpment: An Eastern Version of Bristlecone Pine?International Journal of Plant Sciences, 1992
- Spatio‐temporal analysis of climate–tree ring relationshipsNew Phytologist, 1989
- Paleoclimatic Inferences from Long Tree-Ring RecordsScience, 1974
- Bristlecone Pine: Science and EstheticsScience, 1968
- Beiträge zur Klimakunde von HochasienErdkunde, 1958