Publication details

Persistent humid climate favored the Qin and Western Han Dynasties in China around 2,200 y ago

Authors

QIN Chun YANG Bao BRAEUNING Achim LJUNGQVIST Fredrik Charpentier OSBORN Timothy J SHISHOV Vladimir HE Minhui KANG Shuyuan SCHNEIDER Lea ESPER Jan BÜNTGEN Ulf GRIESSINGER Jussi HUANG Danqing ZHANG Peng TALENTO Stefanie XOPLAKI Elena LUTERBACHER Juerg STENSETH Nils Chr

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2415294121
Doi https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2415294121
Keywords climate variability; ancient dynasties; climate reconstruction; climate impacts; Asian summer monsoon
Description The Qin and Western Han dynasties (221 BCE to 24 CE) represent an era of societal prosperity in China. However, due to a lack of high-resolution paleoclimate records it is still unclear whether the agricultural boost documented for this period was associated with more favorable climatic conditions. Here, multiparameter analysis of annually resolved tree-ring records and process-based physiological modeling provide evidence of stable and consistently humid climatic conditions during 270 to 77 BCE in northern China. Precipitation in the Asian summer monsoon region during the Qin–Western Han Dynasties was ~18 to 34% higher compared to present-day conditions. In shifting agricultural and pastoral boundaries ~60 to 100 km northwestward, possibility up to 200 km at times, persistently wetter conditions arguably increased food production, contributing to the socioeconomic prosperity around 2,200 y ago. A gradual wetting trend in the western part of arid northwestern China since the 1980s resembles the historical climate analogue, suggesting that similar benefits for regional environmental and agricultural systems may reoccur under current climate change, at least in the near term.

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