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Recent summer warming over the western Mediterranean region is unprecedented since medieval times

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BÜNTGEN Ulf REINIG Frederick VERSTEGE Anne PIERMATTEI Alma KUNZ Marcel KRUSIC Paul SLAVIN Philip STEPANEK Petr TORBENSON Max DEL CASTILLO Edurne Martinez AROSIO Tito KIRDYANOV Alexander OPPENHEIMER Clive TRNKA Mirek PALOSSE Audrey BEBCHUK Tatiana CAMARERO J Julio ESPER Jan

Rok publikování 2024
Druh Článek v odborném periodiku
Časopis / Zdroj Global and Planetary Change
Fakulta / Pracoviště MU

Přírodovědecká fakulta

Citace
www https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2023.104336
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2023.104336
Klíčová slova Anthropogenic warming; Climate change; Human history; Iberian Peninsula; Paleoclimate; Proxy reconstructions; Tree rings; Volcanic eruptions; Wood density
Popis Contextualising anthropogenic warming and investigating linkages between past climate variability and human history require high-resolution temperature reconstructions that extend before the period of instrumental measurements. Here, we present maximum latewood density (MXD) measurements of 534 living and relict Pinus uncinata trees from undisturbed upper treeline ecotones in the Spanish central Pyrenees. Spanning the period 1119–2020 CE continuously, our new MXD composite chronology correlates significantly with gridded May–September mean temperatures over the western Mediterranean region (r = 0.76; p ? 0.001; 1950–2020 CE). Based on an integrative ensemble approach, our reconstruction reveals unprecedented summer warming since 2003 CE. The coldest and warmest reconstructed temperature anomalies are -3.4 (±1.4) °C in 1258 and 2.6 (±2.2) °C in 2017 (relative to 1961–90). Abrupt summer cooling of -1.5 (±1.0) °C was found after 20 large volcanic eruptions since medieval times. Comparison of our summer temperature reconstruction with newly compiled historical evidence from the Iberian Peninsula suggests a lack of military conflict during or following exceptionally hot or cold summers, as well as a general tendency towards less warfare and more stable wheat prices during warmer periods. Our study demonstrates the importance of updating and refining annually resolved and absolutely dated climate reconstructions to place recent trends and extremes of anthropogenic warming in a long-term context of natural temperature variability, and to better understand how past climate and environmental changes affected ecological and societal systems.

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