Recent decades may have been the wettest in 3,500 years in North East
Tibet – according to climate researchers at the University of East
Anglia (UK) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (Lanzhou, China).
Researchers looked at 3,500-year-long tree ring records from North East
Tibet to estimate annual precipitation. They found that recent decades
have likely been the wettest on record in this semi-arid region.
The precipitation records have been reconstructed using sub-fossil,
archaeological and living juniper tree samples from the north-eastern
Tibetan Plateau. They reveal a trend towards wider growth rings,
implying moister growing conditions – with the last 50 years seeing
increasing amounts of rainfall.
Notable historical dry periods occurred in the 4th Century BC and in the
second half of the 15th Century AD.
Dr Tim Osborn from UEA’s Climatic Research Unit said: “Our collaboration
with scientists from China has been very fruitful, leading to what is
currently the longest tree-ring-width record in the cold and arid
north-eastern Tibetan Plateau. Not only is the record very long, it is
based on samples from more than 1000 trees, some of which have an
individual lifespan of more than 2000 years.
These are among the
longest-lived trees in the world.”
Not only are these trees long-lived, but they are useful for
understanding how climate has changed. The widths of the tree rings show
a close correspondence with observations from rain gauges over the last
55 years, such that tree rings in wetter years tend to be wider than
tree rings in drier years.
Dr Osborn said: “The most recent few decades have, on average, the
widest rings in the 3,500-year record which suggests that this may have
been the wettest period, perhaps associated with global warming during
the last century. Indeed, over the last two thousand years when the
Northern Hemisphere is warm it appears to be wetter in the Mountains of
North East Tibet.
This suggests that any further large-scale warming
might be associated with even greater rainfall in this region – though
we note that other factors could also have contributed to the increased
ring widths.”
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