Rainfall history for the Hexi Corridor in the arid northwest China during the past 620 years derived from tree rings.

Yang B, Qin C, Bräuning A, Burchardt I, Jingjing L (2011)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2011

Journal

Publisher: Royal Meteorological Society

Book Volume: 31

Pages Range: 1166-1176

Journal Issue: 8

URI: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/joc.2143/abstract

DOI: 10.1002/joc.2143

Open Access Link: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/joc.2143/pdf

Abstract

We present a 620-year long ring width record from the middle Qilian Mountains, where it is presently controlled by the Westerlies. The chronology was developed from Qilian juniper (Sabina przewalskii) growing at sites near the western distribution limit of the species in the northern Qilian Mountains, Gansu Province, China. A linear regression model between ring width and annual (July to June) precipitation accounts for 34.9% of the observed instrumental precipitation variance during the period 1952 to 2007. Spatial correlation analyses between the reconstruction and gridded precipitation data shows that the annual precipitation reconstruction captures regional climatic variations over the Qilian Mountains and the nearby Hexi Corridor. We also show the scaled standard chronology adjusted to the mean and variance of the instrumental data. Relatively wet periods are identified for AD 1390–1413, 1425–1450, 1530–1649, 1792–1920, 1937–1949 and 1980–1985. Dry conditions prevailed during AD 1414–1424, 1451–1529, 1650–1791, 1921–1936, 1950–1979 and 1986–2007. In comparison with the regression-based reconstruction, the scaled reconstruction indicates considerably wetter conditions during 1390–1413, 1425–1450, 1570–1630 and 1790–1920. The interval AD 1451–1529 was the most intense and longest drought epoch in the Hexi Corridor over the past six centuries. This drought was not only recorded in the Qilian Mountains but also occurred in northern and eastern China. It might be caused by a substantial weakening of the Asian summer monsoon induced by the joint effects of solar and volcanic activities at that time. Our results also suggest that the Hexi Corridor was under the control of the Asian monsoon circulation on inter-decadal to centennial timescales in the past centuries.

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APA:

Yang, B., Qin, C., Bräuning, A., Burchardt, I., & Jingjing, L. (2011). Rainfall history for the Hexi Corridor in the arid northwest China during the past 620 years derived from tree rings. International Journal of Climatology, 31(8), 1166-1176. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/joc.2143

MLA:

Yang, Bao, et al. "Rainfall history for the Hexi Corridor in the arid northwest China during the past 620 years derived from tree rings." International Journal of Climatology 31.8 (2011): 1166-1176.

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