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Climate during the Medieval Climate Anomaly in China
Quansheng Ge and Wenxiang Wu
Past Global Changes Magazine
19(1)
24-26
2011
Quansheng Ge and Wenxiang Wu
Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China; wuwx@igsnrr.ac.cn
Various climate archives reveal a heterogeneous occurrence of the Medieval Climate Anomaly in China in terms of timing, amplitude and duration. Uncertainty analyses indicate that it is difficult to assess whether the medieval warmth exceeded that of the late 20th century.
During the past few decades, the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA), a supposed interval of elevated temperatures between approximately AD 900 and 1300, has generated considerable interest due to its potential value as a “natural” analogue of 20th century “greenhouse” warming. Recently published National Research Council (2006) and IPCC (2007) reports have placed a high priority on identifying the confidence level in regional to hemispherical temperature changes during the past 2000 years, including the putative MCA.
China is one of the few regions in the world with almost all types of climate archives that could provide high-resolution proxy data, including the world’s longest continuous written historical records. Temperature time series of the last 500 to 2000 years have been reconstructed based on historical documents and natural archives (e.g., tree rings, ice cores, stalagmites, lake sediments) from China. In this paper, the results of regional proxy-based reconstructions are reviewed and the associated reconstruction uncertainty is assessed.
Regional reconstructions
Five climate regions of China have been selected (Northeast, Northwest, Central East, Tibet, and Southeast) to conduct the uncertainty assessment of the regional reconstructions (Ge et al., 2010). However, the Southeast has been excluded from the regional reconstructions assessment because the time series from that region are too short to cover the MCA. Examples of regional reconstructions from the climate zones are shown in Figure 1.
For the Northeast region temperature proxy data from lake sediments, peats and stalagmites cover the last 2000 years. The MCA is heterogeneously expressed in all three series in terms of timing, amplitude and variation patterns. The annually resolved 2650-year warm season (May, June, July and August: MJJA) temperature series reconstructed by a stalagmite layer thickness record from the Shihua Cave (115°56’E, 39°47’N), Beijing, indicates a pronounced warmth occurring from the 9th to 13th centuries (Fig. 1e) (Tan et al., 2003). The δ18O proxy record from peat cellulose with a 20-year resolution from the Jinchuan peat (126°22’E, 42°20’N), Jilin Province, reveals a pronounced warm period at around AD 1100-1200 (Hong et al., 2000). However, the MCA is not visible in the quantitatively reconstructed mean July temperature from the Daihai Lake sediment (Xu et al., 2003).
The Tibet region has four reconstructed temperature series covering more than 950 years. One is a composite of the ice cores Dasuopu, Dunde, Guliya and Puruogangri (Fig. 1c), one is based on tree rings and two are individual lake sedimentary records. The MCA is discernable in form of a δ18O maximum in Dunde and Guliya ice records, invisible in Puruogangri ice record, and shows a negative trend in the Dasupu record (Thompson et al., 2006a). When the four ice cores are composed as one series, the MCA is not discernable (Thompson et al., 2006b) (Fig. 1c). The temperature reconstruction based on tree-ring widths of Qilian juniper from Wulan (Fig. 1b), Qinghai Province, indicates a moderate warming around AD 1144-1264 (Zhu et al., 2008). A lower resolution Total Organic Carbon (TOC) record form Qinhai Lake sediment in the Qinghai Province reveals warm and dry conditions from AD 1160-1290 (Shen et al., 2001); while the sediment record of Sugan lake in the same province shows a pronounced warm period from AD 500-1200 (Qiang et al., 2005).
In Central East China, Ge et al. (2003) reconstructed winter (October to April) temperatures at a 10- to 30-year resolution from phenological observations recorded in Chinese historical documents for the past 2000 years (Fig. 1d). According to this reconstruction, the winter temperatures from AD 930-1310 in central eastern China were 0.2°C higher than those of the 1950s-1970s, with a maximum warming of 0.9°C occurring during the AD 1230-1250 period. This pronounced warm anomaly was once disregarded by Chu (1973), one of the most famous Chinese climatologists who initiated the study of climatic changes by historical documents. He found that the climate turned cold at the beginning of the 11th century. Although it warmed at the 13th century, the mean amplitude during this period was lower than the average conditions during the past 2000 years. So he suggested that as a whole the Song periods (AD 960-1279) were generally characterized by a cold period (Fig. 1f). However, later studies pointed out that Chu’s reconstruction were based on an incorrect calendar conversion applied to dates of spring snowfall in Hangzhou, the capital of the Southern Song Dynasty (AD 1127-1279) (Zhang, 1994). Subsequent studies suggested the existence of an MCA in Central East China by using multiple independent subjective phenological evidences, which include the distribution and the north cultivation boundaries of winter wheat, sugarcane, tea plant, citrus and ramie, the safety date for full heading time of rice in Kaifeng, the capital of the Northern Song Dynasty, and plant phenological evidence in Hangzhou (Zhang, 1994; Man, 1996).
In the Northwest, the only highly resolved temperature reconstruction is a tree-ring record form the middle Qilian Mountain covering the last millennium, which reveals that a discernable warm period occurred AD 1050-1150 (Liu et al., 2007) (Fig. 1a).
Seen from a regional perspective, all four studied regions experienced warm periods within the 10th to 14th centuries. However, the timing, duration and magnitudes of these warm periods vary substantially in each region and between regions. The maximal temperature in Central East China in the AD 1240s is ~0.8°C above the AD 1901-1950 average (due to the various regions from where reconstructions are available and the variable instrumental data availability, the period AD 1901-1950 has been selected as the common reference period for all areas). The maximal temperatures are 0.4°C warmer in the 1190s for the Northeast and 0.2°C in the 1000s for the Tibet region. In the Northwest, the highest temperatures were reached in the 1100s. Finally, in the Northeast and Central East regions, the warm peaks during AD 900-1300 are higher than temperatures of the late 20th century (Ge et al., 2010) (Fig. 2).
Uncertainty analysis
The proxy-based reconstructions are subject to uncertainties mainly due to dating, proxy interpretation to climatic parameters, spatial representation, calibration of proxy data during the reconstruction procedure, and available sample sizes. Recently, Ge et al. (2010) conducted an assessment in the uncertainty of the regional reconstructions by adopting the envelope assessment method used in the fourth assessment report of IPCC.
The results (Fig. 2) indicate that the proxies have a high level of confidence in the Northeast, Central East and Southeast for the last 500 years, but large uncertainties exist prior to the 16th century. On multidecadal to centennial timescales, several reconstructions show warming peaks that occurred during the period AD 900-1300, whereas their low confidence levels do not allow to assess whether the MCA has been warmer than the late 20th century.
references
Chu, K.C., 1973: A preliminary study on the climatic fluctuations during the last 5000 years in China, Scientia Sinica (Series A), 16 (2): 226-256.
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