A 3,500-year tree-ring record of annual precipitation on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau
Chinese Academy of Sciences · University of East Anglia
Abstract
An annually resolved and absolutely dated ring-width chronology spanning 4,500 y has been constructed using subfossil, archaeological, and living-tree juniper samples from the northeastern Tibetan Plateau. The chronology represents changing mean annual precipitation and is most reliable after 1500 B.C. Reconstructed precipitation for this period displays a trend toward more moist conditions: the last 10-, 25-, and 50-y periods all appear to be the wettest in at least three and a half millennia. Notable historical dry periods occurred in the 4th century BCE and in the second half of the 15th century CE. The driest individual year reconstructed (since 1500 B.C.) is 1048 B.C., whereas the wettest is 2010.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Chronology
- Subfossil
- Plateau (mathematics)
- Dendrochronology
- Precipitation
- Juniper
- Climatology
- Northern Hemisphere
- Climate action