Jonathan Obrist‐Farner, B. Steinman, N. Stansell, J. Maurer
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引用次数: 5
Abstract
Continued global warming is expected to result in reduced precipitation and a drier climate in Central America. Projections of future changes are highly uncertain, however, due to the spatial resolution limitations of models and insufficient observational data coverage across space and time. Paleoclimate proxy data are therefore critical for understanding regional climate responses during times of global climate reorganization. Here we present two lake‐sediment based records of precipitation variability in Guatemala along with a synthesis of Central American hydroclimate records spanning the last millennium (800–2000 CE). The synthesis reveals that regional climate changes have been strikingly heterogeneous, even over relatively short distances. Our analysis further suggests that shifts in the mean position of the Intertropical Convergence Zone, which have been invoked by numerous studies to explain variability in Central American and circum‐Caribbean proxy records, cannot alone explain the observed pattern of hydroclimate variability. Instead, interactions between several ocean‐atmosphere processes and their disparate influences across variable topography appear to have resulted in complex precipitation responses. These complexities highlight the difficulty of reconstructing past precipitation changes across Central America and point to the need for additional paleo‐record development and analysis before the relationships between external forcing and hydroclimate change can be robustly determined. Such efforts should help anchor model‐based predictions of future responses to continued global warming.
期刊介绍:
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (PALO) publishes papers dealing with records of past environments, biota and climate. Understanding of the Earth system as it was in the past requires the employment of a wide range of approaches including marine and lacustrine sedimentology and speleothems; ice sheet formation and flow; stable isotope, trace element, and organic geochemistry; paleontology and molecular paleontology; evolutionary processes; mineralization in organisms; understanding tree-ring formation; seismic stratigraphy; physical, chemical, and biological oceanography; geochemical, climate and earth system modeling, and many others. The scope of this journal is regional to global, rather than local, and includes studies of any geologic age (Precambrian to Quaternary, including modern analogs). Within this framework, papers on the following topics are to be included: chronology, stratigraphy (where relevant to correlation of paleoceanographic events), paleoreconstructions, paleoceanographic modeling, paleocirculation (deep, intermediate, and shallow), paleoclimatology (e.g., paleowinds and cryosphere history), global sediment and geochemical cycles, anoxia, sea level changes and effects, relations between biotic evolution and paleoceanography, biotic crises, paleobiology (e.g., ecology of “microfossils” used in paleoceanography), techniques and approaches in paleoceanographic inferences, and modern paleoceanographic analogs, and quantitative and integrative analysis of coupled ocean-atmosphere-biosphere processes. Paleoceanographic and Paleoclimate studies enable us to use the past in order to gain information on possible future climatic and biotic developments: the past is the key to the future, just as much and maybe more than the present is the key to the past.