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Global wood anatomical perspective on the onset of the Late Antique Little Ice Age (LALIA) in the mid-6th century CE

Authors :
Büntgen, Ulf
Crivellaro, Alan
Arseneault, Dominique
Baillie, Mike
Barclay, David
Bernabei, Mauro
Bontadi, Jarno
Boswijk, Gretel
Brown, David
Christie, Duncan A.
Churakova, Olga V.
Cook, Edward R.
D'Arrigo, Rosanne
Davi, Nicole
Esper, Jan
Fonti, Patrick
Greaves, Ciara
Hantemirov, Rashit M.
Hughes, Malcolm K.
Kirdyanov, Alexander V.
Krusic, Paul J.
Quesne, Carlos Le
Charpentier Ljungqvist, Fredrik
McCormick, Michael
Myglan, Vladimir S.
Nicolussi, Kurt
Oppenheimer, Clive
Palmer, Jonathan
Qin, Chun
Reinig, Frederick
Salzer, Matthew
Stoffel, Markus
Torbenson, Max
Trnka, Mirek
Villalba, Ricardo
Wiesenberg, Nick
Wiles, Greg
Yang, Bao
Piermattei, Alma
Büntgen, Ulf
Crivellaro, Alan
Arseneault, Dominique
Baillie, Mike
Barclay, David
Bernabei, Mauro
Bontadi, Jarno
Boswijk, Gretel
Brown, David
Christie, Duncan A.
Churakova, Olga V.
Cook, Edward R.
D'Arrigo, Rosanne
Davi, Nicole
Esper, Jan
Fonti, Patrick
Greaves, Ciara
Hantemirov, Rashit M.
Hughes, Malcolm K.
Kirdyanov, Alexander V.
Krusic, Paul J.
Quesne, Carlos Le
Charpentier Ljungqvist, Fredrik
McCormick, Michael
Myglan, Vladimir S.
Nicolussi, Kurt
Oppenheimer, Clive
Palmer, Jonathan
Qin, Chun
Reinig, Frederick
Salzer, Matthew
Stoffel, Markus
Torbenson, Max
Trnka, Mirek
Villalba, Ricardo
Wiesenberg, Nick
Wiles, Greg
Yang, Bao
Piermattei, Alma
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Linked to major volcanic eruptions around 536 and 540 CE, the onset of the Late Antique Little Ice Age has been described as the coldest period of the past two millennia. The exact timing and spatial extent of this exceptional cold phase are, however, still under debate because of the limited resolution and geographical distribution of the available proxy archives. Here, we use 106 wood anatomical thin sections from 23 forest sites and 20 tree species in both hemispheres to search for cell-level fingerprints of ephemeral summer cooling between 530 and 550 CE. After cross-dating and double-staining, we identified 89 Blue Rings (lack of cell wall lignification), nine Frost Rings (cell deformation and collapse), and 93 Light Rings (reduced cell wall thickening) in the Northern Hemisphere. Our network reveals evidence for the strongest temperature depression between mid-July and early-August 536 CE across North America and Eurasia, whereas more localised cold spells occurred in the summers of 532, 540–43, and 548 CE. The lack of anatomical signatures in the austral trees suggests limited incursion of stratospheric volcanic aerosol into the Southern Hemisphere extra-tropics, that any forcing was mitigated by atmosphere-ocean dynamical responses and/or concentrated outside the growing season, or a combination of factors. Our findings demonstrate the advantage of wood anatomical investigations over traditional dendrochronological measurements, provide a benchmark for Earth system models, support cross-disciplinary studies into the entanglements of climate and history, and question the relevance of global climate averages.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1387019079
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.j.scib.2022.10.019