Projects per year
Abstract
Large-scale millennial length Northern Hemisphere (NH) temperature reconstructions have been progressively improved over the last 20 years as new datasets have been developed. This paper, and its companion (Part II, Anchukaitis et al. in prep), details the latest tree-ring (TR) based NH land air temperature reconstruction from a temporal and spatial perspective. This work is the first product of a consortium called N-TREND (Northern Hemisphere Tree-Ring Network Development) which brings together dendroclimatologists to identify a collective strategy for improving large-scale summer temperature reconstructions. The new reconstruction, N-TREND2015, utilises 54 records, a significant expansion compared with previous TR studies, and yields an improved reconstruction with stronger statistical calibration metrics. N-TREND2015 is relatively insensitive to the compositing method and spatial weighting used and validation metrics indicate that the new record portrays reasonable coherence with large scale summer temperatures and is robust at all time-scales from 918 to 2004 where at least 3 TR records exist from each major continental mass. N-TREND2015 indicates a longer and warmer medieval period (∼900–1170) than portrayed by previous TR NH reconstructions and by the CMIP5 model ensemble, but with better overall agreement between records for the last 600 years. Future dendroclimatic projects should focus on developing new long records from data-sparse regions such as North America and eastern Eurasia as well as ensuring the measurement of parameters related to latewood density to complement ring-width records which can improve local based calibration substantially.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1-18 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | Quaternary Science Reviews |
Volume | 134 |
Early online date | 9 Jan 2016 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Feb 2016 |
Keywords
- Tree-rings
- Northern Hemisphere
- Last Millennium
- Summer Temperatures
- Reconstruction
- CMIP5 Models
Profiles
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Timothy Osborn
- School of Environmental Sciences - Professor of Climate Science
- Water Security Research Centre - Member
- Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences - Member
- Climatic Research Unit - Member
- ClimateUEA - Member
Person: Research Group Member, Research Centre Member, Academic, Teaching & Research
Projects
- 1 Finished
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The Dendroclimatic Divergence Phenomenon: reassessment of causes and implications for climate reconstruction
Briffa, K., Melvin, T. & Osborn, T.
Natural Environment Research Council
1/05/10 → 31/10/13
Project: Research