Firth River Tree Ring Data [Anchukaitis, K.]

Northwestern North America has one of the highest rates of recent temperature increase in the world, but the putative "divergence problem" in dendroclimatology potentially limits the ability of tree-ring proxy data at high latitudes to provide long-term context for current anthropogenic ch...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anchukaitis, Kevin, D'Arrigo, Rosanne, Frank, David, Hayles, Laia, Buckley, Brendan
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: EOL Data Support. UCAR/NCAR - Earth Observing Laboratory 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.18739/a2964j
https://arcticdata.io/catalog/view/doi:10.18739/A2964J
Description
Summary:Northwestern North America has one of the highest rates of recent temperature increase in the world, but the putative "divergence problem" in dendroclimatology potentially limits the ability of tree-ring proxy data at high latitudes to provide long-term context for current anthropogenic change. Here, summer temperatures are reconstructed from a Picea glauca maximum latewood density (MXD) chronology that shows a stable relationship to regional temperatures and spans most of the last millennium at the Firth River in northeastern Alaska. The warmest epoch in the last nine centuries is estimated to have occurred during the late twentieth century, with average temperatures over the last 30 yr of the reconstruction developed for this study [1973-2002 in the Common Era (CE)] approximately 1.3*deg* *plusmn* 0.4*deg*C warmer than the long-term preindustrial mean (1100-1850 CE), a change associated with rapid increases in greenhouse gases. Prior to the late twentieth century, multidecadal temperature fluctuations covary broadly with changes in natural radiative forcing. The findings presented here emphasize that tree-ring proxies can provide reliable indicators of temperature variability even in a rapidly warming climate.