A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record

PUBLISHED Calibration of proxy climate records is well-established for annually resolved proxies such as tree rings, but it has not been attempted for non-annually resolved proxies such as those from peatland surface wetness records. Several previous studies have suggested that peatland surface wetn...

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Published in:Quaternary International
Main Author: MITCHELL, FRASER JOHN GRAY
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63709
http://people.tcd.ie/fmitchll
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.12.011
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spelling fttrinitycoll:oai:tara.tcd.ie:2262/63709 2023-05-15T17:37:18+02:00 A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record MITCHELL, FRASER JOHN GRAY 2012 87 97 http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63709 http://people.tcd.ie/fmitchll https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.12.011 en eng Quaternary International 268 Dan J. Charman, Veronica Hohl, Antony Blundell, Fraser Mitchell, Julia Newberry, Pirita Oksanen, A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record, Quaternary International, 268, 2012, 87 - 97 Y http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63709 http://people.tcd.ie/fmitchll 76492 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.12.011 Y Climate science proxy climate records Ireland summer precipitation Journal Article scholarly_publications refereed_publications 2012 fttrinitycoll https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.12.011 2020-02-16T13:53:18Z PUBLISHED Calibration of proxy climate records is well-established for annually resolved proxies such as tree rings, but it has not been attempted for non-annually resolved proxies such as those from peatland surface wetness records. Several previous studies have suggested that peatland surface wetness is primarily driven by warm season moisture balance and implied a potential for producing calibrated records of deficit or precipitation. This paper presents a high-resolution testate amoebae analysis of a peat record from central Ireland covering the last c.1000 years, and provides the first attempt to produce a calibrated record of past precipitation from a peat record. Past water table depth was reconstructed using a transfer function applied to contiguous samples for the top 1m of the profile. The chronology was constrained by a series of radiocarbon ages (including `bomb-spike? ages) and spheroidal carbonaceous particles. Correlations between reconstructed water tables and meteorological records (1958-1995) of precipitation and deficit were strongly positive and were used to reconstruct precipitation and deficit from the last 1000 years. Validation using earlier meteorological records was hampered by very low peat accumulation rates, but suggested the summer precipitation and deficit reconstructions were more robust than a reconstruction of annual precipitation. The summer precipitation reconstruction suggests that the period AD1400-1850 experienced higher summer rainfall than for much of both the preceding 400 years and the last 150 years. The change in regime from low to high summer rainfall may be attributed to changes in the summer North Atlantic Oscillation. Combined with tree ring and speleothem records of winter NAO, this suggests a major change in seasonality of precipitation in far western Europe between the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age. The MCA was characterised by dry summers and wet winters, whilst the LIA had wet summers and dry winters. Calibration of peat surface wetness records using meteorological records holds much potential for the future and may lead to improved insights into seasonal precipitation and water balance changes. This study was limited by slow accumulation rates leading to low temporal resolution for the late 19th and early 20th century part of the record. Further development of the technique will require more highly temporally resolved records of change over the whole of the instrumental time period to allow a full calibration and validation approach to be applied. The research was funded by the ACCROTELM Project (`Abrupt Climate Change Recorded Over The European Land Mass?) under the European Union 5th Framework programme (contract number EVK2-CT-2002-00166) and a University of Plymouth PhD scholarship to VH. Bettina Stefanini and Maarten Blaauw assisted with field work. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive) Quaternary International 268 87 97
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive)
op_collection_id fttrinitycoll
language English
topic Climate science
proxy climate records
Ireland
summer precipitation
spellingShingle Climate science
proxy climate records
Ireland
summer precipitation
MITCHELL, FRASER JOHN GRAY
A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record
topic_facet Climate science
proxy climate records
Ireland
summer precipitation
description PUBLISHED Calibration of proxy climate records is well-established for annually resolved proxies such as tree rings, but it has not been attempted for non-annually resolved proxies such as those from peatland surface wetness records. Several previous studies have suggested that peatland surface wetness is primarily driven by warm season moisture balance and implied a potential for producing calibrated records of deficit or precipitation. This paper presents a high-resolution testate amoebae analysis of a peat record from central Ireland covering the last c.1000 years, and provides the first attempt to produce a calibrated record of past precipitation from a peat record. Past water table depth was reconstructed using a transfer function applied to contiguous samples for the top 1m of the profile. The chronology was constrained by a series of radiocarbon ages (including `bomb-spike? ages) and spheroidal carbonaceous particles. Correlations between reconstructed water tables and meteorological records (1958-1995) of precipitation and deficit were strongly positive and were used to reconstruct precipitation and deficit from the last 1000 years. Validation using earlier meteorological records was hampered by very low peat accumulation rates, but suggested the summer precipitation and deficit reconstructions were more robust than a reconstruction of annual precipitation. The summer precipitation reconstruction suggests that the period AD1400-1850 experienced higher summer rainfall than for much of both the preceding 400 years and the last 150 years. The change in regime from low to high summer rainfall may be attributed to changes in the summer North Atlantic Oscillation. Combined with tree ring and speleothem records of winter NAO, this suggests a major change in seasonality of precipitation in far western Europe between the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age. The MCA was characterised by dry summers and wet winters, whilst the LIA had wet summers and dry winters. Calibration of peat surface wetness records using meteorological records holds much potential for the future and may lead to improved insights into seasonal precipitation and water balance changes. This study was limited by slow accumulation rates leading to low temporal resolution for the late 19th and early 20th century part of the record. Further development of the technique will require more highly temporally resolved records of change over the whole of the instrumental time period to allow a full calibration and validation approach to be applied. The research was funded by the ACCROTELM Project (`Abrupt Climate Change Recorded Over The European Land Mass?) under the European Union 5th Framework programme (contract number EVK2-CT-2002-00166) and a University of Plymouth PhD scholarship to VH. Bettina Stefanini and Maarten Blaauw assisted with field work.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author MITCHELL, FRASER JOHN GRAY
author_facet MITCHELL, FRASER JOHN GRAY
author_sort MITCHELL, FRASER JOHN GRAY
title A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record
title_short A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record
title_full A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record
title_fullStr A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record
title_full_unstemmed A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record
title_sort 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from ireland: calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63709
http://people.tcd.ie/fmitchll
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.12.011
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation Quaternary International
268
Dan J. Charman, Veronica Hohl, Antony Blundell, Fraser Mitchell, Julia Newberry, Pirita Oksanen, A 1000-year reconstruction of summer precipitation from Ireland: Calibration of a peat-based palaeoclimate record, Quaternary International, 268, 2012, 87 - 97
Y
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63709
http://people.tcd.ie/fmitchll
76492
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.12.011
op_rights Y
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2011.12.011
container_title Quaternary International
container_volume 268
container_start_page 87
op_container_end_page 97
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