Express Global

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 9 September 2013

New paper finds South Pacific rainfall was up to 2.4 times more variable before the 20th century

Posted on 18:57 by Unknown
A new paper published in Geology reconstructs climate of the South Pacific over the past 446 years and "shows rainfall varied much more dramatically before the start of the 20th century than after. The finding, based on an analysis of a ...stalagmite from the island nation of Vanuatu, could force climate modelers to adjust their models." The paper finds rainfall was up to 2.4 times more variable prior to the 20th century, debunking claims of climate alarmists that global warming has increased rainfall variability or extreme weather.






Jud Partin inspects a stalagmite in Taurius Cave on the island of Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu. A stalagmite such as this one could be used in a paleoclimate reconstruction. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of Texas at Austin)









Rainfall in South Pacific Was More Variable Before 20th Century

Sep. 9, 2013 — A new reconstruction of climate in the South Pacific during the past 446 years shows rainfall varied much more dramatically before the start of the 20th century than after. The finding, based on an analysis of a cave formation called a stalagmite from the island nation of Vanuatu, could force climate modelers to adjust their models. The models are adjusted to match the current levels of climate variability that are smaller now than they were in the recent past for this region.




"In this case, the present is not the key to the past, nor the future," says Jud Partin, a research scientist associate at The University of Texas at Austin's Institute for Geophysics who led the study. The institute is part of the Jackson School of Geosciences. "Instead, the past is the key to what may happen in the future."

The researchers also discovered a roughly 50 year cycle of rainfall in Vanuatu, toggling between wet and dry periods. Vanuatu lies within the largest rain band in the southern hemisphere, the South Pacific Convergence Zone and its rainy season is from November to April. In the 20th century, rainfall during wet periods was about 7 feet per rainy season and during dry periods about 4 ½ feet per rainy season. [i.e. a difference of 2.5 feet between dry and wet periods]

However, before the 20th century, the dry periods tended to be much drier, with rainfall as low as 1 foot per rainy season and wet periods that were still getting about 7 feet per rainy season. This means there were differences as large as 6 feet per rainy season between dry and wet periods. [i.e. up to 2.4 times more variable than during the 20th century]

"Without this record, you would not guess that this area could experience such large changes in rainfall," says Partin.

While 20th century rainfall in Vanuatu experienced a smaller range from wet to dry periods than in the previous centuries, the biggest difference was during the dry periods. Dry periods in the 20th century were much wetter than dry periods in previous centuries. The researchers note that this overall wettening of Vanuatu is consistent with the hypothesis that anthropogenic climate change, caused by the emission of greenhouse gases, makes wet areas wetter and dry areas drier.

The study was published online on September 6 in the journal Geology.

Stalagmites are rocky features that form on the floors of caves as water dripping from above deposits minerals over time. By analyzing the abundance of oxygen isotopes deposited in the minerals of one particular stalagmite, the scientists were able to reconstruct a history of rainfall going back 446 years. This is significant because rainfall measurements in this region are sparse and only span the past century. Decadal averages of oxygen isotopes increase and decrease in lockstep with rainfall. To convert oxygen isotope levels to actual rainfall values, the researchers calibrated the stalagmite data with actual rainfall measurements in Vanuatu from 1904 to 2003.

The stalagmite had a deposition rate about 100 times as high as typical stalagmites in the region, meaning much more material was deposited in a given year than elsewhere and therefore yielded a much higher resolution rainfall record than is typically possible. In the local dialect, known as Bislama, one would say of the stalagmite "Hem gudfala ston," which means "This is a good stone."

The 50-year cycle of rainfall in Vanuatu does not appear to be linked to any external forces, such as changes in solar intensity. No correlation was found with the sun's regular 11-year cycle of intensity or the Little Ice Age, a multi-decade change in climate possibly caused by solar dimming.

Instead, the researchers propose that the 50-year cycle, or Pacific Decadal Variability (PDV), arises from natural fluctuations in Earth's climate. The PDV causes the South Pacific Convergence Zone to shift northeast and southwest over time. At times, the zone is over Vanuatu (corresponding to wet times) and at others, it is farther to the northeast (corresponding to dry times).

"This new result is part of a larger research program aimed at understanding climate changes in this important but understudied area of the tropical Pacific," says co-author Terry Quinn, director and research professor at the Institute for Geophysics and professor in the Department of Geological Sciences.

Partin's other co-authors at The University of Texas at Austin are Frederick Taylor, Charles Jackson and Christopher Maupin at the Institute for Geophysics and Jay Banner at the Department of Geological Sciences. Other co-authors are Chuan-Chou "River" Shen and Ke Lin at National Taiwan University; Julien Emile-Geay at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles; Daniel Sinclair at Rutgers University; and Chih-An Huh at Academia Sinica, Taiwan.

Funding for this research was provided by the National Science Foundation (award AGS-1003700) to Jud Partin, the Taiwan (Republic of China) National Science Council and National Taiwan University.



Journal Reference:
J. W. Partin, T. M. Quinn, C.-C. Shen, J. Emile-Geay, F. W. Taylor, C. R. Maupin, K. Lin, C. S. Jackson, J. L. Banner, D. J. Sinclair, C.- A. Huh. Multidecadal rainfall variability in South Pacific Convergence Zone as revealed by stalagmite geochemistry. Geology, 2013; DOI:10.1130/G34718.1



Multidecadal rainfall variability in South Pacific Convergence Zone as revealed by stalagmite geochemistry

J.W. Partin et al




Abstract

Pacific decadal variability (PDV) causes widespread, persistent fluctuations that affect climate, water resources, and fisheries throughout the Pacific basin, yet the magnitude, frequency, and causes of PDV remain poorly constrained. Here we present an absolutely dated, subannually resolved, 446 yr stable oxygen isotope (δ18O) cave record of rainfall variability in Vanuatu (southern Pacific Ocean), a location that has a climate heavily influenced by the South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ). The δ18O-based proxy rainfall record is dominated by changes in stalagmite δ18O that are large (∼1‰), quasi-periodic (∼50 yr period), and generally abrupt (within 5–10 yr). These isotopic changes imply abrupt rainfall changes of as much as ∼1.8 m per wet season, changes that can be ∼2.5× larger than the 1976 C.E. shift in rainfall amount associated with a PDV phase switch. The Vanuatu record also shares little commonality with previously documented changes in the Intertropical Convergence Zone during the Little Ice Age or solar forcing. We conclude that multidecadal SPCZ variability is likely of an [natural] endogenous nature. Large, spontaneous, and low-frequency changes in SPCZ rainfall during the past 500 yr have important implications for the relative magnitude of natural PDV possible in the coming century.

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Executive Summary of the NIPCC Climate Change Reconsidered II Report
    Executive Summary from the NIPCC Climate Change Reconsidered II Report, released 9/16/13: Executive Summary  This report is produced by the ...
  • New paper finds South Pacific rainfall was up to 2.4 times more variable before the 20th century
    A new paper published in Geology reconstructs climate of the South Pacific over the past 446 years and "shows rainfall varied much mor...
  • New Material Posted on the NIPCC Web site
    New Material Posted on the NIPCC Web site Species Range Shifts in a Warming World (19 Nov 2013) It is considerably more complex - and conser...
  • WSJ: Fracking has done more for the poor than all of Obama's ministrations combined
    More on Fracking and the Poor The U.S. oil and gas boom added $1,200 to disposable income in 2012. Last week we reported on a study showing ...
  • Where, Oh Where, Has that Global Warming Gone?
    Terrifying Flat Global Temperature Crisis Threatens To Disrupt U.N. Climate Conference Agenda By Larry Bell, Forbes, 9/10/13 Bummer! Now, ju...
  • New paper finds chaotic response to natural climate drivers ENSO and solar activity
    A paper under open review for Climate of the Past reconstructs climate and levels of 9 lakes in East Africa and finds the climate of East A...
  • New paper finds IPCC climate models don't realistically simulate convection
    More problems for the models: A paper published today in Geophysical Research Letters finds climate models do not realistically simulate co...
  • Special Report: The Age of Plenty debunks alarmist claims of food shortages
    Paging Paul Ehrlich :  IEEE Spectrum , the journal of the world's largest professional association for the advancement of technology, ha...
  • Yale Climate Forum stumped by simple question on sea levels
    In response to the article The Inevitability of Sea-Level Rise posted at the Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media, I asked the foll...
  • New paper finds another non-hockey-stick in Sweden
    A paper in open review for Climate of the Past reconstructs temperatures in northern Sweden for the past 800 years and finds another non-ho...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (20)
    • ►  January (20)
  • ▼  2013 (480)
    • ►  December (77)
    • ►  November (64)
    • ►  October (65)
    • ▼  September (130)
      • WSJ: One lesson of the IPCC report is it's time fo...
      • The Economist: All of the warming we're not having...
      • WSJ Op-Ed: The U.N. IPCC is unreformable and its l...
      • Mathematical & observational proof that CO2 has no...
      • Physicist explains why increased CO2 has a trivial...
      • How climate models dismiss the role of the Sun in ...
      • New paper finds warming leads to fewer floods
      • As Its Global Warming Narrative Unravels, The IPCC...
      • Review paper finds global Medieval Warm Period was...
      • 'Political advocacy by climate scientists has dama...
      • Never mind: IPCC claim of 750 million people kille...
      • Review paper finds no evidence warming has increas...
      • UN IPCC Reviewer Dr. Vincent Gray: IPCC climate mo...
      • Little Ice Age was due to low solar activity, not ...
      • Delingpole: Global warming believers are feeling t...
      • New paper finds Ireland climate controlled by natu...
      • New paper finds 'the reality of a link between lon...
      • IPCC says only way to lower temperatures is NEGATI...
      • Stanford scientist claims the current pace of zero...
      • How the government claims almost everybody can hav...
      • WSJ: EPA is banning coal even if it doesn't reduce...
      • WSJ Op-Ed: The media hail IPCC reports as definiti...
      • McIntyre demolishes IPCC credibility with one post
      • A climate scientist who accurately predicted the f...
      • New paper finds misguided biofuel policies provide...
      • Political support for climate policies eroding wor...
      • 'Missing' phytoplankton found, but Trenberth's ima...
      • IPCC Chairman Denies Global Warming Slowdown & pee...
      • Global Warming and the Credentialist Fallacy; 'the...
      • UK Paper: Global warming's credibility problem due...
      • New paper finds climate skeptics have pro-environm...
      • New paper predicts an increase of US thunderstorms...
      • Chaos theory explains why weather & climate cannot...
      • New paper attempts to explain why global warming c...
      • New paper finds another amplification mechanism by...
      • New paper finds sea levels rising at less than 4 i...
      • UK Telegraph: The obsession with climate change is...
      • New IPCC report claims greenhouse gases caused 140...
      • New study says threat of man-made global warming g...
      • More evidence carbon capture technology is doomed:...
      • IPCC didn't predict the global warming 'hiatus', b...
      • EPA used Obama's 'social cost of carbon' trick to ...
      • CBS News admits controversy about the halt of glob...
      • Review paper finds biosphere productivity of the A...
      • How the IPCC hides the 20 year halt in global warm...
      • Climategate 4.0? UN IPCC 'pause deniers' cover-up ...
      • World's 'top' climate scientists told to 'cover up...
      • Washington Times Op-Ed: Sea level claims are a pro...
      • Shocker: The "1000 year Colorado flood" is actuall...
      • Thanks Australia! Carbon tax failure will 'dim pro...
      • Contrary to reports, global warming studies don’t ...
      • Relax, Life on Earth has another good 1.75 billion...
      • AP: IPCC is 'struggling to explain why global warm...
      • New paper finds current climate models are 'unable...
      • Article in Nature offers 3 natural explanations fo...
      • Nature editorial: "The IPCC’s mega-assessments are...
      • New paper finds drought in the US Great Basin was ...
      • Executive Summary of the NIPCC Climate Change Reco...
      • UN official says people won't vote to control the ...
      • The IPCC global warming paradigm is falling apart;...
      • New paper claims wind & solar energy are now cheap...
      • Spencer: We are at the point where the IPCC global...
      • AGW is a theory full of holes and laden with fault...
      • Defensive IPCC lead author jumps to conclusions ba...
      • Climatologist explains halt of global warming via ...
      • New paper finds the oceans are a net source of CO2...
      • Energy Production Up In Spite Of Obama, Not Becaus...
      • Washington Times Op-Ed: The IPCC has been corrupte...
      • New paper finds reduction of soot caused ~17 times...
      • Global warming is just a QUARTER of what we said: ...
      • New paper finds climate models are unable to repro...
      • Dialing Back the Alarm on Climate Change
      • Debunking the latest asinine warmist claim: 'We're...
      • Obama's nominee says natural gas is a 'dead end' a...
      • New study finds electric vehicles are the worst po...
      • Paper finds rice paddy fields are a net source of ...
      • New paper finds glaciers may be advancing in size ...
      • New paper finds Mediterranean cover crops are a ne...
      • New paper finds sugarcane plantation is a net sour...
      • New paper finds hay, oats, canola crops are net so...
      • New paper finds global potential solar energy is 4...
      • New paper finds rice crops are a net source of CO2...
      • New paper finds the natural Pacific Decadal Oscill...
      • New paper finds models have a high rate of 'false ...
      • Environmentalism: The Road To A Primitive Existence
      • Physicists claim further evidence of link between ...
      • Eat your peas! UN says wasted food is frying the p...
      • New paper finds El Ninos were much more extreme in...
      • Spencer shows why Hayhoe's belief in catastrophic ...
      • New paper finds 'up to 30% discrepancy between mod...
      • The green dream is not compatible with billions of...
      • UK Express: Global warming? No, the planet is gett...
      • New paper finds grasslands are a net source of CO2...
      • New paper finds chaotic response to natural climat...
      • New paper finds another non-hockey-stick in Sweden
      • Where, Oh Where, Has that Global Warming Gone?
      • New paper finds IPCC climate models don't realisti...
      • Settled science update: Oceanographers find enormo...
      • WSJ: Fracking has done more for the poor than all ...
      • New paper finds South Pacific rainfall was up to 2...
    • ►  August (108)
    • ►  July (36)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile