Holocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.

Water resources in western North America depend on winter precipitation, yet our knowledge of its sensitivity to climate change remains limited. Similarly, understanding the potential for future loss of winter snow pack requires a longer perspective on natural climate variability. Here we use stable...

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Main Authors: Ersek, V, Clark, P, Mix, A, Cheng, H, Edwards, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2012
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author Ersek, V
Clark, P
Mix, A
Cheng, H
Edwards, R
author_facet Ersek, V
Clark, P
Mix, A
Cheng, H
Edwards, R
author_sort Ersek, V
collection OXFORD
description Water resources in western North America depend on winter precipitation, yet our knowledge of its sensitivity to climate change remains limited. Similarly, understanding the potential for future loss of winter snow pack requires a longer perspective on natural climate variability. Here we use stable isotopes from a speleothem in southwestern Oregon to reconstruct winter climate change for much of the past 13,000 years. We find that on millennial time scales there were abrupt transitions between warm-dry and cold-wet regimes. Temperature and precipitation changes on multi-decadal to century timescales are consistent with ocean-atmosphere interactions that arise from mechanisms similar to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. Extreme cold-wet and warm-dry events that punctuated the Holocene appear to be sensitive to solar forcing, possibly through the influence of the equatorial Pacific on the winter storm tracks reaching the US Pacific Northwest region.
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spelling oxford-uuid:df577a08-fcbd-459e-8a85-6c22efaebf652022-03-27T09:38:44ZHolocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:df577a08-fcbd-459e-8a85-6c22efaebf65EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Ersek, VClark, PMix, ACheng, HEdwards, RWater resources in western North America depend on winter precipitation, yet our knowledge of its sensitivity to climate change remains limited. Similarly, understanding the potential for future loss of winter snow pack requires a longer perspective on natural climate variability. Here we use stable isotopes from a speleothem in southwestern Oregon to reconstruct winter climate change for much of the past 13,000 years. We find that on millennial time scales there were abrupt transitions between warm-dry and cold-wet regimes. Temperature and precipitation changes on multi-decadal to century timescales are consistent with ocean-atmosphere interactions that arise from mechanisms similar to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. Extreme cold-wet and warm-dry events that punctuated the Holocene appear to be sensitive to solar forcing, possibly through the influence of the equatorial Pacific on the winter storm tracks reaching the US Pacific Northwest region.
spellingShingle Ersek, V
Clark, P
Mix, A
Cheng, H
Edwards, R
Holocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.
title Holocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.
title_full Holocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.
title_fullStr Holocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.
title_full_unstemmed Holocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.
title_short Holocene winter climate variability in mid-latitude western North America.
title_sort holocene winter climate variability in mid latitude western north america
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AT mixa holocenewinterclimatevariabilityinmidlatitudewesternnorthamerica
AT chengh holocenewinterclimatevariabilityinmidlatitudewesternnorthamerica
AT edwardsr holocenewinterclimatevariabilityinmidlatitudewesternnorthamerica