About - SW Paleoclimate
Paleoclimatology is the study of past climates, prior to the time when instrumental records from thermometer and rains gages are available. In the Southwest, the longest instrumental records date back about 100 years. Understanding the climate of the past is important for understanding the current climate, including extreme events such as drought, in a long-term context. For example, are the drought conditions that much of the Southwest has been experiencing over the past couple of decades unusual, and due to anthropogenic climate change? Or are these conditions part of the natural variability of the climate system? The instrumental record of climate is only 100 years and not long enough to document rare events, such as multi-decadal droughts, that many happen only every couple of centuries.
Paleoclimate data come from a variety of environmental recorders that reflect climate. In the Southwest, these including historical documents, tree rings, layers of organic and mineral materials that accumulate in the bottoms of lakes, packrat middens, and cave formations called speleothems. The climate proxy records that come from these environmental recorders reveal different aspects of climate, at different space and time scales. Using tree rings as an example, tree-ring widths can record annual variations in seasonal rainfall. Southwestern conifers, the most useful trees for recording past moisture variability, are found throughout the region mostly above 4000 feet and can grow to be 300-500 years old, or older. In the Southwest, tree-ring records have been particularly useful for shed light on the length and severity of past droughts.
Links / Resources:
- Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research (University of Arizona): Resources on the basics of tree-ring science, data, bibliography of scientific literature and more
- National Centers for Environmental Information Paleoclimatology Archive: World's largest archive of climate and paleoclimatology data
- National Centers for Environmental Information: Paleo Education and Outreach: Introduction to Paleoclimatology, Paleo Perspectives, various Explainers
- TreeFlow: Reconstruction of past streamflow from tree rings
- Tree Ring Drought Atlas: Reconstructions of spatial patterns of drought for regions that include North America and Mexico based on tree-ring data