Artículos de revistas
Tree ring reconstructed rainfall over the southern Amazon Basin
Fecha
2017-07Registro en:
Lopez Callejas, Lidio; Stahle, David; Villalba, Ricardo; Torbenson, Max; Feng, Song; et al.; Tree ring reconstructed rainfall over the southern Amazon Basin; American Geophysical Union; Geophysical Research Letters; 44; 14; 7-2017; 7410-7418
0094-8276
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Lopez Callejas, Lidio
Stahle, David
Villalba, Ricardo
Torbenson, Max
Feng, Song
Cook, Edward
Resumen
Moisture sensitive tree ring chronologies of Centrolobium microchaete have been developed from seasonally dry forests in the southern Amazon Basin and used to reconstruct wet season rainfall totals from 1799 to 2012, adding over 150 years of rainfall estimates to the short instrumental record for the region. The reconstruction is correlated with the same atmospheric variables that influence the instrumental measurements of wet season rainfall. Anticyclonic circulation over midlatitude South America promotes equatorward surges of cold and relatively dry extratropical air that converge with warm moist air to form deep convection and heavy rainfall over this sector of the southern Amazon Basin. Interesting droughts and pluvials are reconstructed during the preinstrumental nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but the tree ring reconstruction suggests that the strong multidecadal variability in instrumental and reconstructed wet season rainfall after 1950 may have been unmatched since 1799.