Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print U of Minnesota researchers uncover surprising effects of climate patterns in ancient China

U of Minnesota researchers uncover surprising effects of climate patterns in ancient China

November 10, 2008

University of Minnesota geology and geophysics researchers, along with their colleagues from China, have uncovered surprising effects of climate patterns on social upheaval and the fall of dynasties in ancient China.

Their research identifies a natural phenomenon that may have been the last straw for some Chinese dynasties: a weakening of the summer Asian Monsoons. Such weakening accompanied the fall of three dynasties and now could be lessening precipitation in northern China.




The study, led researchers from the University of Minnesota and Lanzhou University in China, appears in the Nov. 7 issue of Science.

The work rests on climate records preserved in the layers of stone in a 118-millimeter-long stalagmite found in Wanxiang Cave in Gansu Province, China. By measuring amounts of the elements uranium and thorium throughout the stalagmite, the researchers could tell the date each layer was formed. And by analyzing the "signatures" of two forms of oxygen in the stalagmite, they could match amounts of rainfall--a measure of summer monsoon strength--to those dates.

The stalagmite was formed over 1,810 years; stone at its base dates from A.D. 190, and stone at its tip was laid down in A.D. 2003, the year the stalagmite was collected.

"It is not intuitive that a record of surface weather would be preserved in underground cave deposits. This research nicely illustrates the promise of paleoclimate science to look beyond the obvious and see new possibilities," said David Verardo, director of the U.S. National Science Foundation's Paleoclimatology Program, which funded the research.

"Summer monsoon winds originate in the Indian Ocean and sweep into China," said Hai Cheng, corresponding author of the paper and a research scientist at the University of Minnesota. "When the summer monsoon is stronger, it pushes farther northwest into China."

These moisture-laden winds bring rain necessary for cultivating rice. But when the monsoon is weak, the rains stall farther south and east, depriving northern and western parts of China of summer rains. A lack of rainfall could have contributed to social upheaval and the fall of dynasties.

The researchers discovered that periods of weak summer monsoons coincided with the last years of the Tang, Yuan, and Ming dynasties, which are known to have been times of popular unrest. Conversely, the research group found that a strong summer monsoon prevailed during one of China's "golden ages," the Northern Song Dynasty. The ample summer monsoon rains may have contributed to the rapid expansion of rice cultivation from southern China to the midsection of the country. During the Northern Song Dynasty, rice first became China's main staple crop, and China's population doubled.

"The waxing and waning of summer monsoon rains are just one piece of the puzzle of changing climate and culture around the world," said Larry Edwards, Distinguished McKnight University Professor in Geology and Geophysics and a co-author on the paper. For example, the study showed that the dry period at the end of the Tang Dynasty coincided with a previously identified drought halfway around the world, in Meso-America, which has been linked to the fall of the Mayan civilization.

The study also showed that the ample summer rains of the Northern Song Dynasty coincided with the beginning of the well-known Medieval Warm Period in Europe and Greenland. During this time--the late 10th century--Vikings colonized southern Greenland. Centuries later, a series of weak monsoons prevailed as Europe and Greenland shivered through what geologists call the Little Ice Age. In the 14th and early 15th centuries, as the cold of the Little Ice Age settled into Greenland, the Vikings disappeared from there. At the same time, on the other side of the world, the weak monsoons of the 14th century coincided with the end of the Yuan Dynasty.

A second major finding concerns the relationship between temperature and the strength of the monsoons. For most of the last 1,810 years, as average temperatures rose, so, too, did the strength of the summer monsoon. That relationship flipped, however, around 1960, a sign that the late 20th century weakening of the monsoon and drying in northwestern China was caused by human activity.

If carbon dioxide is the culprit, as some have proposed, the drying trend may well continue in Inner Mongolia, northern China and neighboring areas on the fringes of the monsoon's reach, as society is likely to continue adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere for the foreseeable future. If, however, the culprit is man-made soot, as others have proposed, the trend could be reversed, the researchers said, by reduction of soot emissions.

University of Minnesota



Related Climate Pattern Current Events and Climate Pattern News Articles
Panama butterfly migrations linked to El Niño, climate change
A high-speed chase across the Panama Canal in a Boston Whaler may sound like the beginning of another James Bond film-but the protagonist of this story brandishes a butterfly net and studies the effects of climate change on insect migrations at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute.

Scientists discover new ocean current
Scientists at Georgia Tech have discovered a new climate pattern, the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation. This pattern explains, for the first time, changes in the water important in helping commercial fishermen understand fluctuations in the fish stock. They're also finding that as the Earth is warming, large fluctuations in these factors could help climatologists predict how oceans will respond in a warmer world.

Duke scientists explain gaps in nutrient availability within North Atlantic
Duke University oceanographers have developed an explanation for why a vast North Atlantic circulation zone can have a large variability in nutrient supplies needed to sustain ocean plants and, by extension, support the food web of marine life.
More Climate Pattern Current Events and Climate Pattern News Articles
Weather Patterns (Weather and Climate)

Weather Patterns (Weather and Climate)
by Terry Jennings (Author)

Weather and Climate is a brand new series that explores what causes our weather - why the world's weather is constantly changing, why different countries have different weather patterns, how meteorologists forecast weather and the effect the weather has on our lives. Weather Patterns looks at the many different climates of the world, from deserts to the polar regions, and from temperate zones to the tropics. It describes how the pattern of weather in a place affects the vegetation, animal life, agriculture and the lifestyles of the people who live there.

Unpredictable

Unpredictable
Directed By: Rob Lieberman
Also With: Jaime Paglia (Producer), Charlie Craig (Producer)



"Geography Basics: Climate, Water, and Living Patterns VHS"

"Geography Basics: Climate, Water, and Living Patterns VHS"
by Rainbow

Become familiar with the world's six primary climate regions.

The Global Climate System: Patterns, Processes, and Teleconnections

The Global Climate System: Patterns, Processes, and Teleconnections
by Howard A. Bridgman (Author), John E. Oliver (Author)

Over the last 20 years, developments in climatology have provided an amazing array of explanations for the pattern of world climates. This textbook examines the earth's climate systems in light of this incredible growth in data availability, data retrieval systems, and satellite and computer applications. It considers regional climate anomalies, developments in teleconnections, unusual sequences of recent climate change, and human impacts upon the climate system. The physical climate forms the main part of the book, but it also considers social and economic aspects of the global climate system. This textbook has been derived from the authors' extensive experience of teaching climatology and atmospheric science. Each chapter contains an essay by a specialist in the field to enhance the...

  2 each: Arrowhead Sillcock (255BFPSDBC)
by Arrowhead Brass Products

Sold as 2 UNITS at $23.57 per unit. (1 unit = each.) 1/2" IPS. Heavy pattern, large oval handle w/factory installed automatic self draining vacuum breaker. Use in freeze climates. Desirable when used in conjunction w/line stop valve. Brass. Bulk . Manufacturer number: 255BFPSDBC. SKU #: 4064416. Country of origin: (TBA). Distributed by Arrowhead Brass Products.

  Australian climate patterns (Nelson's Australasian paperbacks)
by J Gentilli (Author)



  Biological response to changes in climate patterns: population increases of gray snapper (Lutjanus griseus) in Texas bays and estuaries.(Report): An article from: Fishery Bulletin
by James M. Tolan (Author), Mark Fisher (Author)

This digital document is an article from Fishery Bulletin, published by National Marine Fisheries Service on January 1, 2009. The length of the article is 5717 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Biological response to changes in climate patterns: population increases of gray snapper (Lutjanus griseus) in Texas bays and estuaries.(Report)
Author: James M. Tolan
Publication: Fishery Bulletin (Magazine/Journal)
Date: January 1, 2009
Publisher: National Marine Fisheries Service
Volume: 107 Issue: 1 Page: 36(9)

Article Type: Report

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage...

Unpredictable [HD]

Unpredictable [HD]
Directed By: Rob Lieberman
Also With: Jaime Paglia (Producer), Charlie Craig (Producer)



  Global Patterns: Climate, Vegetation, and Soils
by Wallace E. Akin (Author)



  Climate change and the migratory pattern for Norwegian spring-spawning herring-implications for management [An article from: Marine Policy]
by E.H. Sissener (Author), T. Bjorndal (Author)

This digital document is a journal article from Marine Policy, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Norwegian spring-spawning herring (Clupea harengus) is a migratory fish stock, and the migratory pattern has changed several times. There seems to be a connection between altering climatic conditions and the size of fish, year-class strength and the migratory pattern. The changing juridical status of the herring has caused problems and conflicts between the parties involved in the fishery. Investigating whether the change is due to over fishing or to environmental causes, or a combination of both, was one of the objectives...

© 2009 BrightSurf.com