Twentieth century dust lows and the weakening of the westerly winds over the Tibetan Plateau: Dust and the Westerlies over the TP

Understanding past atmospheric dust variability is necessary to put modern atmospheric dust into historical context and assess the impacts of dust on the climate. In Asia, meteorological data of atmospheric dust is temporally limited, beginning only in the 1950s. High-resolution ice cores provide th...

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Published inGeophysical research letters Vol. 42; no. 7
Main Authors Grigholm, B., Mayewski, P. A., Kang, S., Zhang, Y., Morgenstern, U., Schwikowski, M., Kaspari, S., Aizen, V., Aizen, E., Takeuchi, N., Maasch, K. A., Birkel, S., Handley, M., Sneed, S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Geophysical Union 21.03.2015
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Summary:Understanding past atmospheric dust variability is necessary to put modern atmospheric dust into historical context and assess the impacts of dust on the climate. In Asia, meteorological data of atmospheric dust is temporally limited, beginning only in the 1950s. High-resolution ice cores provide the ideal archive for reconstructing pre-instrumental atmospheric dust concentrations. Using a ~500-year (1477-1982AD) annually resolved calcium (Ca) dust proxy from a Tibetan Plateau (TP) ice core, we demonstrate the lowest atmospheric dust concentrations in the past ~500 years during the latter 20th century. Declines in late 19th-20th century Ca concentrations significantly correspond with regional zonal wind trends from two reanalysis models, suggesting that the Ca record provides a proxy for the westerlies. Twentieth century warming and attendant atmospheric pressure reductions over northern Asia have potentially reduced temperature/pressure gradients resulting in lower zonal wind velocities and associated dust entrainment/transport in the past ~500 years over the TP.
Bibliography:USDOE Office of Science (SC)
ATM #0754644; P2C2 #1401899; DGE-1144423
ISSN:0094-8276
1944-8007