A Link Between Hydroclimate Variability and Biomass Burning During the Last Millennium in the Interior Pacific Northwest

Author:

Mark S. Z.1ORCID,Abbott M. B.1,Steinman B. A.2ORCID,Fernandez A.3ORCID,Wise E. K.4ORCID,Walsh M. K.5,Whitlock C.6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geology and Environmental Science University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh PA USA

2. Large Lakes Observatory University of Minnesota Duluth Duluth MN USA

3. University of Minnesota Twin‐Cities Minneapolis MN USA

4. Department of Geography University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill NC USA

5. Department of Geography Central Washington University Ellensburg WA USA

6. Department of Earth Sciences Montana State University Bozeman MT USA

Abstract

AbstractWe present oxygen isotope and charcoal accumulation records from two lakes in eastern Washington that have sufficient temporal resolution to quantitatively compare with tree‐ring records and meteorological data. Hydroclimate reconstructions from tree‐rings and lake sediments show close correspondence after accounting for seasonal‐ to centennial‐ scale temporal sensitivities. Carbonate δ18O measurements from Castor and Round lakes reveal that the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) experienced wetter November‐March conditions than the Little Ice Age (LIA). Charcoal records from Castor, Round, and nearby lakes show elevated fire activity during the LIA compared to the MCA. Increased multidecadal hydroclimate variability after 1250 CE is evident in proxy records throughout western North America. In the Upper Columbia River Basin, multidecadal wet periods during the LIA may have enhanced fuel loads that burned in subsequent dry periods. A notable decline in biomass burning occurred with Euro‐American settlement in the late nineteenth century.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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