Did the Bronze Age deforestation of Europe affect its climate? A regional climate model study using pollen-based land cover reconstructions
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Published:2023-07-27
Issue:7
Volume:19
Page:1507-1530
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ISSN:1814-9332
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Container-title:Climate of the Past
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Strandberg GustavORCID, Chen Jie, Fyfe Ralph, Kjellström ErikORCID, Lindström Johan, Poska AnneliORCID, Zhang QiongORCID, Gaillard Marie-José
Abstract
Abstract. This paper studies the impact of land use and land cover change
(LULCC) on the climate around 2500 years ago (2.5 ka), a period of rapid
transitions across the European landscape. One global climate model was used
to force two regional climate models (RCMs). The RCMs used two land cover
descriptions. The first was from a dynamical vegetation model representing
potential land cover, and the second was from a land cover description reconstructed from
pollen data by statistical interpolation. The two different land covers
enable us to study the impact of land cover on climate conditions. Since the
difference in landscape openness between potential and reconstructed land
cover is mostly due to LULCC, this can be taken as a measure of early
anthropogenic effects on climate. Since the sensitivity to LULCC is
dependent on the choice of climate model, we also use two RCMs. The results show that the simulated 2.5 ka climate was warmer than the
simulated pre-industrial (PI, 1850 CE) climate. The largest differences are seen in
northern Europe, where the 2.5 ka climate is 2–4 ∘C warmer than
the PI period. In summer, the difference between the simulated 2.5 ka and PI climates
is smaller (0–3 ∘C), with the smallest differences in southern
Europe. Differences in seasonal precipitation are mostly within ±10 %. In parts of northern Europe, the 2.5 ka climate is up to 30 %
wetter in winter than that of the PI climate. In summer there is a tendency for the 2.5 ka climate to be drier than the PI climate in the Mediterranean region. The results also suggest that LULCC at 2.5 ka impacted the climate in parts
of Europe. Simulations including reconstructed LULCC (i.e. those using
pollen-derived land cover descriptions) give up to 1 ∘C higher
temperature in parts of northern Europe in winter and up to 1.5 ∘C warmer in southern Europe in summer than simulations with potential land
cover. Although the results are model dependent, the relatively strong
response implies that anthropogenic land cover changes that had occurred
during the Neolithic and Bronze Age could have affected the European climate
by 2.5 ka.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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