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2,200-Year tree-ring and lake-sediment based snowpack reconstruction for the northern Rocky Mountains highlights the historic magnitude of recent snow drought

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Spruce W. Schoenemann, Justin T Martin, Gregory T Pederson, and David B. McWethy, 2020-08-22, 2,200-Year tree-ring and lake-sediment based snowpack reconstruction for the northern Rocky Mountains highlights the historic magnitude of recent snow drought: Quaternary Science Advances, v. 2.

Summary

In recent decades, Rocky Mountain accumulated snowpack levels have experienced rapid declines, yet long-term records of snowpack prior to the installation of snowpack observation stations in the early and mid 20th century are limited. To date, a small number of tree-ring based reconstructions of April 1 Snow Water Equivalent (SWE) in the northern Rocky Mountains have extended modern records of snowpack variability to ∼1200 C.E. Carbonate isotope lake sediment records, provide an opportunity to further extend tree-ring based reconstructions through the Holocene, providing a millennial-scale temporal record that allows for an evaluation of multi-scale drivers of snowpack variability, from internal climate dynamics to orbital-scale forcings. [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • North Central CASC

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalQuaternary Science Advances
parts
typeDOI
valuehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.qsa.2020.100013
typeVolume
value2

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