http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jgrd.50692/abstract

Volcanic cooling signal in tree ring temperature records for the past
millennium

Rosanne D'Arrigo, Rob Wilson, Kevin J. Anchukaitis
Article first published online: 29 AUG 2013
DOI: 10.1002/jgrd.50692

Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

Volume 118, Issue 16, pages 9000–9010, 27 August 2013

Keywords:

volcanism;dendrochronology;maximum latewood density;tree
rings;cross-dating;temperature reconstructions

Abstract

[1] Tree rings are an important proxy for understanding the timing and
environmental consequences of volcanic eruptions as they are precisely
dated at annual resolution and, particularly in tree line regions of the
world, sensitive to cold extremes that can result from climatically
significant volcanic episodes. Volcanic signals have been detected in ring
widths and by the presence of frost-damaged rings, yet are often most
clearly and quantitatively represented within maximum latewood density
series. Ring width and density reconstructions provide quantitative
information for inferring the variability and sensitivity of the Earth's
climate system on local to hemispheric scales. After a century of
dendrochronological science, there is no evidence, as recently theorized,
that volcanic or other adverse events cause such severely cold conditions
near latitudinal tree line that rings might be missing in all trees at a
given site in a volcanic year (“stand-wide” missing rings), resulting in
misdating of the chronology. Rather, there is a clear indication of precise
dating and development of rings in at least some trees at any given site,
even under adverse cold conditions, based on both actual tree ring
observations and modeling analyses. The muted evidence for volcanic cooling
in large-scale temperature reconstructions based at least partly on ring
widths reflects several factors that are completely unrelated to any
misdating. These include biological persistence of such records, as well as
varying spatial patterns of response of the climate system to volcanic
events, such that regional cooling, particularly for ring widths rather
than density, can be masked in the large-scale reconstruction average.

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