Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Climate of Trees
Tue Jun 03, 2003

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Hi, I'm Bryan Yeaton, and this is The Weather Notebook's weekly segment on Global Climate Change. Today, Jeff Rice reports how trees can tell the climate record of a thousand years.

In the simplest terms, the larger the tree ring, the faster the tree grew and the better the growing conditions were for that year. Those conditions are usually influenced by rainfall or temperature, so that makes each tree a type of living weather station.

MH: You know, there's a guy called Bob Dylan had a real good line, you don't need a weather man to know which way the wind blows... No offense, but he had something there.

Dr. Malcolm Hughes is a professor at the University of Arizona's world renowned tree ring lab in Tucson. He says typical weather records only go back about 100 years.

MH: That's only three 30 year mortgages.

By looking at tree rings Hughes and other researchers can create accurate, year by year weather records dating back more than a millenium.

MH: For example, we've got a drought going on here for the moment in this part of the southwest that by some definitions you could say has been going for four years. It turns out it's not all that unusual. There have been droughts about this severe two or three times a century for the last millenium. The good news is that very few of them have gone on longer than four years. So, for a scientist, it's the extraordinarily unusual situation of being able to say something comforting.

Hughes says that kind of detailed, year by year information could be of interest to farmers or other people trying to anticipate regional climate and weather patterns on a human scale. For The Weather Notebook, I'm Jeff Rice.

Our series on Global Climate Change has been generously funded by the New England Science Center Collaborative, and the Roy A. Hunt Foundation. Thanks today to the entire Weather Notebook staff, Doug Sanborn, Melody Nester, Sean Doucette, and Peter Crane.

Today's Links

The Ultimate Tree Ring Web-pages
http://web.utk.edu/~grissino/




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