A seesaw in Mediterranean precipitation during the Roman Period linked to millennial-scale changes in the North Atlantic
Publication date
2012
Authors
Dermody, B.
Boer, H.J. de
Bierkens, M.F.P.
Weber, S.L.
Wassen, M.J.
Dekker, S.C.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
We present a reconstruction of the change in climatic
humidity around the Mediterranean between 3000–
1000 yr BP. Using a range of proxy archives and model simulations
we demonstrate that climate during this period was
typified by a millennial-scale seesaw in climatic humidity
between Spain and Israel on one side and the Central
Mediterranean and Turkey on the other, similar to precipitation
anomalies associated with the East Atlantic/West Russia
pattern in current climate. We find that changes in the position
and intensity of the jet stream indicated by our analysis
correlate with millennial changes in North Atlantic sea surface
temperature. A model simulation indicates the proxies
of climatic humidity used in our analysis were unlikely to
be influenced by climatic aridification caused by deforestation
during the Roman Period. That finding is supported by
an analysis of the distribution of archaeological sites in the
Eastern Mediterranean which exhibits no evidence that human
habitation distribution changed since ancient times as a
result of climatic aridification. Therefore we conclude that
changes in climatic humidity over the Mediterranean during
the Roman Period were primarily caused by a modification
of the jet stream linked to sea surface temperature change in
the North Atlantic. Based on our findings, we propose that
ocean-atmosphere coupling may have contributed to regulating
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation intensity
during the period of analysis.
Keywords
climatic humidity, climatic aridification, Mediterranean, sea surface temperature change, climate change