Abstract

Due to the scarcity of observational data in the early 20th century, very limited research has explored the impact of human activities on temperature extremes at the regional scale. Here we used a newly developed homogenized near-surface air temperature dataset from the beginning of the 20th century to estimate the frequency and intensity of extreme temperatures in eastern China and evaluate their anthropogenic influence based on models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6). We found clear increases in warm extremes and decreases in cold extremes since 1901 for both annual and seasonal mean temperatures, with more pronounced changes in recent decades. The most significant warming occurred in spring and winter, approximately double the smallest warming observed in autumn. The CMIP6 models generally replicated the century-scale warming in annual and seasonal temperature extremes, showing increases in the frequency and intensity of warm extremes and corresponding decreases in cold extremes. The optimal fingerprinting detections suggest that the century-scale warming can be clearly attributed to anthropogenic forcing, including changes in seasonal extreme temperatures. Most observed changes in extreme temperatures were attributable to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, partially offset by a smaller negative impact from anthropogenic aerosol forcing, whereas natural forcing has played a minor role. These results provide important information for accurately projecting future changes in temperature extremes.

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