Abstract

AbstractTo deeply understand the Asian summer monsoon (ASM) strength variation in its fringe region, we established a 205‐year stable oxygen isotope (δ18O) chronology based on four individual Pinus tabulaeformis Carr. from Ordos Plateau, China. First, we found that δ18O in tree rings inherits the signals of summer (June to August) monsoonal precipitation δ18O (δ18OP). Second, relative humidity (RH) was observed to have a large effect on the δ18O of pine trees. The tree ring δ18O series significantly correlates with the observed local RH from June to August (RHJJA) with r = −0.65 (N = 56, p < 0.001). The RH over Ordos Plateau is greatly influenced by ASM‐related precipitation. As such, it could well reflect the variations of ASM intensity. Thus, we reconstructed the RHJJA over Ordos, the center of the ASM fringe region (ASMFR), for the last two centuries. Our reconstructed RHJJA series has a large geographical and spatial representativeness, which is well compared with other precipitation reconstructions in ASMFR and jointly reflects ASM variations in the past. The RHJJA reconstruction showed that the 1870s–1890s were the wettest years in the entire reconstruction, while the middle‐late 1920s were the driest. From 1930 to 2012, the RH of the study area continuously decreased. We found significantly negative correlations between RHJJA and the Central Pacific sea surface temperature. This finding means that if the El Niño–Southern Oscillation of the Central Pacific continues to increase in the future, the aridification in the ASMFR will be intensified.

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