Abstract

The presence of an ancient, high-elevation pine forest in the Natural Park of Sierras de Cazorla in southern Spain, including some trees reaching >700 years, stimulated efforts to develop high-resolution temperature reconstructions in an otherwise drought-dominated region. Here, we present a reconstruction of spring and fall temperature variability derived from black pine tree ring maximum densities reaching back to 1350 Coefficient of Efficiency (CE). The reconstruction is accompanied by large uncertainties resulting from low interseries correlations among the single trees and a limited number of reliable instrumental stations in the study region. The reconstructed temperature history reveals warm conditions during the early 16th and 19th centuries that were of similar magnitude to the warm temperatures recorded since the late 20th century. A sharp transition from cold conditions in the late 18th century (t1781–1810 = −1.15 °C ± 0.64 °C) to warm conditions in the early 19th century (t1818–1847 = −0.06 °C ± 0.49 °C) is centered around the 1815 Tambora eruption (t1816 = −2.1 °C ± 0.55 °C). The new reconstruction from southern Spain correlates significantly with high-resolution temperature histories from the Pyrenees located ~600 km north of the Cazorla Natural Park, an association that is temporally stable over the past 650 years (r1350–2005 > 0.3, p < 0.0001) and particularly strong in the high-frequency domain (rHF > 0.4). Yet, only a few of the reconstructed cold extremes (1453, 1601, 1816) coincide with large volcanic eruptions, suggesting that the severe cooling events in southern Spain are controlled by internal dynamics rather than external (volcanic) forcing.

Highlights

  • The climate of the Iberian Peninsula is characterized by a sustained warming trend of >1.0 ◦ C since the late 20th century [1]

  • The original and 30-year low-pass filtered chronologies correlate at rOrig = 0.89 and rLF = 0.81 since 1300 Coefficient of Efficiency (CE), respectively, indicating that the truncation of tree-rings older than 300 and 200 years had a stronger effect on the low frequency variance

  • The underlying measurement series of this reconstruction were truncated at a biological age >300 years to support the application of a detrending method (RCS) capable of preserving low-frequency variability in the resulting index chronology

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Summary

Introduction

The climate of the Iberian Peninsula is characterized by a sustained warming trend of >1.0 ◦ C since the late 20th century [1]. Climate models indicate increased frequencies of extreme events, including persistent heatwaves and severe flooding and drought, to occur over the 30–80 years in the western Mediterranean [4,5,6]. Placing these current and forthcoming dynamics into a longer-term context is challenging, as only a few high-resolution reconstructions have been developed providing information on natural climate variability and extremes on the Iberian Peninsula [7,8,9]. Documentary evidence on rogations [10,11,12]

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