Abstract

    Recurrent droughts in history, especially climatic aridity since the mid-20th century have aroused great social anxiety about the water resources in the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP). Given lacking of extended instrumental-like records, new precipitation reconstructions in the CLP are badly needed for objectively evaluating the current precipitation situation, understanding the spatial-temporal differences, and serving for predicting the future. Here we present a tree-ring-based 248-year regional precipitation reconstruction (P8–7) in the Heichashan Mountain, which can significantly represent the past dry-wet variations in the eastern CLP (ECLP). P8–7 explains 48.72% of the instrumental record, reveals a wetting trend since the early 2000s and attains the second wettest period over the past 248 years in 2014–2020 AD. The 1920s/2010s is recorded as the driest/wettest decade. 1910–1932 AD ranks as the driest period over the past centuries. The 19th century is comparatively wet while the 20th century is dry. Precipitation in the ECLP and western CLP (WCLP) has changed synchronously over most time of the past two centuries. However, regional difference exists in the 1890s–1920s when a gradually drying occurred in the ECLP, while not evident in the WCLP, although the 1920s megadrought occurred in the CLP. Moreover, the 20th-century drying in the ECLP begins in the 1950s, later than the WCLP. It reveals that P8–7 variability is primarily influenced by the Asian Summer Monsoon and related large-scale circulations. The seismic phase shift of the contemporaneous Northern Hemispheric temperature may also be responsible for the 1920s megadrought.

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