Abstract

Understanding of long-term climatic change prior to instrumental records necessitates reconstructions from documentary and palaeoclimate archives. In southern Africa, documentary-derived chronologies of nineteenth century rainfall variability and palaeoclimate records have permitted new insights into rainfall variability over past centuries. Rarely considered, however, is the climatic information within early colonial documentary records that emerge from the late fifteenth century onwards. This paper examines evidence for (multi-)seasonal dry and wet events within these earlier written records (c. 1550–1830 CE) from southeast Africa (Mozambique) and west-central Africa (Angola) in conjunction with palaeoclimate records from multiple proxies. Specifically, it aims to understand whether these sources agree in their signals of rainfall variability over a 280-year period covering the ‘main phase’ Little Ice Age (LIA) in southern Africa. The two source types generally, but do not always, show agreement within the two regions. This appears to reflect both the nature of rainfall variability and the context behind documentary recording. Both source types indicate that southeast and west-central Africa were distinct regions of rainfall variability over seasonal and longer timescales during the LIA, with southeast Africa being generally drier and west-central Africa generally wetter. However, the documentary records reveal considerable variability within these mean state climatic conditions, with multi-year droughts a recurrent feature in both regions. An analysis of long-term rainfall links with the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) in southeast Africa suggests a complex and possibly non-stationary relationship. Overall, early colonial records provide valuable information for constraining hydroclimate variability where palaeoclimate records remain sparse.

Highlights

  • Analyses of long-term trends in rainfall variability are crucial for understanding changes in the timing, distribution, and amount of precipitation

  • It should be noted that over-representation of drier seasons is common in documentary reconstructions in dryland areas (Nash et al 2016b), the opposite pattern has been observed in central Namibia (Grab and Zumthurm 2018)

  • This study has extended and revised existing documentary-derived chronologies of seasonal rainfall variability in southeast and west-central Africa and has compared these to a range of palaeoclimate proxy records covering the Little Ice Age (LIA)

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Summary

Introduction

Analyses of long-term trends in rainfall variability are crucial for understanding changes in the timing, distribution, and amount of precipitation. Recent years have seen the proliferation of palaeoclimate proxy records in southern Africa and the African continent (Nash et al 2016a). Annually resolved palaeoclimate records remain sparse in comparison to other regions and continents, including other southern hemisphere landmasses such as South America and Australasia (Neukom and Gergis 2012). In the absence of high numbers of annually resolved rainfall reconstructions, documentarybased reconstructions have taken on particular importance in extending existing records of seasonal rainfall variability and extreme events (Allan et al 2016; Nash et al 2016b; Neukom et al 2013; Nash and Hannaford 2020). Wind data recorded within ships’ logbooks have been used to reconstruct precipitation in South Africa from the 1790s onwards (Hannaford et al 2015)

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