Abstract

This reconstruction of the ice winter severity in the Western Baltic is based for the period 1878-1993 on the accumulated areal ice volume along the German Baltic coast with observations from 13 coastal stations; for the period 1701-1877 it is based on the accumulated areal ice volume divided into 7 classes (ice winter severity types). The various types of data consulted in the latter case provided ice data of good spatial and temporal resolution. Speerschneider's compilation of data relating to ice conditions in Danish Baltic waters was found to be a valuable source of information. Using a classification table for the periods 1907-1943 and 1947-1992, five of the seven ice winter types have been derived with certainty as they are characterized by typical stages of maximum ice cover throughout the Western Baltic. The Gaussian lowpass-filtered time series of the ice winter index numerals with a 20 year cutoff period shows four periods of varying ice winter severity over a secular range: 1701-1720: slightly increased ice winter severity with regard to the mean of the 1701-1993 time series; this period can be assigned to the end of a cooling phase during ‘Little Ice Age’ which in central Europe peaked in the second half of the 17th c. 1721-1760: ice winter severity is clearly reduced in this period. 1761-1860: ice winter severity is clearly increased (maximum occurs around 1800) towards the end of the ‘Little Ice Age’, associated with increased variability of ice production. 1861-1993: the present-day ice winter regime when three short intervals with increased ice winter severity (the 1890s, 1940s and 1980s) and a period of greatly reduced ice winter severity (between 1900 and the mid-1920s) stand out.

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