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Historical droughts recorded in extended Juniperus procera ring-width chronologies from the Ethiopian Highlands

In the Horn of Africa, little is known about temporal changes in hydroclimate owing to the influence of multiple weather systems, the complex terrain, and the sparse instrumental records. Absolutely dated tree-ring records offer the potential to extend our understanding of climate into the pre-instr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of biometeorology 2020-05, Vol.64 (5), p.739-753
Main Authors: Gebregeorgis, E. Gebrehiwot, Robertson, I., Koprowski, M., Zhou, L. P., Gao, P., Williams, A. P., Eshetu, Z., Wils, T. H. G.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In the Horn of Africa, little is known about temporal changes in hydroclimate owing to the influence of multiple weather systems, the complex terrain, and the sparse instrumental records. Absolutely dated tree-ring records offer the potential to extend our understanding of climate into the pre-instrumental era, but tree-ring studies in this region, and indeed all of tropical Africa, have been rare largely due to lack of an annual climate cycle that reliably produces annual tree-rings. In this study, 40 cores were obtained from 31 Juniperus procera trees growing in the grounds of Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo churches in the Gonder region of Ethiopia. The samples were cross-dated using a re-iterative process involving identifying anatomical features from high-resolution images. The tentative ring-width chronologies were revised after the determination of bomb-peak accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon dates. Individual series were significantly correlated to the respective master chronologies (r > 0.55; P  
ISSN:0020-7128
1432-1254
DOI:10.1007/s00484-020-01863-7