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Publication Date
1 May 2019

Twentieth Century Hydroclimate Changes Consistent with Human Influence

Subtitle
A signal of greenhouse-gas-forced change is robustly detectable in reconstructions of the Palmer drought severity index.
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Science

This study compared predicted and real-world soil moisture data to look for human influences on global drought patterns in the 20th century. Climate models predict that a human "fingerprint" - a global pattern of regional drying and wetting characteristic of the climate response to greenhouse gases - should be visible early in the 1900s and increase over time as emissions increased. Using observational data and data reconstructed from tree rings, the researchers found that the real-world data began to align with the fingerprint within the first half of the 20th century.

Impact

This study is the first to provide historical evidence connecting human-generated emissions and drought at near-global scales.

Summary

Using CMIP5 models, we obtained a “fingerprint” of greenhouse gases on the Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI) and performed a formal detection and attribution analysis for three periods:

  • 1900-1949: The signal is detectable: highly unusual to have arisen from internal variability (which we estimate from pre-1850 GDA data and CMIP5 piControl simulations.  It is attributable to the collection of external forcings included in the CMIP5 simulations.
  • 1950-1975: The signal is negative and unlikely to have arisen from internal variability alone.  It suggests a possible role for aerosol forcing, although the fingerprint of aerosols remains poorly understood due to uncertainties in aerosol emissions, radiative forcing, and hydroclimate response.
  • 1980-2017: The signal is once again positive, but has not yet re-emerged from the “noise” of naturally forced variability.  This may be related to recent “hiatus” conditions characterized by anomalously cool equatorial Pacific SSTs and relatively muted warming.
Point of Contact
Kate Marvel
Institution(s)
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS)
Funding Program Area(s)
Publication