A Climate and History Case Study of 18th- and 19th-Century Multidecadal Droughts in East Africa Using a new Tree-Ring Drought Atlas
Abstract
Historians and paleoclimatologists have both identified the decades spanning the late-18th and early-19th centuries in many East African regions as a period of prolonged and severe drought. A challenge that emerges from both the historical evidence and the paleolimnological data that have been primarily used to characterize this drought period, however, concerns the dating of events and the characterization of their spatial character; both oral traditions and lake-core proxies cannot typically offer hydroclimate estimates with seasonal or annual resolution, nor can they provide gridded reconstructions on the order of 1° latitude and longitude. The new East African Drought Atlas (EADA) incorporates far-field dendroclimatic records and several local East African tree-ring chronologies to provide estimates of the self-calibrating Palmer Drought Severity Index (scPDSI) on a 0.5° latitude-longitude grid. We present the Point-by-Point Regression technique that was used to create the EADA, the rationale for the employed input data network, and the calibration and validation skill of the derived hydroclimatic field reconstruction. We use the EADA to characterize the timing of two decadal-scale droughts, centered over the Uganda and Kenya regions, which occurred in the late 18th century and early in the 19th century and were separated by a shorter, but pronounced wet period. We characterize the spatial patterns of the associated events and the dynamical causes that that the patterns imply. The reconstructed droughts are also compared to historical and paleolimnological data to evaluate the robustness of the reconstruction and the degree of agreement across the different sources of information.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2022
- Bibcode:
- 2022AGUFMPP42B..02S