@article{abdbc6807e79459d99346a452cd51391,
title = "Last millennium Northern Hemisphere summer temperatures from tree rings: Part II, spatially resolved reconstructions",
abstract = "Climate field reconstructions from networks of tree-ring proxy data can be used to characterize regional-scale climate changes, reveal spatial anomaly patterns associated with atmospheric circulation changes, radiative forcing, and large-scale modes of ocean-atmosphere variability, and provide spatiotemporal targets for climate model comparison and evaluation. Here we use a multiproxy network of tree-ring chronologies to reconstruct spatially resolved warm season (May–August) mean temperatures across the extratropical Northern Hemisphere (40-90°N) using Point-by-Point Regression (PPR). The resulting annual maps of temperature anomalies (750–1988 CE) reveal a consistent imprint of volcanism, with 96% of reconstructed grid points experiencing colder conditions following eruptions. Solar influences are detected at the bicentennial (de Vries) frequency, although at other time scales the influence of insolation variability is weak. Approximately 90% of reconstructed grid points show warmer temperatures during the Medieval Climate Anomaly when compared to the Little Ice Age, although the magnitude varies spatially across the hemisphere. Estimates of field reconstruction skill through time and over space can guide future temporal extension and spatial expansion of the proxy network.",
keywords = "Common Era, Last millennium, Northern Hemisphere, Reconstruction, Spatial, Summer temperatures, Tree-rings",
author = "Anchukaitis, {Kevin J.} and Rob Wilson and Briffa, {Keith R.} and Ulf B{\"u}ntgen and Cook, {Edward R.} and Rosanne D'Arrigo and Nicole Davi and Jan Esper and David Frank and Gunnarson, {Bj{\"o}rn E.} and Gabi Hegerl and Samuli Helama and Stefan Klesse and Krusic, {Paul J.} and Linderholm, {Hans W.} and Vladimir Myglan and Osborn, {Timothy J.} and Peng Zhang and Milos Rydval and Lea Schneider and Andrew Schurer and Greg Wiles and Eduardo Zorita",
note = "Funding Information: The N-TREND consortium is not itself funded, but many individuals acknowledge relevant projects, grants, and support; KJA: National Science Foundation Paleoclimate Perspectives on Climate Change NSF AGS-1501856 and NSF AGS-1501834; RW: UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC - NE/K003097/1) and Leverhulme Trust project (F/00 268/BG); KRB and TO: NERC (Belmont Forum/JPI-Climate: INTEGRATE project NE/P006809/1); KRB also thanks Gaurav Kapur FRCR and Colin Watts FRCS for time; UB: Czech project {\textquoteleft}Building up a multidisciplinary scientific team focused on drought{\textquoteright} No. CZ.1.07/2.3.00/20.0248; EC: National Science Foundation Paleoclimate Perspectives on Climate Change AGS-1502224; RD: National Science Foundation Paleoclimate Perspectives on Climate Change AGS-1159430, AGS-1502150, and AGS-1502224; SH: Academy of Finland; GH and AS: ERC advanced grant TITAN (EC-320691), NCAS GH specifically with a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award (WM130060); GH and AS: PACMEDY, NE/P006752/1; HL: The Swedish Science Council (VR) (2012-5246); MR: The Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland; GW: NSF AGS-1502186. The N-TREND project website, along with the archived TR chronologies and temperature reconstructions can be found at https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo/f?p=519:1:0::::P1_study_id:19743 and additional information is available at https://ntrenddendro.wordpress.com/. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory contribution #8093. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2017 Elsevier Ltd",
year = "2017",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.02.020",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "163",
pages = "1--22",
journal = "Quaternary Science Reviews",
issn = "0277-3791",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
}