Thursday, May 12, 2016

Japanese Priests Collected Almost Seven Centuries of Climate Data


Lake Suwa
















This is important because it clearly established the cold spell between 1500 to 1800 during which change came very slowly.  I did not think that the cold spell was so long and potentially much longer.  Nor is much variation indicated at all.  In practice there was none.  Memories of the Thames freezing was rare enough but not so anomalous either.  Could we have been looking for a cycle that did not exist.
What we do have is a much clearer association between industrialization and a warmer planet.  Yet that may also be misleading as well.  The warming looks like a long cycle adjustment and more plausibly a response to agricultural expansion that eliminated vast forests.  Certainly not sufficiently linked to CO2 emissions which only became significant  with the massive expansion in the twentieth century.  Forecst removal was significant long before.
Forest expansion is dessert areas would have an opposite effect.
This is all promising in that they are useful proxies. Yet local weather changes can affect a single year. One storm can bounce the time frames all over the place for a given river basin.

Japanese Priests Collected Almost Seven Centuries of Climate Data

Historic records from "citizen scientists" in Japan and Finland give researchers centuries of data on ice conditions

A print of Lake Suwa from the series Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji. (Corbis)

By Jason Daley

SMITHSONIAN.COM
APRIL 27, 2016 12:07PM


http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/japanese-priests-collected-almost-seven-centuries-climate-data-180958929/#ZyPYDTT0fB2fRJYg.99

Almost every winter, after Lake Suwa in the Japanese Alps freezes, the male Shinto god Takeminakata crosses the ice to visit the female god Yasakatome at her shrine, causing a ridge known as the omiwatari to form. At least, that’s what the priests living on the shores of the lake believed. When the water froze, they would conduct a purification ritual and celebration in honor of the ridge, using its direction and starting location to forecast the harvest and rainfall for the coming year.

The priests kept records of the event beginning in 1443, inadvertently creating a massive data set of climate conditions. Now Sapna Sharma, a York University biologist, and John J. Magnuson, a University of Wisconsin limnologist, paired that data with records of the spring ice breakup of Finland's Torne River to understand the effects of climate change on inland waters.
 
“These data are unique,” Sharma says in a press release. “They were collected by humans viewing and recording the ice event year after year for centuries, well before climate change was even a topic of discussion.”
 
The study, published today in Scientific Reports, shows that the annual freeze date of Lake Suwa changed very slowly—roughly 0.19 days earlier per decade. But once the Industrial Revolution started, the change of freeze date began drastically jumping and shifted about 4.6 days per decade.


Before the industrial revolution began in the late 18th century, the lake froze 99 percent of the time—only failing to freeze three times in the three centuries before 1800. Now, Lake Suwa completely freezes only half the time. In the last decade, the lake failed to freeze five times, writes Lisa Borre at National Geographic
 
In 1693, Finnish merchant Olof Ahlbom began keeping records of the date and time the ice broke up on the Torne River, part of the border between Sweden and Finland that flows from the Arctic to the Baltic Sea. A war interrupted his record keeping between 1715 and 1721, but otherwise the record has been maintained by observers ever since.
 
The Torne data is similar to that from Lake Suwa. While between 1693 and 1799 there were only four extremely warm years, causing the ice to break up in April, in the past decade there have been five. “Even though the two waters are half a world apart and differ greatly from one another, the general patterns of ice seasonality are similar for both systems,” Magnuson says in the press release
 
According to Borre, the findings fit in with other studies that have identified changes in climate cycles like the North Atlantic Oscillation and El NiƱo Southern Oscillation, which impact ice cover on lakes and rivers around the world. But the biggest find of the study is that there could be more high-quality data about climate change in unusual records.
 
“What is so interesting to me is that we were able to include in our analysis the longest ice records in the world based on direct human observation,” Magnuson tells Borre. “To have such long records from two very different freshwater systems in different parts of the world show the same general pattern is one of our key findings…and are entirely consistent with other research that shows a pattern of change after the Industrial Revolution.”

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/japanese-priests-collected-almost-seven-centuries-climate-data-180958929/#ZyPYDTT0fB2fRJYg.99

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