Litcius/Paper detail

Past megadroughts in central Europe were longer, more severe and less warm than modern droughts

Monica Ioniță, Mihai Dima, Viorica Nagavciuc, Patrick Scholz, Gerrit Lohmann

2021Communications Earth & Environment116 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Megadroughts are notable manifestations of the American Southwest, but not so much of the European climate. By using long-term hydrological and meteorological observations, as well as paleoclimate reconstructions, here we show that central Europe has experienced much longer and severe droughts during the Spörer Minimum (~AD 1400–1480) and Dalton Minimum (~AD 1770–1840), than the ones observed during the 21st century. These two megadroughts appear to be linked with a cold state of the North Atlantic Ocean and enhanced winter atmospheric blocking activity over the British Isles and western part of Europe, concurrent with reduced solar forcing and explosive volcanism. Moreover, we show that the recent drought events (e.g., 2003, 2015, and 2018), are within the range of natural variability and they are not unprecedented over the last millennium.

Topics & Concepts

PaleoclimatologyClimatologyWestern europeForcing (mathematics)Period (music)Climate changeVolcanismRange (aeronautics)OceanographyGeographyPhysical geographyGeologyEnvironmental scienceEuropean unionBusinessMaterials sciencePaleontologyEconomic policyPhysicsAcousticsComposite materialTectonicsTree-ring climate responsesClimate variability and modelsHydrology and Drought Analysis