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US Gulf Coast tropical cyclone precipitation influenced by volcanism and the North Atlantic subtropical high

Earth Sciences

US Gulf Coast tropical cyclone precipitation influenced by volcanism and the North Atlantic subtropical high

J. C. Bregy, J. T. Maxwell, et al.

Explore a groundbreaking 473-year reconstruction of tropical cyclone precipitation from longleaf pine in southern Mississippi. This study reveals how volcanic eruptions impact rainfall patterns and highlights significant correlations with the North Atlantic high-pressure system and multidecadal variability, conducted by authors Joshua C. Bregy, Justin T. Maxwell, Scott M. Robeson, Grant L. Harley, Emily A. Elliott, and Karen J. Heeter.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Understanding the response of tropical cyclone precipitation to ongoing climate change is essential to determine associated flood risk. However, instrumental records are short-term and fail to capture the full range of variability in seasonal totals of precipitation from tropical cyclones. Here we present a 473-year-long tree-ring proxy record comprised of longleaf pine from excavated coffins, a historical house, remnant stumps, and living trees in southern Mississippi, USA. We use cross-dating dendrochronological analyses calibrated with instrumental records to reconstruct tropical cyclone precipitation stretching back to 1540 CE. We compare this record to potential climatic controls of interannual and multidecadal tropical cyclone precipitation variability along the Gulf Coast. We find that tropical cyclone precipitation declined significantly in the two years following large Northern Hemisphere volcanic eruptions and is influenced by the behavior of the North Atlantic subtropical high-pressure system. Additionally, we suggest that tropical cyclone precipitation variability is significantly, albeit weakly, related to Atlantic multidecadal variability. Finally, we suggest that we need to establish a network for reconstructing precipitation from tropical cyclones in the Southeast USA if we want to capture regional tropical cyclone behavior and associated flood risks.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Jul 22, 2022
Authors
Joshua C. Bregy, Justin T. Maxwell, Scott M. Robeson, Grant L. Harley, Emily A. Elliott, Karen J. Heeter
Tags
tropical cyclone precipitation
tree-ring proxy
volcanic eruptions
North Atlantic high-pressure system
multidecadal variability
climate variability
flood risks
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