2001
DOI: 10.3354/cr017123
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Climatic and environmental change in Africa during the last two centuries

Abstract: Climatic and environmental changes in Africa during the last 2 centuries have been examined, using both systematic rainfall records and proxy information concerning lakes and rivers and the occurrence of famine and drought. The rainfall records provide excellent detail for the 20th century. The proxy data have been used to produce a semi-quantitative data set spanning most of the continent and having an annual time resolution. These provide an overview of conditions during the 19th century. Various issues rela… Show more

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Cited by 445 publications
(291 citation statements)
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References 107 publications
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“…7 shows the regions with significant correlations (p b 0.1) between SOS and MEI and cumulative NDVI and PDO. The figure reveals a familiar and wellknown north-south division of ecoclimatic regions (Nicholson, 2001). Table 2 reveals that 5.1% of the pixels correlated with MEI in the June-August period have a q-value of less than 50%, meaning that for only 5.1% of the pixels the expected proportion of false positives incurred when calling that pixel significant is less than 50%.…”
Section: Western Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…7 shows the regions with significant correlations (p b 0.1) between SOS and MEI and cumulative NDVI and PDO. The figure reveals a familiar and wellknown north-south division of ecoclimatic regions (Nicholson, 2001). Table 2 reveals that 5.1% of the pixels correlated with MEI in the June-August period have a q-value of less than 50%, meaning that for only 5.1% of the pixels the expected proportion of false positives incurred when calling that pixel significant is less than 50%.…”
Section: Western Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 1870s and early 1890s in the Nile records are more characteristic of a La Niña-like response, with both periods recording a consistent lack of El Niño-related lowstands (Quinn, 1993). Further south, historical accounts and lake level reconstructions from equatorial east Africa indicate lower water levels in the earlyto mid-nineteenth century, followed by, in most cases, steadily rising levels in the following one to two decades (Sieger, 1887(Sieger, , 1888 (as referenced by Walsh and Musa, 1994); Owen and Crossley, 1989;Nicholson, 1998Nicholson, , 1999Nicholson, , 2001Nicholson and Yin, 2001;Verschuren, 2001). However, the resolution and the complexity of interpreting these historical lake level records, hinders their interpretation on the multi-year timescales required here.…”
Section: Historical and Proxy Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the resolution and the complexity of interpreting these historical lake level records, hinders their interpretation on the multi-year timescales required here. In southern Africa, a region characteristically wet during most of the identified extra-tropical drought events, missionary documents from the Kalahari region Nash and Endfield, 2002), climate chronologies from the former Cape Province of South Africa (Lindesay and Vogel, 1990), and semi-quantitative southern African rainfall timeseries from Nicholson (2001) each indicate a dry late 1850s to early 1860s. Meanwhile, the 1870s and 1890s are both wet (Lindesay and Vogel, 1990;Nicholson, 2001), equivalent to a La Niña rainfall signal in this region.…”
Section: Historical and Proxy Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the late 1970s, as a consequence of recurrent droughts that occurred in East and West Africa (Nicholson 2001), famine struck millions of people, creating a need for national authorities and the international community to coordinate efforts to limit the dramatic impact on the affected population. Since then, an integrated famine early warning system (EWS) has been established in West Africa by the Permanent Inter-State Committee for Drought Control in the Sahel (CILSS), which is still one of the most effective and reliable mechanisms operating in sub-Saharan Africa in order to prevent and manage food crises (Genesio et al 2011).…”
Section: Evolution Of Early Warning Systems For Food Security In the mentioning
confidence: 99%