2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.01.005
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Moisture changes over the last millennium in arid central Asia: a review, synthesis and comparison with monsoon region

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Cited by 430 publications
(274 citation statements)
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“…Conversely, eastern monsoonal stalagmite records [42] show the opposite situations (e.g. increased rainfall in the MWP and decreased rainfall in the LIA) [43]. For the last century, especially during the last 50 years, the westerly regions have become increasingly humid, while the monsoonal regions (including northern China and the eastern part of northwestern China) have become drier [44].…”
Section: Arid Region Lakes In Northwestern Chinamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conversely, eastern monsoonal stalagmite records [42] show the opposite situations (e.g. increased rainfall in the MWP and decreased rainfall in the LIA) [43]. For the last century, especially during the last 50 years, the westerly regions have become increasingly humid, while the monsoonal regions (including northern China and the eastern part of northwestern China) have become drier [44].…”
Section: Arid Region Lakes In Northwestern Chinamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The different sizes of the three lake volumes (Lake Sugan smallest whereas Lake Qinghai biggest) and their association of temperature with hydrological changes could potentially explain the observed discrepancies. During the warm MWP, lake levels in Lake Sugan and Gahai would have decreased due to associated dry conditions [22] and thus the warming signal would be further enhanced, while prevailing wet conditions in Lake Qinghai would have diminished the warming signal. Thus, the estimated warmth between the MWP relative to the recent level could be bracketed by the ~1.9°C from Lake Gahai and ~0.5°C from Lake Qinghai, probably closer to the lower end as the Lake Qinghai size is substantially larger and thus the lake volume effect should be smaller.…”
Section: The Medieval Warm Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The northern Tibetan Plateau is a climatologically important region as it involves complex interactions between the mid-latitude westerly and subtropical Asia monsoon circulations [22], which may provide a bridge connecting the high and low latitude climatic processes [23]. The temperature records in China have high level-of-confidence for the past 500 years [24][25][26].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this region, the scarcity of water, the fragile ecological environment, and the influences of human activities make the ASAC extremely sensitive to abnormal changes in water and heat, such as global warming (Narisma et al, 2007;Chen et al, 2010;Dai, 2011). Based on temperature data for the years 1961-1997, Li and Qian (2005 indicated that temperatures in the ASAC kept increasing, especially winter temperatures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%