“…Analyses of coral skeletal aragonite for Sr/Ca and oxygen isotopic composition have been widely used since the early 1990s to reconstruct past tropical climate variability (e.g., Tierney et al, 2015;Urban et al, 2000, and references therein), but only a few monthly or seasonally resolved records extend over 200 years (e.g., Asami et al, 2005;DeLong et al, 2012DeLong et al, , 2014. In Japan, the few climate proxies that cover the Little Ice Age (LIA, circa 1550-1700), during which cooling was driven by low solar irradiance, reduced insolation, and stratospheric aerosols from volcanic eruptions (e.g., Ammann et al, 2007), consist of historical documents (Mikami, 2008) and temperature/precipitation tree ring reconstructions for the spring/summer season (Cook et al, 2012;D'Arrigo & Wilson, 2006;D'Arrigo et al, 2014;Ohyama et al, 2013;Sakashita et al, 2016;Yamaguchi et al, 2010). Although the impact of the solar cycle on the global climate is small (Schurer et al, 2014), an amplified regional response to the variability in ultraviolet solar irradiance through atmospheric teleconnections is now widely accepted (e.g., Meehl et al, 2009).…”