1st Edition

Climate since AD 1500

Edited By Raymond S. Bradley, Philip D. Jones Copyright 1995
    724 Pages
    by Routledge

    724 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 2004. Climate Since A.D. 1500 presents a unique perspective on the 'Little Ice Age' and the climate of the twentieth century. Leading scientists explore historical documents, dendroclimatic data and ice core records from all over the world, presenting an invaluable compilation for all those concerned with past climate and the risks of man-made climatic change in the future. This revised edition includes a new chapter summarizing the wealth of literature on climatic change over the past few years and a new and expanded index.

    1 Climate since A.D. 1500: Introduction SECTION A: DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE 2 Hudson's Bay Company ships' log-books as sources of sea ice data, 1751-1870 3 Historical and instrumental evidence of climate: western Hudson Bay, Canada, 1714-1850 4 Historical climate records from the northeastern United States, 1640 to 1900 5 Documentary evidence for changes in the climate of Iceland, A.D. 1500 to 1800 6 Monthly temperature and precipitation in central Europe from 1525-1979: quantifying documentary evidence on weather and its effects 7 Reconstructing the climate of northern Italy from archive sources 8 Three historical data series on floods and anomalous climatic events in Italy 9 Documentary evidence from the U.S.S.R. 10 Reconstruction of the 18th century summer precipitation of Nanjing, Suzhou, and Hangzhou, China, based on the Clear and Rain Records 11 Beijing summer temperatures since 1724 12 Reconstruction of rainfall variation of the Baiu in historical times 13 Climatic variations in the longest instrumental records SECTION B: DENDROCLIMATIC EVIDENCE 14 Mapping climate using tree-rings from western North America 15 Dendroclimatic evidence from northern North America 16 Dendroclimatic evidence from the Great Plains of the United States 17 Dendroclimatic evidence from eastern North America 18 Dendroclimatic evidence from southwestern Europe and northwestern Africa 19 Recent dendroclimatic evidence of northern and central European summer temperatures 20 Dendroclimatic evidence from the northern Soviet Union 21 Dendroclimatic evidence from the western Himalaya 22 Dendroclimatic studies in China 23 South American dendroclimatological records 24 Dendroclimatic evidence from Australasia SECTION C: ICE CORE EVIDENCE 25 Ice core climate signals from Mount Logan, Yukon A.D. 1700-1987 26 The Arctic from Svalbard to Severnaya Zemlya: climatic reconstructions from ice cores 27 Ice core evidence from Peru and China 28 Ice core evidence from the Antarctic Peninsula region 29 Paleoenvironmental conditions in Antarctica since A.D. 1500: ice core evidence 31 Records of explosive volcanic eruptions over the last 500 years 32 The historical record of EI Nino events SECTION E: SUMMARY33 Climatic variations over the last 500 years 34 Recent developments in studies of climate since A.D. 1500

    Biography

    Raymond S. Bradley is Professor and Head of the Department of Geology and Geography at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Philip D. Jones is Reader at the Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich.