Fuente: University of Utah News
  Expuesto el: lunes, 30 de julio de 2012 2:01
  Autor: Shawn Wood
  Asunto: When the World Burned Less
| July 30, 2012 – In the    years after Columbus’ voyage, burning of New World forests and fields    diminished significantly – a phenomenon some have attributed to decimation of    native populations by European diseases. But a new University of Utah-led    study suggests global cooling resulted in fewer fires because both preceded    Columbus in many regions worldwide. “The drop in fire [after    about A.D. 1500] has been linked previously to the population collapse. We’re    saying no, there is enough independent evidence that the drop in fire was    caused by cooling climate,” says the study’s principal author, Mitchell    Power, an assistant professor of geography at the University of Utah. “The implication is that    climate is a large-scale driver of fire. That’s a key finding. Climate is    driving fire on global and continental scales,” says Power, who also is    curator of the Garrett Herbarium at the Natural History Museum of Utah, which    is part of the University of Utah. The new study analyzed    worldwide charcoal samples spanning 2,000 years. It will be published online    during August in the journal The    Holocene, which is the name of the geological epoch covering    roughly the last 11,500 years of Earth’s history. It was funded by the    National Science Foundation and the Natural History Museum of Utah. The study deals with the    Little Ice Age, a period when Earth’s climate cooled, causing New York Harbor    to freeze over in 1780, among other effects. Estimates of when the Little Ice    Age started range from the 1200s to the 1500s. It ended in the early 1800s.    Possible causes include some combination of increased dust from volcanic    eruptions, decreased solar activity, and changes in circulation of the ocean    and atmosphere. “The decrease in fire on    a very large scale – globally and in the Americas – was controlled by this    cooling climate, which began prior to the population collapse, and climate    alone is sufficient to explain large scale changes in burning,” says Power. “In a cooler atmosphere,    you tend to get reduced convection, so you get reduced thunderstorms and    ignition from lightning,” he says. “Cooler climate also tends to maintain    high levels of fuel moisture and soil moisture.” Today, warming climate    and drought have been tied to increasing fires in the U.S. West and    elsewhere. “In a world where climate is rapidly changing we need to pay more    attention to this relationship between climate and fire,” Power says Power conducted the study    with 19 other scientists, including paleoecologist Frank Mayle at the    University of Edinburgh, U.K., and climatologist Patrick Bartlein at the    University of Oregon. Other coauthors – who provided charcoal data or samples    – are from University of Wisconsin, Madison and Oshkosh; Northern Arizona    University; University of Gottingen, Germany; Canadian Forest Service;    University of Montpellier, France; University of Bern, Switzerland;    University of Calgary, Canada; University of Tennessee; Virginia Tech;    University of North Carolina; University of Chile; Laval University, Quebec;    Fordham College, New York; and Central Washington University. Cooling Climate    or Population Collapse? After Columbus reached    the New World in 1492, explorers brought European diseases such as smallpox    that “decimated populations in the Americas – 10 million to 100 million dead,    with most estimates in the 60 million range,” Power says. “All these people died    abruptly – Mayans, Incas, Aztecs and down in Patagonia – they were all    affected,” he adds. “Agriculture was sharply reduced. Landscapes that had    been cleared for agriculture started a process of plants growing back and    infilling those abandoned fields. In terms of greenhouse gases, when you    change from maintained cropland to woodlands, plants take up more carbon    dioxide and there is less in the atmosphere. This has been pointed to as one    mechanism for causing the Little Ice Age.” Power agrees population    collapse may have led to reduced biomass burning in some local regions of the    Americas. But the new study indicates the reduction in fire was actually    global and began before Columbus in most areas, suggesting the Little Ice Age    triggered most of the reduction in burning – not the other way around, Power    says. “If you look at    independent climate records, cooling from the Little Ice Age was happening    about 200 years before the population collapse,” or about A.D. 1300, he says. Power notes there is room    for debate because the Little Ice Age varied in time and space, and didn’t    affect all parts of the world equally, although most places cooled. A Record of Fire    Left in Charcoal The study used existing    records and-or new samples of charcoal – burnt wood or other biomass – found    in sediment cores from lake bottoms and bogs from some 600 sites around the    world, about half in the Americas, and dated within the past 2,000 years. “Whatever was burning, we    see a record of that fire in lake sediments, from either aerial transport or    erosion” of burned material, Power says. Power manages the Global    Charcoal Database that compiles data from all the existing studies that date    charcoal samples and describe where they came from. The new study included    498 existing charcoal records and 93 new samples. “We have gone back in and    calculated the ages of all these charcoal samples,” except for some dated    independently in other recent studies, and then used recent radiocarbon    dating calibrations to make sure all data are consistent, Power says. “Greater than 80 percent    of biomass burning records show a decline post-1500 in the Americas, he says.    The other 20 percent may be from areas that were still fire-prone despite    cooling or that simply had burning declines for which there are inadequate    charcoal samples, he adds. The study compared the    charcoal records with previously published ancient climate records and    population reconstructions. It found: – Clumping all the    charcoal data in two groups – from the Americas or the Eastern Hemisphere –    shows that in the Americas, biomass burning declined between 1500 and 1650    and stayed at a minimum until 1700, the same time as the peak of the Little    Ice Age. That period was the lowest level of burning in the past 6,000 years. – In the Eastern    Hemisphere, there was a prominent decline in burning that began about 1400 –    well before the population collapse in the Americas. Power says cooling also    started about a century earlier in the Eastern Hemisphere than in the    Americas – more evidence cooling caused reduced burning. There was no    parallel population collapse large enough to explain the reduction in    burning, although a small downward blip in burning is noted in Europe around the    time of the bubonic plague or Black Death. – In tropical Middle    America – the Caribbean Basin, Mexico and Central America – climate cooling    starting around 1350, when burning also begins to decline. Population    collapse didn’t begin until around 1500. – In tropical South    America, climate changed around 1350 to 1400. There is debate whether it    warmed or cooled. The population collapsed after 1500. Power says neither    climate nor population strongly influenced post-Columbian biomass burning in    that region, which declined only subtly and not until 1700. It also is    possible the population that collapsed didn’t use fire very much in    agriculture – something a recent study coauthored by Power found in French    Guiana. – In southern South    America, ice-core and tree-ring growth studies show cooling began about 1450,    well before an abrupt decline in burning in 1550. That would seem to support    the theory that population collapse reduced burning – except that the region    had little population, certainly not enough for any decline to trigger a    reduction in burning. – Ice cores from    Greenland show cooling started about 1450, and fire started to decline about    1500, according to charcoal for boreal Canada and the western United States.    Cooling and reduced burning stopped about 1800. Despite the 50-year lag,    Power says that is more evidence tying climate cooling to reduced biomass    burning, particularly since the region had relatively few people at the time. 
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