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Larson - Caswick - QUAL - ITRDB WI025

Originator:

Larson, E.R.; Allen, S.A.; Underwood, C.A.

Citation Information:

Larson, Evan R., Sara A. Allen, Chris A. Underwood. 2021. The Driftless Oaks: A new network of tree-ring chronologies to improve regional perspectives of drought in the Upper Midwest, USA. Progress in Physical Geography, 45(3), 375-406. doi: 10.1177/0309133320960670
Lat:0, Lon:0

Download Data:

Caswick
Correlation Statswi025.txt
Raw Measurementswi025.rwl
Raw Measurements - NOAA Template Filewi025-rwl-noaa.txt

Use Constraints:

Please cite original publication, online resource, dataset and publication DOIs (where available), and date accessed when using downloaded data. If there is no publication information, please cite investigator, title, online resource, and date accessed. The appearance of external links associated with a dataset does not constitute endorsement by the Department of Commerce/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of external Web sites or the information, products or services contained therein. For other than authorized activities, the Department of Commerce/NOAA does not exercise any editorial control over the information you may find at these locations. These links are provided consistent with the stated purpose of this Department of Commerce/NOAA Web site.

Distributor:

National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce

Resource Description (data set id):

noaa-tree-33926

Data Coverage:

Latitude: 42.73
Longitude: -90.496
Minimum Elevation: 263 m
Maximum Elevation: 263 m
Earliest Year: 233 cal yr BP (1717 CE)
Most Recent Year: -63 cal yr BP (2013 CE)

Science Keywords:

white oak
QUAL
Quercus alba L.

Tree Species:

QUAL (Quercus alba L.)
  white oak

Parameters:

earth science>paleoclimate>tree-ring>width>ring width

Variables:

whatunitinfo
ageyear Common Era
total ring widthmillimeterTree ID: CWK002A; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999
total ring widthmillimeterTree ID: CWK002B; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999
total ring widthmillimeterTree ID: CWK003A; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999
total ring widthmillimeterTree ID: CWK003B; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999
total ring widthmillimeterTree ID: CWK004A; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999
total ring widthmillimeterTree ID: CWK004B; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999
total ring widthmillimeterunits are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999

Summary/Abstract:

New and updated multi-century tree-ring chronologies from living oak trees, remnants, and archeological beams from across the Driftless Area of southwest Wisconsin and northeast Iowa, USA, were developed to fill a spatial gap in the network of available tree-ring chronologies. We produced a robust 303-year summer drought reconstruction (June-August Palmer's Modified Drought Index (PMDI): r2 = 0.45) that identified clusters of extreme droughts and pluvials (PMDI <= -4.0 or >= 4.0) in the early 1700s and more even distributions of drought conditions, with the exception of the post 1930s period when drought became relatively infrequent. Compared to the Living Blended Drought Atlas (LBDA) and the North American Drought Atlas (NADA), our reconstruction more accurately represented moderate moisture conditions across the Driftless Area, the NADA and LBDA more closely represented extreme pluvials, and our reconstruction and the LBDA better represented extreme drought years. The three reconstructions largely captured the same high-frequency variability in drought conditions and differed most at low frequencies. Significant correlations were identified between our reconstruction and corn (r = 0.30, n = 91, p = 0.002) and soybean (r = 0.25, n = 81, p = 0.012) yields, with the strength of the correlations increasing over recent decades suggesting a tighter coupling of interannual climate variability and crop productivity in the region. Superposed epoch analyses indicated significantly wetter conditions in the Driftless Area two years after major volcanic eruptions. In the context of long-term climatic variability, the Driftless Oaks drought reconstruction demonstrated that drought and pluvial conditions more extreme than those experienced during the instrumental record have occurred in the past.

Study Notes:

Oak ring width data from the Driftless Area of southwest Wisconsin and northeast Iowa, USA, sampled from living oak trees, remnants, and archeological beams. NOAA Template Raw Measurements file added 2021-10-19.

More Information:

Contact Information:

DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCEI
National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
325 Broadway, E/NE31
Boulder, CO 80305-3328
USA