U.S. droughts can last for centuries
Study links periodic droughts with changes in  solar activity

By Andrea Thompson

updated  5:10 p.m. MT, Tues., Aug. 19, 2008 

Dips in the sun's activity have triggered centuries-long  droughts in eastern 
North America, according to a new study that examined the  geologic record 
stored within a stalagmite from a West Virginia cave.

The link between periodic _droughts_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/environment/070420_drought_defn.html)   and changes 
in solar activity initially was 
proposed by geologist Gerald Bond.  He suggested that every 1,500 years, weak 
solar 
activity caused by fluctuations  in the sun's magnetic fields cooled the North 
Atlantic Ocean and created more  icebergs and ice rafting, or the movement of 
sediment to the ocean floor. This  caused less precipitation to fall, 
creating drought conditions.

The climate record preserved by trace  elements such as strontium, carbon and 
oxygen in stalagmites is clearer and more  detailed than records previously 
taken from lake sediments. During dry periods,  strontium is concentrated in 
stalagmites. Carbon isotopes also record drought  because drier soils slow 
biological activity.

For the new study, researchers cut and polished _a  stalagmite_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/php/multimedia/imagedisplay/img_display.php?s=environment&c=&l=o
n&pic=080819-stalagmite-slice-02.jpg&cap=The+stalagmite,+which+is+7.9+inches+l
ong,+was+collected+from+a+site+in+Buckeye+Creek+Cave,+West+Virginia.+It+is+7,0
00+years+old.+Credit:+Greg+Springer,+Ohio+University&title=)  taken from 
Buckeye Creek Cave and drilled out 200 samples. The  metals and isotopes in the 
_stalagmites'  growth layers_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/environment/061009_mm_icicle_formation.html)  were 
weighed and analyzed to determine how the 
concentrations  changed over time.

The stalagmite's  record provides evidence that there were at least seven 
major droughts durin g  the Holocene era in eastern North America. Some of 
these, 
from about 6,300 to  4,200 years ago, were particularly pronounced, lasting 
for decades or even  entire centuries.

"This really nails down  the idea of solar influence on continental drought," 
said geologist Gregory  Spring of Ohio University and the study's leader. The 
results of the study are  detailed online in the journal Geophysical Research 
 Letters.

Modern droughts may not  follow this same pattern of periodic long-term 
droughts caused by weak solar  activity, as cooling in the North Atlantic Ocean 
today actually increases  moisture and precipitation.

The climate  record does suggest that North America could face a major 
drought event again in  500 to 1,000 years, though Springer said that 
human-induced 
global warming could  offset the cycle.

"Global warming will  leave things like this in the dust," he said. "The 
natural oscillations here are  nothing like what we would expect to see with 
global warming."


In fact, new research from the University of Arizona in  Tucson has linked 
human-driven changes in the westerly winds to drought  conditions in the 
_American  Southwest_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/environment/070405_southwest_drought.html) , which 
has been plagued by drought for much of the last decade.

Since the 1970s, the winter storm track in  the western United States has 
shifted northward, bringing fewer winter storms  and less rain and snow to the 
region, the researchers found. This precipitation  deficit can affect water 
resources later in the year and cause more and larger  forest fires.

These findings will also be  detailed in Geophysical Research Letters.

_http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26298797/_ 
(http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26298797/) 




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