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Did the Bronze Age deforestation of Europe affect its climate? A regional climate model study using pollen-based land cover reconstructions

Strandberg, Gustav ; Chen, Jie ; Fyfe, Ralph ; Kjellström, Erik ; Lindström, Johan LU orcid ; Poska, Anneli ; Zhang, Qiong and Gaillard, Marie José (2023) In Climate of the Past 19(7). p.1507-1530
Abstract

This paper studies the impact of land use and land cover change (LULCC) on the climate around 2500 years ago (2.5 ka), a period of rapid transitions across the European landscape. One global climate model was used to force two regional climate models (RCMs). The RCMs used two land cover descriptions. The first was from a dynamical vegetation model representing potential land cover, and the second was from a land cover description reconstructed from pollen data by statistical interpolation. The two different land covers enable us to study the impact of land cover on climate conditions. Since the difference in landscape openness between potential and reconstructed land cover is mostly due to LULCC, this can be taken as a measure of early... (More)

This paper studies the impact of land use and land cover change (LULCC) on the climate around 2500 years ago (2.5 ka), a period of rapid transitions across the European landscape. One global climate model was used to force two regional climate models (RCMs). The RCMs used two land cover descriptions. The first was from a dynamical vegetation model representing potential land cover, and the second was from a land cover description reconstructed from pollen data by statistical interpolation. The two different land covers enable us to study the impact of land cover on climate conditions. Since the difference in landscape openness between potential and reconstructed land cover is mostly due to LULCC, this can be taken as a measure of early anthropogenic effects on climate. Since the sensitivity to LULCC is dependent on the choice of climate model, we also use two RCMs. The results show that the simulated 2.5 ka climate was warmer than the simulated pre-industrial (PI, 1850 CE) climate. The largest differences are seen in northern Europe, where the 2.5 ka climate is 2-4 'C warmer than the PI period. In summer, the difference between the simulated 2.5 ka and PI climates is smaller (0-3 'C), with the smallest differences in southern Europe. Differences in seasonal precipitation are mostly within ±10 %. In parts of northern Europe, the 2.5 ka climate is up to 30 % wetter in winter than that of the PI climate. In summer there is a tendency for the 2.5 ka climate to be drier than the PI climate in the Mediterranean region. The results also suggest that LULCC at 2.5 ka impacted the climate in parts of Europe. Simulations including reconstructed LULCC (i.e. those using pollen-derived land cover descriptions) give up to 1 'C higher temperature in parts of northern Europe in winter and up to 1.5 'C warmer in southern Europe in summer than simulations with potential land cover. Although the results are model dependent, the relatively strong response implies that anthropogenic land cover changes that had occurred during the Neolithic and Bronze Age could have affected the European climate by 2.5 ka.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Climate of the Past
volume
19
issue
7
pages
24 pages
publisher
Copernicus GmbH
external identifiers
  • scopus:85167663006
ISSN
1814-9324
DOI
10.5194/cp-19-1507-2023
project
PAGES LandCover6k fast track project 2020-2021
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
151496f3-3e95-4a33-aec0-4b37602fb31a
date added to LUP
2024-01-12 14:15:43
date last changed
2024-02-09 11:19:41
@article{151496f3-3e95-4a33-aec0-4b37602fb31a,
  abstract     = {{<p>This paper studies the impact of land use and land cover change (LULCC) on the climate around 2500 years ago (2.5 ka), a period of rapid transitions across the European landscape. One global climate model was used to force two regional climate models (RCMs). The RCMs used two land cover descriptions. The first was from a dynamical vegetation model representing potential land cover, and the second was from a land cover description reconstructed from pollen data by statistical interpolation. The two different land covers enable us to study the impact of land cover on climate conditions. Since the difference in landscape openness between potential and reconstructed land cover is mostly due to LULCC, this can be taken as a measure of early anthropogenic effects on climate. Since the sensitivity to LULCC is dependent on the choice of climate model, we also use two RCMs. The results show that the simulated 2.5 ka climate was warmer than the simulated pre-industrial (PI, 1850 CE) climate. The largest differences are seen in northern Europe, where the 2.5 ka climate is 2-4 'C warmer than the PI period. In summer, the difference between the simulated 2.5 ka and PI climates is smaller (0-3 'C), with the smallest differences in southern Europe. Differences in seasonal precipitation are mostly within ±10 %. In parts of northern Europe, the 2.5 ka climate is up to 30 % wetter in winter than that of the PI climate. In summer there is a tendency for the 2.5 ka climate to be drier than the PI climate in the Mediterranean region. The results also suggest that LULCC at 2.5 ka impacted the climate in parts of Europe. Simulations including reconstructed LULCC (i.e. those using pollen-derived land cover descriptions) give up to 1 'C higher temperature in parts of northern Europe in winter and up to 1.5 'C warmer in southern Europe in summer than simulations with potential land cover. Although the results are model dependent, the relatively strong response implies that anthropogenic land cover changes that had occurred during the Neolithic and Bronze Age could have affected the European climate by 2.5 ka.</p>}},
  author       = {{Strandberg, Gustav and Chen, Jie and Fyfe, Ralph and Kjellström, Erik and Lindström, Johan and Poska, Anneli and Zhang, Qiong and Gaillard, Marie José}},
  issn         = {{1814-9324}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{7}},
  pages        = {{1507--1530}},
  publisher    = {{Copernicus GmbH}},
  series       = {{Climate of the Past}},
  title        = {{Did the Bronze Age deforestation of Europe affect its climate? A regional climate model study using pollen-based land cover reconstructions}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/cp-19-1507-2023}},
  doi          = {{10.5194/cp-19-1507-2023}},
  volume       = {{19}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}