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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(18): 5607-12, 2015 May 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25902508

RESUMO

Paleoclimate records indicate a series of severe droughts was associated with societal collapse of the Classic Maya during the Terminal Classic period (∼800-950 C.E.). Evidence for drought largely derives from the drier, less populated northern Maya Lowlands but does not explain more pronounced and earlier societal disruption in the relatively humid southern Maya Lowlands. Here we apply hydrogen and carbon isotope compositions of plant wax lipids in two lake sediment cores to assess changes in water availability and land use in both the northern and southern Maya lowlands. We show that relatively more intense drying occurred in the southern lowlands than in the northern lowlands during the Terminal Classic period, consistent with earlier and more persistent societal decline in the south. Our results also indicate a period of substantial drying in the southern Maya Lowlands from ∼200 C.E. to 500 C.E., during the Terminal Preclassic and Early Classic periods. Plant wax carbon isotope records indicate a decline in C4 plants in both lake catchments during the Early Classic period, interpreted to reflect a shift from extensive agriculture to intensive, water-conservative maize cultivation that was motivated by a drying climate. Our results imply that agricultural adaptations developed in response to earlier droughts were initially successful, but failed under the more severe droughts of the Terminal Classic period.


Assuntos
Aclimatação , Agricultura/história , Secas/história , Ecossistema , Agricultura/métodos , Agricultura/tendências , Civilização/história , Clima , Mudança Climática , Meio Ambiente , Geografia , Sedimentos Geológicos/análise , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , História Antiga , Humanos , Indígenas Sul-Americanos/história , Lipídeos/análise , México , Isótopos de Oxigênio , Plantas/química , Chuva , Fatores de Tempo , Ceras/análise
3.
Science ; 338(6108): 788-91, 2012 Nov 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23139330

RESUMO

The role of climate change in the development and demise of Classic Maya civilization (300 to 1000 C.E.) remains controversial because of the absence of well-dated climate and archaeological sequences. We present a precisely dated subannual climate record for the past 2000 years from Yok Balum Cave, Belize. From comparison of this record with historical events compiled from well-dated stone monuments, we propose that anomalously high rainfall favored unprecedented population expansion and the proliferation of political centers between 440 and 660 C.E. This was followed by a drying trend between 660 and 1000 C.E. that triggered the balkanization of polities, increased warfare, and the asynchronous disintegration of polities, followed by population collapse in the context of an extended drought between 1020 and 1100 C.E.


Assuntos
Civilização/história , Mudança Climática/história , Indígenas Centro-Americanos/história , Sistemas Políticos/história , Chuva , Agricultura/história , Belize , Cavernas , Secas/história , História Antiga , Humanos , Isótopos de Oxigênio , Guerra
5.
Nature ; 470(7335): 518-21, 2011 Feb 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21350483

RESUMO

The potential for increased drought frequency and severity linked to anthropogenic climate change in the semi-arid regions of the southwestern United States (US) is a serious concern. Multi-year droughts during the instrumental period and decadal-length droughts of the past two millennia were shorter and climatically different from the future permanent, 'dust-bowl-like' megadrought conditions, lasting decades to a century, that are predicted as a consequence of warming. So far, it has been unclear whether or not such megadroughts occurred in the southwestern US, and, if so, with what regularity and intensity. Here we show that periods of aridity lasting centuries to millennia occurred in the southwestern US during mid-Pleistocene interglacials. Using molecular palaeotemperature proxies to reconstruct the mean annual temperature (MAT) in mid-Pleistocene lacustrine sediment from the Valles Caldera, New Mexico, we found that the driest conditions occurred during the warmest phases of interglacials, when the MAT was comparable to or higher than the modern MAT. A collapse of drought-tolerant C(4) plant communities during these warm, dry intervals indicates a significant reduction in summer precipitation, possibly in response to a poleward migration of the subtropical dry zone. Three MAT cycles ∼2 °C in amplitude occurred within Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 11 and seem to correspond to the muted precessional cycles within this interglacial. In comparison with MIS 11, MIS 13 experienced higher precessional-cycle amplitudes, larger variations in MAT (4-6 °C) and a longer period of extended warmth, suggesting that local insolation variations were important to interglacial climatic variability in the southwestern US. Comparison of the early MIS 11 climate record with the Holocene record shows many similarities and implies that, in the absence of anthropogenic forcing, the region should be entering a cooler and wetter phase.


Assuntos
Clima , Secas/história , Cálcio/análise , Carbono/análise , Dióxido de Carbono/análise , Secas/estatística & dados numéricos , Fósseis , Água Doce , Sedimentos Geológicos/análise , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Aquecimento Global/estatística & dados numéricos , História Antiga , Atividades Humanas , New Mexico , Desenvolvimento Vegetal , Plantas/metabolismo , Pólen/química , Chuva , Estações do Ano , Microbiologia do Solo , Temperatura , Fatores de Tempo
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