| Literature DB >> 25686877 |
Ashish Sinha1, Gayatri Kathayat2, Hai Cheng3, Sebastian F M Breitenbach4, Max Berkelhammer5, Manfred Mudelsee6, Jayant Biswas7, R L Edwards8.
Abstract
Observations show that summer rainfall over large parts of South Asia has declined over the past five to six decades. It remains unclear, however, whether this trend is due to natural variability or increased anthropogenic aerosol loading over South Asia. Here we use stable oxygen isotopes in speleothems from northern India to reconstruct variations in Indian monsoon rainfall over the last two millennia. We find that within the long-term context of our record, the current drying trend is not outside the envelope of monsoon's oscillatory variability, albeit at the lower edge of this variance. Furthermore, the magnitude of multi-decadal oscillatory variability in monsoon rainfall inferred from our proxy record is comparable to model estimates of anthropogenic-forced trends of mean monsoon rainfall in the 21st century under various emission scenarios. Our results suggest that anthropogenic-forced changes in monsoon rainfall will remain difficult to detect against a backdrop of large natural variability.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25686877 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919