How tree rings tell time and climate history
Most of us learned as children that the age of a tree could be found by counting its rings. Rings of trees growing in temperate climates can indeed tell their age through their annual rings and also help determine the age of wood used to construct buildings or wooden objects. The ages of wooden objects can be revealed by cross-dating, the process of matching ring patterns between wood samples of known and unknown ages.
What do tree rings tell us
The underlying patterns of wide or narrow rings record the year-to-year fluctuations in the growth of trees. The patterns, therefore, often contain a weather history at the location the tree grew, in addition to its age. In dry environments, such as the Middle East or U.S. Southwest, tree rings typically record wet or dry years, and in cooler areas (high latitudes or high elevation), the ring widths are often a proxy for temperature.
Archeologists have used the ring patterns in building timbers to estimate construction dates for some of the world’s most famous buildings, including the cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde National Park (nearly 1,000 years old) and the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem (nearly 1,500 years old).
What's in NOAA's tree ring data base?
NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) houses the International Tree-Ring Data Bank (ITRDB), which contains ring width data from forests worldwide, plus ring width data from old buildings, and even from rare Stradivari violins. The ITRDB contains ring width data from trees at over 4,600 locations on six continents, providing tree growth histories from around the world. New additions from field scientists are added regularly.
Climate scientists compare the tree growth records to local weather records. For locations where a good statistical match exists between tree growth and temperature or precipitation during the period of overlap, the ring widths can be used to estimate past temperature or precipitation over the lifetime of the tree.
In many parts of the world, trees can provide a climate history for hundreds of years, with some extending back 1,000 years or more. The resulting climate histories enhance our knowledge of natural climate variability and also create a baseline against which human-induced climate change can be evaluated. NCEI archives these climate reconstructions in addition to the tree ring measurements.
Glimpsing the past
Tree ring data have been used to reconstruct drought or temperature in North America and Europe over the past 2,000 years. For example, tree ring based drought reconstructions for the American Southwest indicate a period of prolonged drought in the late 1200’s. Archeologists believe that the drought was a contributing factor in the Ancestral Pueblo People abandoning the famous cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde, never to return.
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tree rings
RE: tree rings
RE: RE: tree rings
tree rings
What is your source?
re: What is your source?
I'm not sure what you're asking here. The whole post is about the International Tree Ring Data Bank at NOAA NCEI Paleoclimate Data Center.
Tree rings have been used as
Very cool article and outreach
Speaking for Webinar ZOOM event
RE: Speaking for Webinar ZOOM event
Sorry I didn't see this sooner. Comments on older posts are not moderated routinely. If you are still trying to reach Bruce, let me know. For future reference, the most reliable way to contact Climate.gov is to use our webmail addresses: https://www.climate.gov/contact
use of your data in support of study
I have found your tree ring data to be very valuable in double checking my own tree ring measurements from an oak tree palaeoclimate study and much appreciate the efforts you have made in publishing this material in an accessible format.
Tree ring data of 21st century W/O hockey stick mixture
Hi & thanks for an interesting read. Is there an up to date graph of tree ring data per climate such as 2000-2020? Even something like 1980-2020. I can only find graphs that end 22 years ago. I'm in 2022 post COVID times & am interested to see what temperature data in North America looks like via tree rings for the past 20 or 22 years etc. I'd like to be able to compare 21st century data to older data.
Thanks so much.
Mark in Tennessee,
recent tree rings
For specific questions like this, your best bet is to contact that the experts with the International Tree-Ring Data Bank (ITRDB), which is maintained by the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Their contact email is located in the footer of the databank's homepage.
Fair warning, though, I think such a dataset could be hard to find because the whole point of tree-ring data is to create a high-frequency, continuous record of environmental variables like temperature or precipitation over very long periods of time, the longer the better, generally speaking. Just like any other dataset, the shorter the period, the greater the level of uncertainty, so scientists aren't going to have a lot of motivation to create such short records.
But...I am not an expert! Perhaps such records exist as part of efforts to correlate tree ring data to climate variables during the modern observation record or something. Good luck!
Asymmetrical tree rings
I have a recently harvested log from an ash tree planted in West Wales in 1997. The rings are extremely asymmetrical with the centre very close to one side. What does this tell us about the tree's experience?
asymmetry in tree rings
Hi, Len. I will pass this question over to the scientist who wrote this blog. I'm assuming you don't know anything about the site location? My hunch would be this is related to a physical characteristic of the site as opposed to climate. For example, the tree grew up touching a rock formation like a cliff or a big boulder. But maybe something like that could happen with strong, persistent prevailing winds.
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