Publication | Open Access
Northern Hemisphere Land Monsoon Precipitation Increased by the Green Sahara During Middle Holocene
60
Citations
52
References
2019
Year
EngineeringClimate ModelingEarth System ScienceSimulated NhlmpEarth ScienceHoloceneMiddle HoloceneVegetation-atmosphere InteractionsAtmospheric ScienceArid EnvironmentClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGeographyEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologyGreen SaharaDroughtDrylandsSummer MonsoonNhlmp Changes
Abstract Changes in land cover and dust emission may significantly influence the Northern Hemisphere land monsoon precipitation (NHLMP), but observations are too short to fully evaluate their impacts. The “Green Sahara” during the mid‐Holocene (6,000 years BP) provides an opportunity to unravel these mechanisms. Here we show that during the mid‐Holocene, most of the NHLMP changes revealed by proxy data are reproduced by the Earth System model results when the Saharan vegetation cover and dust reduction are taken into consideration. The simulated NHLMP significantly increases by 33.10% under the effect of the Green Sahara. The North African monsoon precipitation increases most significantly. Additionally, the Saharan vegetation (dust reduction under vegetated Sahara) alone remotely intensifies the Asian (North American) monsoon precipitation through large‐scale atmospheric circulation changes. These findings imply that future variations in land cover and dust emissions may appreciably influence the NHLMP.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1