Everything about The Medieval Warm Period totally explained
The
Medieval Warm Period (MWP) or
Medieval Climate Optimum was a time of unusually
warm climate in the
North Atlantic region, lasting from about the
tenth century to about the
fourteenth century. The MWP is often invoked in contentious discussions of
global warming. Some refer to the event as the
Medieval Climatic Anomaly as this term emphasizes that effects other than temperature were important.
Initial research
The
Medieval Warm Period was a time of warm weather around
800-
1300 AD during the
European
Medieval period. Initial research on the MWP and the following
Little Ice Age (LIA) was largely done in Europe, where the phenomenon was most obvious and clearly documented.
It was initially believed that the temperature changes were global . However, this view has been questioned; the
2001 IPCC report summarises this research, saying "…current evidence doesn't support globally synchronous periods of anomalous cold or warmth over this time frame, and the conventional terms of 'Little Ice Age' and 'Medieval Warm Period' appear to have limited utility in describing trends in hemispheric or global mean temperature changes in past centuries". The
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) states that the "idea of a global or hemispheric "Medieval Warm Period" that was warmer than today however, has turned out to be incorrect" and that what those "records that do exist show is that there was no multi-century periods when global or hemispheric temperatures were the same or warmer than in the 20th century".
Palaeoclimatologists developing region-specific climate reconstructions of past centuries conventionally label their coldest interval as "LIA" and their warmest interval as the "MWP". Others follow the convention and when a significant climate event is found in the "LIA" or "MWP" time frames, associate their events to the period. Some "MWP" events are thus wet events or cold events rather than strictly warm events, particularly in central Antarctica where climate patterns opposite to the North Atlantic area have been noticed.
Climate events
North Atlantic and North American regions
The
Vikings took advantage of ice-free seas to colonize
Greenland and other outlying lands of the far north . The MWP was followed by the Little Ice Age, a period of cooling that lasted until the
19th century. In the
Chesapeake Bay, researchers found large temperature excursions during the Medieval Warm Period (about
800–
1300) and the Little Ice Age (about
1400–
1850), possibly related to changes in the strength of North Atlantic
thermohaline circulation. Sediments in
Piermont Marsh of the lower
Hudson Valley show a dry Medieval Warm period from AD 800–1300.
Prolonged droughts affected many parts of the western
United States and especially eastern
California and the western
Great Basin.
A
radiocarbon-dated box core in the
Sargasso Sea shows that the sea surface temperature was approximately 1°C cooler than today approximately 400 years ago (the Little Ice Age) and 1700 years ago, and approximately 1°C warmer than today 1000 years ago (the Medieval Warm Period).
During the MWP
wine grapes were grown in
Europe as far north as southern
Britain, as they're today.
Other regions
The climate in equatorial east
Africa has alternated between drier than today, and relatively wet. The drier climate took place during the Medieval Warm Period (~AD
1000–
1270).
An
ice core from the eastern Bransfield Basin,
Antarctic Peninsula, clearly identifies events of the
Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period. The core clearly shows a distinctly cold period about AD 1000–
1100, neatly illustrating the fact that "MWP" is a moveable term, and that during the "warm" period there were, regionally, periods of both warmth and cold.
Corals in the tropical
Pacific Ocean suggest that relatively cool, dry conditions may have persisted early in the millennium, consistent with a
La Niña-like configuration of the
El Niño-Southern Oscillation patterns. Although there's an extreme scarcity of data from
Australia (for both the Medieval Warm Period and
Little Ice Age) evidence from wave built shingle terraces for a permanently full
Lake Eyre during the ninth and tenth centuries is consistent with this La Niña-like configuration, though of itself inadequate to show how lake levels varied from year to year or what climatic conditions elsewhere in Australia were like.
Adhikari and Kumon (2001), whilst investigating sediments in
Lake Nakatsuna in central Japan, verified the existence there of both the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice Age.
For further discussion of regional and global temperature variations see:
Temperature record.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Medieval Warm Period'.
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