Ancient
Records Help Test Climate Change
September
15, 2007 9:50 AM EDT
EINSIEDELN,
"Jan. 11 was so
frightfully cold that all of the communion wine froze," says an entry from
1684 by Brother Josef Dietrich, governor and "weatherman" of the
once-powerful Einsiedeln Monastery. "Since I've
been an ordained priest, the sacrament has never frozen in the chalice."
"But on Jan. 13 it got
even worse and one could say it has never been so cold in human memory,"
he adds.
Diaries of day-to-day weather
details from the age before 19th-century standardized thermometers are proving
of great value to scientists who study today's climate. Historical accounts
were once largely ignored, as they were thought to be fraught with inaccuracy
or were simply inaccessible or illegible. But the booming interest in climate
change has transformed the study of ancient weather records from what was once
a "wallflower science," says Christian Pfister,
a climate historian at the
The accounts dispel any
lingering doubts that the Earth is heating up more dramatically than ever
before, he says. Last winter - when spring blossoms popped up all over the
Austrian Alps, Geneva's official chestnut tree sprouted leaves and flowers, and
Swedes were still picking mushrooms well into December - was Europe's warmest
in 500 years, Pfister says. It came after the hottest
autumn in a millennium and was followed by one of the balmiest Aprils on
record.
"In the last year there
was a series of extremely exceptional weather," he says. "The
probability of this is very low."
The records also provide a
context for judging shifts in the weather. Brother Konrad
Hinder, the current weatherman at Einsiedeln and an
avid reader of Dietrich's diaries, says his predecessor's precise accounts of
everything from yellow fog to avalanches provide historical context.
"We know from Josef
Dietrich that the extremes were very big during his time. There were very cold
winters and very mild winters, very wet summers and very dry summers," he
says, adding that the range of weather extremes has been smaller in the 40
years he has recorded data for the Swiss national weather service.
"That's why I'm always
cautious when people say the weather extremes now are at their greatest.
Without historical context you lose control and you rush to proclaim every
latest weather phenomenon as extreme or unprecedented," Hinder says.
Most historians and
scientists delving deep into archives seek accounts of disasters and extreme
weather events. But the records can also be used to obtain a more precise
temperature range for most months and years that goes
beyond such general indicators as tree rings, corals, ice cores or glaciers.
Such weather sources include
the thrice-daily temperature and pressure measurements by 17th-century
Early records often are only
discovered by chance in documents that have survived in centuries-old European
monasteries like Einsiedeln, or in the annals of
rulers, military campaigns, famines, natural hazards and meteorological
anomalies. In Klosterneuberg near Vienna an
unidentified writer notes a lack of ice on the Danube in 1343-1344 and calls
the winter "mild," while the abbot of Switzerland's Fischingen Monastery laments the late harvest of hay and
corn in the summer of 1639 when "there was hardly ever a really warm
day."
Scores of similar clues are
pieced together year by year to determine temperature ranges, says Pfister, whose team of four uses old "weather reports"
to work back as far as the 10th century.
Pfister has found that from 1900 to 1990,
there was an average of five months of extreme warmth per decade. In the 1990s,
that number jumped to an unprecedented 22 months. The same decade also had no
months of extreme cold, in contrast to the half-millennium before.
Even in the last major
global warming period from 900 to 1300, severe winters were only "somewhat
less frequent and less extreme," Pfister says.
Over the past century, temperatures have gone up an average of 1.3 degrees
Fahrenheit, which is often attributed to the accumulation of greenhouse gases,
primarily carbon dioxide, in the atmosphere.
Global warming is one of the
world's top issues today because of fears of massive hurricanes and flooding.
For most of history, though, it was the fate of farms and the fear of famine
that encouraged careful weather observation.
The Einsiedeln
abbots - princes within the Holy Roman Empire until 1798 - were powerful
leaders who ruled over large swaths of central
Debts accrued and honored,
accidents, local conflicts and business transactions also fill Dietrich's
accounts, "but most days start with the weather," says Andreas Meyerhans, who cares for the monastery's precious
documents.
The diaries - written in
German sprinkled with old Swiss dialect and margin notes in Latin - are
"unique" because of the exceptional everyday detail they provide, Pfister says. He adds that centuries of weather records
make it clear that people need to adapt when extremely hot or cold weather
becomes more frequent. While the lives of earlier generations were ruled by the
weather, "in the second half of the 20th century people slept and became
completely unprepared for natural disasters, because they happened so
rarely."
In Einsiedeln,
Hinder reads from a barometer flanked by the Virgin Mary, and worries that
humanity is in trouble.
"God still controls the
weather," he says. But, he adds, people must do their part by taking
better care of the planet.
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