1930s Dust Bowl May Have Been Once Common
© SpaceDaily Portland OR (SPX) - Aug 02, 2004
Events like the great Dust Bowl of the 1930s,
immortalized in "The Grapes of Wrath"
and remembered as a transforming event for millions
of Americans, were regular parts of much-earlier
cycles of droughts followed by recoveries in the
region, according to new studies by a multi-institutional
research team led by Duke University.
Some of those prehistoric droughts in the northern
Great Plains of what is now the United States
also lasted longer than modern-day dry spells
such as the 1930's Dust Bowl decade, according
to sediment core studies by the team.
The group's evidence implies these ancient droughts
persisted for up to several decades each. At their
heights, prairie fires became uncommon because
there was too little vegetation left to burn.
The ages of charcoal deposits suggest instead
that prairie fires occurred during intervening
wet periods, with each wet-dry cycle lasting more
than a century each.
A report on the research will be delivered at
a session at 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 4, in
Meeting Room D136 of the Oregon Convention Center
during the Ecological Society of America's 2004
annual meeting in Portland.
"We were looking for the effects of past
climate changes on ecosystems," said Jim
Clark, H.L. Blomquist Professor of Biology at
Duke's Nicholas School of the Environment and
Earth Sciences. But when Clark and his colleagues
began examining evidence from the mid-Holocene
period of 5,000 to 8,000 years ago in parts of
the Dakotas, Montana and western Minnesota, "nothing
seemed to make any sense."
"The question was: Could we look at the
sediments for charcoal evidence of the amount
of fire, for pollen evidence of the kinds of grasses
that were growing then, for sediment chemistry
to show how much erosion was going on, and be
able to deduce climate changes -- or the lack
of them -- under way at the time?" Clark
said.
When he and his colleagues finally determined
the correct intervals between samplings was about
once every decade, "the patterns just jumped
right out at us," he recalled in an interview.
"We were seeing these very coherent drought
cycles.
"What would happen was that the grass would
disappear. So the fuel for fire would be lost.
We'd see the erosion start. The chemistry of the
lakes would change. We would see these dust-bowl
effects.
"And then, within several decades to a century
later, the grasses would come back, fires would
start back up and erosion would stop."
To make these deductions, Duke post-doctoral
investigator Kendrick Brown evaluated prehistoric
charcoal deposits. Joe Donovan, a geophysicist
at the University of West Virginia, studied the
geochemistry of the soil samples. Eric Grimm and
Pietra Mueller of the Illinois State Museum in
Springfield investigated pollen in the sediments.
The regularity of these ancient droughts make
much more recent Great Plains droughts in the
1890s and 1930s appear "unremarkable"
by comparison, Clark said, even though the contemporary
ones "walloped people."
The study did not speculate how the findings
might relate to anticipated future climate change,
when a surge of carbon dioxide from human activities
is predicted to cause Earth's climate to warm
appreciably.
"What we can say that is relevant is that
these sort of drought cycles are common and most
of the climate models predict increased aridity
in continental interiors in the future,"
Clark said.
"One could speculate that the droughts could
be all that much worse when you realize that it's
not only climate change from changing CO2 content
in the atmosphere, but also this natural variability
out there that we don't fully understand."
Media Contact: Tim Lucas at 919-613-8084 or tdlucas@duke.edu |