Scientists may have solved a long-standing
enigma1 known as the African Humid Period -- an intense increase in
cumulative2 rainfall in parts of Africa that began after a long dry spell following the end of the last ice age and
lasting3 nearly 10,000 years. In a new study published this week in Science, an international research team linked the increase in rainfall in two regions of Africa thousands of years ago to an increase in greenhouse gas concentrations. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy.
The findings are critical, researchers say, because they provide new evidence that increases in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases could have a significant impact on the future climate of Africa.
"This study is important not only because it explains a long-standing puzzle, but it helps to
validate4 model predictions of how rising greenhouse gas concentrations might change rainfall patterns in a highly populated and vulnerable part of the world," said Peter Clark, an Oregon State University paleoclimatologist and co-author on the study.
The study was led by the National Center for
Atmospheric5 Research (NCAR). It used computer simulations and analysis of
geologic6 records of past climate.
The researchers focused on the era following the last ice age. When ice sheets covering North America and northern Europe began retreating after the last glacial maximum some 21,000 years ago, there was a long dry spell in central Africa that lasted until about 14,700 years ago, when rainfall increased
abruptly7. Scientists have long been puzzled by the regime shift, which turned deserts into
grasslands8 and earned the African Humid Period moniker.
Rainfall actually increased in two separate regions of Africa -- one north of the equator, the other south. Some previous studies had suggested that the shift may have been triggered by changes in the Earth's orbit, but lead author Bette Otto-Bliesner said orbital patterns alone could not explain increased rainfall of that extent in both regions.
As the Earth emerged from the ice age, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide and
methane9 increased significantly -- almost to pre-industrial levels -- by 11,000 years ago. As the planet continued warming, ice sheets melted and the
influx10 of fresh water from North America and northern Europe began weakening the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, which brings warm water up from the tropics and keeps Europe
temperate11.