Geography and the Environment- Donald Meinig Undergraduate Lecture
Eggers Hall, 220 (Strasser Legacy Room)
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No Analogue: What Can Tree Rings Tell Us in a Changed Climate?
Amy Hessl, Department of Geology & Geography, West Virginia University.
Abstract: In the early 1900s, a creative astronomer named A. E. Douglass turned to tree rings to reconstruct sunspot cycles. Through careful observation, he developed a method we call cross-dating to date tree rings to the calendar year, even for long dead trees. While Douglass failed to create a reliable history of sunspots, he recognized the potential to use tree rings to build long histories of past environments, date archeological sites and, with Willard Libby, calibrate the radiocarbon scale.
Over the 20th century, the field of dendrochronology contributed to major discoveries in a range of disciplines from archeology to climatology. By the turn of the 21st century, climate change became the overwhelming focus of paleoenvironmental studies and tree rings played a central role in confirming the reality of our changed climate. Ironically, with this discovery, dendrochronology also confirmed that the past is rapidly becoming no analogue for the future. With the climate debate settled, and the past seemingly not as relevant to understanding future climate, studies of past environments via tree rings and other environmental archives seemed destined for the dustbin of history.
In this talk, I challenge this view and argue that long tree ring records are a rare and precious paleoenvironmental archive that continue to yield new discoveries about the history of our planet, society, and the sun. Environmental archives continue to astound and need young passionate scientists to discover, safeguard, and mine them for the yet unknown histories they contain.
Category
Social Science and Public Policy
Type
Lectures and Seminars
Region
Campus
Open to
Alumni
Faculty
Staff
Students, Graduate and Professional
Students, Undergraduate
Cost
None
Organizer
MAX-Geography and the Environment
Accessibility
Communication Access Real-time Translation (CART)
Contact Deborah Toole to request additional accommodations
We’re Turning 100!
To mark our centennial in the fall of 2024, the Maxwell School will hold special events and engagement opportunities to celebrate the many ways—across disciplines and borders—our community ever strives to, as the Oath says, “transmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us.”
Throughout the year leading up to the centennial, engagement opportunities will be held for our diverse, highly accomplished community that now boasts more than 38,500 alumni across the globe.