March 19, 2007
NASA FINDS
SUN-CLIMATE CONNECTION IN OLD
Long-term climate
records are a key to understanding how Earth's climate changed in the
past and
how it may change in the future. Direct measurements of light energy
emitted by
the sun, taken by satellites and other modern scientific techniques,
suggest
variations in the sun's activity influence Earth's long-term climate.
However,
there were no measured climate records of this type until the
relatively recent
scientific past.
Scientists have traditionally relied upon indirect data gathering
methods to
study climate in the Earth's past, such as drilling ice cores in
Greenland and
Alexander Ruzmaikin and Joan Feynman of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif., together with Dr. Yuk Yung of the California
Institute of
Technology, Pasadena, Calif., have analyzed Egyptian records of annual
Nile
water levels collected between 622 and 1470 A.D. at Rawdah Island in
Cairo.
These records were then compared to another well-documented human
record from
the same time period: observations of the number of auroras reported
per decade
in the Northern Hemisphere.
Feynman said that while ancient
"Since the time of the pharaohs, the water levels of the Nile were
accurately measured, since they were critically important for
agriculture and
the preservation of temples in
A similarly accurate record exists for auroral activity during the same
time
period in northern Europe and the
"A great deal of modern scientific effort has gone into collecting
these
ancient auroral records, inter-comparing them and evaluating their
accuracy," Ruzmaikin said. "They have been successfully used by
aurora experts around the world to study longer time scale variations."
The researchers found some clear links between the sun's activity and
climate
variations. The
The researchers said the findings have climate implications that extend
far
beyond the
"Our results characterize not just a small region of the upper Nile,
but a
much more extended part of
So what causes these cyclical links between solar variability and the
Study findings were recently published in the Journal of Geophysical Research.
For
more information and images, visit:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/features.cfm?feature=1319
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/nilef-20070319.html
##
Contact:
Alan Buis
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
818-354-0474
This text is
derived from:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/features.cfm?feature=1319