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NOAA LAUNCHES NEW WEB SITE ON ANCIENT DROUGHTS

Dust bowl of 1935 in Stratford, Texas.September 6, 2000 — A new Web site on drought history is available from NOAA's National Geophysical Data Center in Boulder, Colo. The Web site, entitled "North American Drought: A Paleo Perspective," explains how data from sources such as tree rings, lake sediments, and archeological remains can provide insight about past droughts. (NOAA photo: Dust bowl of 1935 in Stratford, Texas. Click image for larger view.)

Just how unusual was the Dust Bowl drought? Was this a rare event or should we expect drought of similar magnitude to occur in the future? Rainfall records used to evaluate drought extend back just over 100 years, and are too short to answer these questions. Data from the natural archive are used to answer these questions and to evaluate 20th century North American droughts in the context of hundreds to thousands of years in the field of paleoclimatology.

Paleoclimatology is the study of past climate. The word is derived from the Greek root paleo-, which means ancient, and the term "climate" meaning the weather conditions over an interval of time, usually several decades. Paleoclimate is climate that existed before humans began collecting instrumental measurements of weather such as temperature from a thermometer, precipitation from a rain gauge, sea level pressure from a barometer, and wind speed and direction from an anemometer. Instead of instrumental measurements of weather and climate, paleoclimatologists use natural environmental records to infer past climate conditions. Paleoclimatology includes the collection of evidence of past climate conditions, and the investigation of the climate processes underlying these conditions.

The new Web site is the second in NGDC's Paleo Perspectives series and follows the highly successful "A Paleo Perspective on Global Warming."

Relevant Web Sites
North American Drought: A Paleo Perspective

NOAA's Drought Information Center

– Dust Bowl, 1930s
historic photos: 1, 2, 3


NOAA RELEASES 20th CENTURY'S TOP WEATHER, WATER AND CLIMATE EVENTS

Media Contact:
Patricia Viets, NOAA Satellite Service, (301) 457-5005.