3800 years of quantitative precipitation reconstruction from the northwest Yucatan peninsula

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Abstract

Precipitation over the last 3800 years has been reconstructed using modern pollen calibration and precipitation data. A transfer function was then performed via the linear method of partial least squares. By calculating precipitation anomalies, it is estimated that precipitation deficits were greater than surpluses, reaching 21% and <9%, respectively. The period from 50 BC to 800 AD was the driest of the record. The drought related to the abandonment of the Maya Preclassic period featured a 21% reduction in precipitation, while the drought of the Maya collapse (800 to 860 AD) featured a reduction of 18%. The Medieval Climatic Anomaly was a period of positive phases (3.8-7.6%). The Little Ice Age was a period of climatic variability, with reductions in precipitation but without deficits. © 2013 Carrillo-Bastos et al.

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Carrillo-Bastos, A., Islebe, G. A., & Torrescano-Valle, N. (2013). 3800 years of quantitative precipitation reconstruction from the northwest Yucatan peninsula. PLoS ONE, 8(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084333

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