Change of extreme snow events shaped the roof of traditional Chinese architecture in the past millennium

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Abstract

As a symbol of civilization and culture, architecture was originally developed for sheltering people from unpleasant weather or other environmental conditions. Therefore, architecture is expected to be sensitive to climate change, particularly to changes in the occurrence of extreme weather events. However, although meteorological factors are widely considered in modern architecture design, it remains unclear whether and how ancient people adapted to climate change from the perspective of architecture design, particularly on a millennium time scale. Here, we show periodic change and a positive trend in roof slope of traditional buildings in the northern part of central and eastern China and demonstrate climate change adaptation in traditional Chinese architecture, driven by fluctuations in extreme snowfall events over the past thousand years. This study provides an excellent example showing how humans have long been aware of the impact of climate change on daily life and learned to adapt to it.

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Li, S., Ding, K., Ding, A., He, L., Huang, X., Ge, Q., & Fu, C. (2021). Change of extreme snow events shaped the roof of traditional Chinese architecture in the past millennium. Science Advances, 7(37). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abh2601

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