Study: fewer Caribbean hurricanes during Maunder Minimum of solar activity

“We didn’t go looking for the Maunder Minimum, it just popped out of the data.”

Hurricane Katrina, Aug 28, 2005
Hurricane Katrina, Aug 28, 2005

From the UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA

Shipwrecks, tree rings reveal Caribbean hurricanes in buccaneer era

Records of Spanish shipwrecks combined with tree-ring records show the period 1645 to 1715 had the fewest Caribbean hurricanes since 1500, according to new University of Arizona-led research. The study is the first to use shipwrecks as a proxy for hurricane activity.

The researchers found a 75 percent reduction in the number of Caribbean hurricanes from 1645-1715, a time with little sunspot activity and cool temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere.

“We’re the first to use shipwrecks to study hurricanes in the past,” said lead author Valerie Trouet, an associate professor in the UA Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research. “By combining shipwreck data and tree-ring data, we are extending the Caribbean hurricane record back in time and that improves our understanding of hurricane variability.”

Although global climate models indicate hurricanes will be more intense as the climate warms, those models are not yet good at making regional predictions, Trouet said. Learning more about how hurricanes correlated with climate for the past 500 years may lead to better regional predictions of hurricanes.

“We’re providing information that can help those models become more precise,” she said.

What is now the U.S. National Hurricane Center did not begin keeping records of Caribbean hurricanes until 1850, she said. Researchers have used lake sediments to develop a record of hurricanes over the past centuries, but these data provide only century-level resolution.

The new research provides an annual record of Caribbean hurricanes going back to the year 1500 – shortly after Christopher Columbus first reached the Caribbean.

Ship traffic between Spain and the Caribbean became commonplace. Spain kept detailed records of the comings and goings of ships–at the time, ships returning with gold and other goods provided the income for the Spanish kingdom. Storms were the major reason that ships wrecked in the Caribbean.

Figuring out how climate change affects hurricane activity is important for emergency management planning. For U.S. hurricanes from 1970 to 2002, other investigators estimated the damages cost $57 billion in 2015 dollars.

The team’s paper, “Shipwreck Rates Reveal Caribbean Tropical Cyclone Response to Past Radiative Forcing,” is scheduled to be published online by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of March 7.

Trouet’s co-authors are Grant Harley of the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg and Marta Domínguez-Delmás of the University of Santiago de Compostela in Lugo, Spain.

The University of Southern Mississippi, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and an Agnese N. Haury Visiting Scholar Fellowship supported the research.

Trouet and her coauthors hatched the idea for the study while sitting on the patio of Tucson’s Hotel Congress. The three scientists were attending the Second American Dendrochronology Conference, which was held in Tucson in 2013.

Harley mentioned he had tree-ring records from the Florida Keys that went back to 1707 – and that the tree rings revealed when hurricanes had occurred. The growth of trees is retarded in years with hurricanes. That reduction in growth is reflected in the tree’s annual rings.

Domínguez-Delmás, a dendroarchaelogist, figures out when Spanish ships were built by retrieving wood from shipwrecks and dating the wood. Trouet wondered whether the tree-ring record of Florida hurricanes could be combined with shipwreck data to create a long-term history of Caribbean hurricanes.

The team discovered that a book used by treasure hunters, Robert F. Marx’s book “Shipwrecks in the Americas: a complete guide to every major shipwreck in the Western Hemisphere,” had a detailed record of Caribbean shipwrecks. The team also used “Shipwrecks of Florida: A comprehensive listing,” by Steven D. Singer.

The books, combined with ship logs, allowed the researchers to compile a list of Spanish ships known to have been wrecked by storms during the hurricane seasons of 1495-1825. The team found that the hurricane patterns from the shipwreck database closely matched Florida Keys tree-ring chronology of hurricanes from 1707-1825.

In addition, the team compared the Florida Keys tree-ring records to the systematic recordings of hurricanes from 1850-2009. Again, the patterns matched.

When they overlapped the shipwreck data with the tree-ring data, the researchers discovered a 75 percent reduction in hurricane activity from 1645-1715, a time period known as the Maunder Minimum.

“We didn’t go looking for the Maunder Minimum,” Trouet said. “It just popped out of the data.”

The Maunder Minimum is so named because there was a low in sunspot activity during that time. Because Earth receives less solar radiation during lulls in sunspot activity, the Northern Hemisphere was cooler during the Maunder Minimum than in the time periods before or after.

Learning that a lull in Caribbean hurricanes corresponded to a time when Earth received less solar energy will help researchers better understand the influence of large changes in radiation, including that from greenhouse gas emissions, on hurricane activity.

Having better predictions about how anthropogenic climate change affects hurricane activity is important because hurricanes are so destructive and have big societal impacts, Trouet said. She anticipates the new findings will help improve future hurricane predictions under a changing climate.

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AnonyMoose
March 7, 2016 8:53 pm

The study assumes that people during that period were not better at avoiding hurricanes than at other periods. Perhaps one group got an education or experience which were more relevant to sailing.

otsar
March 7, 2016 9:06 pm

After Medina Sidonia’s not so excellent adventure of 1588, things did not go well for Spain. Many ships were lost, many sailors were lost. The depredations of Drake and Morgan, did not help with the rebuilding the Spanish fleet.
I wonder if the trade winds decreased or increased during the Maunder Minimum, as that would have had an impact on sea voyages at the time.

Greg
March 7, 2016 9:30 pm

Although global climate models indicate hurricanes will be more intense as the climate warms, those models are not yet good at making regional predictions, Trouet said.

Well if the models cannot predict hurricanes on a basin by basin ‘regional’ level why would we have any faith in what they show as a global average.? Tropical storms are emergent phenomena which spring up out of variations in local ‘regional’ conditions.
If you can’t model that you can’t model hurricanes, period. You model is WORTHLESS. Come back when you have a model that works.
Anyone looking for naive linear relationship between tropical storms and global average temperature has zero understanding of climate and weather.comment image
https://judithcurry.com/2016/01/11/ace-in-the-hole/
When their GCMs can reproduce the drop off of cyclone energy since 2005 and during the mid-century warm period they may have something to tell us.

Greg
March 7, 2016 9:38 pm

“We’re providing information that can help those models become more precise,” she said.

We are now living in the hottest period EVAH and have a trough in hurricane activity. Models say is should be at a max. Becoming “more precise” than that should not be difficult.
The stupid language tries, dishonestly, to pretend that models are already “precise” but just need a bit more input from sunken spanish ships to tweak then into being “more precise”
The models are diametrically WRONG for the current period. That is not a degree of precision.

March 7, 2016 9:43 pm

This is proof positive that when there is a Maunder Minimum, there are more pirates about, as fewer of them go to Davey Jones’ Locker.

Greg
Reply to  ntesdorf
March 7, 2016 10:01 pm

Good point, Maybe the recent drop in solar activity explains the increase in piracy of the Somali coast !

Greg
March 7, 2016 10:00 pm

Learning that a lull in Caribbean hurricanes corresponded to a time when Earth received less solar energy will help researchers better understand the influence of large changes in radiation, including that from greenhouse gas emissions, on hurricane activity.
Says who?
There is the spurious assumption that IR that affects a few microns of the surface has the same effect on SST as UV that penetrates tens of metres.
Do they even think about physics before writing such garbage?

Greg
March 7, 2016 10:12 pm

Harley mentioned he had tree-ring records from the Florida Keys that went back to 1707 – and that the tree rings revealed when hurricanes had occurred. The growth of trees is retarded in years with hurricanes. That reduction in growth is reflected in the tree’s annual rings.

Isn’t it great how tree rings are just like tea leaves ?
All you have to do is concentrate really hard on the thing you want to know about and tree-rings will give you the answer.
You then totally ignore all the other things tree-rings are also claimed to indicate any you have proxy result.
MAGIC isn’t it?

Greg
Reply to  Greg
March 7, 2016 10:18 pm

I love then hand-waving explanation for the proxy. Never mind doing a study to establish the proxy relationship before doing a study based on the proxy. Just assume it is a reliable proxy if it gives the answer you want.
Once your dressed it up with a few words like “societal impact” and “anthropogenic climate change” and it’s sure to get published.
You’re in !

John Law
Reply to  Greg
March 8, 2016 12:09 am

Sort of a storm in a teacup!

kennethrichards
March 7, 2016 11:38 pm

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10933-015-9861-3
[W]e reconstructed the history of typhoon and storm-rain activity only for the interval AD 1400–1900. The record indicates that typhoon frequency throughout the Korean Peninsula varied in response to the state of the El Niño/Southern Oscillation. Typhoon variability was likely modulated further by the state of the East Asia summer monsoon (EASM) pattern, associated with variation in the magnitude of solar irradiance. During periods of minimum solar activity, such as the early Maunder Minimum (AD 1650–1675), typhoons struck the east China coast and Korean Peninsula more frequently because of a strengthened EASM.
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00382-010-0883-2
The linear trend in the number of severe TCs [tropical cyclones] making land-fall over eastern Australia declined from about 0.45 TCs/year in the early 1870s to about 0.17 TCs/year in recent times—a 62% decline.
http://linkis.com/wiley.com/lXQQS
Our record of tropical cyclone activity reveals no significant trends in the total number of tropical cyclones (tropical storms and hurricanes) in the best sampled regions for the past 318 years. However, the total number of hurricanes in the 20th century is ∼20% lower than in previous centuries.

G.
March 7, 2016 11:42 pm

Apologies for this OT comment, I’m having difficulties getting the tips and notes page to load. I was just wondering if this article from the Conversation has been mentioned here yet?
‘We traced the human fingerprint on record-breaking temperatures back to the 1930s’
“In recent years climate scientists have looked at the role climate change played in unusual extreme weather events such as Australia’s hottest summer in 2012-13 and recent heatwaves.
Before now no one had looked at how far back in time we could go and still link these weird weather events and record-breaking climate extremes to our influence on the climate.
Our study, published in Geophysical Research Letters, addressed the question of when climate change started altering the influence of record hot years and summers in a way we can detect. We looked at five regions of the world, as well as the whole globe.
We’ve been changing the weather for a long time
Human-made climate change has been influencing heat extremes for decades, with many past records directly attributable to the effect we have had on the climate…”
https://theconversation.com/we-traced-the-human-fingerprint-on-record-breaking-temperatures-back-to-the-1930s-55438
The paper is paywalled
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2015GL067448/abstract

G.
Reply to  G.
March 9, 2016 1:48 am

Never mind.

March 7, 2016 11:58 pm

“Harley mentioned he had tree-ring records from the Florida Keys that went back to 1707 – and that the tree rings revealed when hurricanes had occurred.”
But that is only the time period that covers the last 18 years of the this, 70 year period mentioned in the “study”:
‘Records of Spanish shipwrecks combined with tree-ring records show the period 1645 to 1715 had the fewest Caribbean hurricanes since 1500″‘
Talk about cherry picking.
And can tell some-one tell me? What is with this ad hominum attacking on WE by Alan Cates? Mr. WE has provided many (to me and others) excellent LOGICAL hands on articles on thunder- storms , cloud development in the tropics and again HANDS on experience of working on and with the sea, from the arctic to the tropics. Frankly I doubt that any of the “writers” of this “study” has ever set foot on a vessel further off shore than the middle of a 100 ft wide pond.
( some where on another thread somebody made the reference to a Brit that said something along the line of ” You can captain a ship at sea but you can run a Navy from behind a desk” That is very apt.
To me the amount of experience that Mr. E gathered all the years he actually worked in those environments and has been able to write understandable, logical records of those years compared to someone that spends 6-8 years sitting behind a desk in a university followed by a few more years behind a desk studying models rates just a wee bit higher in my HO. but then who am I? And thanks for the rant. good night from chilly Canada. ( which for this time of the year is quite normal, it isn’t even spring yet!).

Robert
March 8, 2016 12:44 am

So no ship ever ran aground in good weather during hurricane season ?

Reply to  Robert
March 8, 2016 5:38 am

You mean like Capt. Edward Teach, aka Blackbeard? Who ran his ill gotten ship ‘Queen Anne’s Revenge’ aground off of Beaufort island.

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  ATheoK
March 8, 2016 8:03 am

That was in 1718, so after the MM is generally considered to have ended. A common end date is 1715, but its depths were in the 1680s-90s.

TinyCO2
March 8, 2016 1:54 am

I don’t know if it was ever disputed but Scottish researchers discovered that the tree rings they examined had more in common with sunspot activity than temperature or rainfall.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_8311000/8311373.stm

Geoffrey Preece
March 8, 2016 1:56 am

Detecting Hurricane History and effect from tree rings.
http://www.nwrc.usgs.gov/wdb/pub/0021.pdf

H.R.
Reply to  Geoffrey Preece
March 8, 2016 2:26 am

Thanks for the link, Geoffrey Preece. I’m off to work, but from a quick read, it looks like hurricanes might register in tree rings. I didn’t get to any error estimates yet, where they examine tee rings that give a false positive for hurricanes.
Thanks again.

Reply to  Geoffrey Preece
March 8, 2016 5:50 am

“…Suppressed growth patterns were noted in cores collected from all but two control sites. In particular, there were rings missing for years immediately following hurricane Camille. Several innovative approaches were used to determine whether the timing of a hurricane was coincident with changes in growth pattern. These detection methods included repeated measure analysis of growth rates before and after the hurricane, differences in within-tree stemwood distribution, and growth departures from expected biological growth. All site collections demonstrated some growth sensitivity to one or more hurricanes with one or more of the above analytical approaches…”

Reads like they were darned determined to link hurricane to growth rings, reasons be dam_ed. That last sentence above is especially telling.
“…rings missing for years immediately following hurricane Camille…”, rings missing entirely, for years? Perhaps because of bark loss?
Bark loss is not restricted to hurricanes.

Geoff
March 8, 2016 2:05 am

i wonder what the bar tab was for this study

March 8, 2016 5:43 am

I once read the hypothesis that a colder average temperature for the planet meant that the difference in temperature of the poles and the equator was less. In other words, than the temperature differences were reduced. It has been speculated that it is temperature difference that leads to a lot of weather impact and that a lesser difference would lead to a calmer weather in general. (not better, as warmer is better for life)
This paper seems to be saying much the same it looks like at first glance.

March 8, 2016 5:58 am

I see that in the press release they claim:
“Although global climate models indicate hurricanes will be more intense as the climate warms, those models are not yet good at making regional predictions, Trouet said.”
What they don’t mention is that the GCMs indicate only about a 5% increase in strength, but many also indicate a substantial DECREASE in overall tropical cyclone numbers. The warmunists keep fudging on this and the IPCC tried to bury this in its AR5. Imagine how the public would react if someone were to mention that the global climate models were predicting a decrease in hurricanes in a warmer world.

March 8, 2016 6:38 am

The hurricane/tree ring connection looks plausible to me. I checked their supplemental data on specific years of suppressed growth vs. storms in the Florida Keys and it looks correlated to me. And it makes sense – Keys trees damaged by storms, both from wind and the salt from storm surge, take a year or so to recover.
The one thing I’m not clear about is the timing – hurricanes occur at the end of the growth season, I believe, and so should affect the following year, not the current year. Their lag-1 data shows that delay but not their lag-0.
I don’t see using shipwrecks to establish hurricane frequency. There are too many variables in shipwrecks. I looked for commentary in the paper by a professional historian but did not see any.

Reply to  davidsmith651
March 8, 2016 4:13 pm

Thanks for that, David. I got a copy of the paper, lots of strange stuff. All of the data is available in the Supplemental Information online, but the paper talks about the methods. I’ll probably write something up on it, but the TLDR version is that it doesn’t hold up.
w.

Resourceguy
March 8, 2016 9:19 am

Surely we can do better than tree rings and shipwrecks for regional climate measures. Drill some coral reefs, karst features, or maybe Miami beach for some data.

Svend Ferdinandsen
March 8, 2016 9:24 am

It is funny how every new finding can improve the settled science of climate models.
If you counts all the improvements possible for climate models they must be in a very infant state, especially as it is believers that say it..

Mark Johnson
March 8, 2016 10:08 am

How could this study have any credibility at all? None of the authors are from Harvard or Yale.

ulriclyons
March 8, 2016 5:08 pm

Major problems with this.
a) The bulk of negative NAO in Maunder was 1672-1705, the 1650’s and 1660’s were largely very warm in NW Europe.
b) Increased negative NAO leads to a warm North Atlantic (AMO), as from 1995 and from 1925, and through the last solar minimum in the late 1800’s.
c) The weakest solar magnetic phase of the Dalton Minimum through 1807-1817 saw an increase in Caribbean tropical cyclones, along with a noted southward shift of the ITCZ.
d) The big change in solar activity through solar minima is the solar wind strength rather than irradiance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1800%E2%80%9309_Atlantic_hurricane_seasons
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1810%E2%80%9319_Atlantic_hurricane_seasons

The Great Walrus
March 9, 2016 10:26 am

There is now a shipwreck in Arizona — the remains can be seen at the university. No recovery possible.

Rob
March 10, 2016 2:08 am

Way, way to many other factors possible to make such a wild association!!!