IANIGLA   20881
INSTITUTO ARGENTINO DE NIVOLOGIA, GLACIOLOGIA Y CIENCIAS AMBIENTALES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Scientific Merits and Analytical Challenges of Tree-Ring Densitometry
Autor/es:
VON ARX, G.; VAN DEN BULCKE, J.; RYDVAL, M.; ANDREU-HAYLES, L.; DAVI, N.; GÄRTNER, H.; HARTL, C.; JANECKA, K.; KOCHBECK, M.; MUNDO, I.; PICHLER, T.; SCHWEINGRUBER, F.; VAN ACKER, J.; WILMKING, M.; NIEVERGELT, D.; GÜNTHER, B.; FONTI, P.; BÜNTGEN, U.; DE MIL, T.; GEARY, J.; HEVIA, A.; KACZKA, R.J.; LIU, Y.; NICOLUSSI, K.; SÁNCHEZ-SALGUERO, R.; TIMONEN, M.; VERSTEGE, A.; FRANK, D.; BJÖRKLUND, J.; WILSON, R.; LOADER, N.J.; SCHARNWEBER, T.; D'ARRIGO, R.; ESPER, J.; GUNNARSON, B.E.; SONG, H.; KIRDYANOV, A.V.; MEKO, M.; OELKERS, R.; SCHNEIDER, L.; TROUET, V.; VILLALBA, R.
Revista:
REVIEWS OF GEOPHYSICS
Editorial:
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
Referencias:
Año: 2019 vol. 57 p. 1224 - 1264
ISSN:
8755-1209
Resumen:
X-ray microdensitometry on annually resolved tree-ring samples has gained an exceptional position in last-millennium paleoclimatology through the maximum latewood density (MXD) parameter, but also increasingly through other density parameters. For 50 years, X-ray based measurement techniques have been the de facto standard. However, studies report offsets in the mean levels for MXD measurements derived from different laboratories, indicating challenges of accuracy and precision. Moreover, reflected visible light-based techniques are becoming increasingly popular, and wood anatomical techniques are emerging as a potentially powerful pathway to extract density information at the highest resolution. Here we review the current understanding and merits of wood density for tree-ring research, associated microdensitometric techniques, and analytical measurement challenges. The review is further complemented with a careful comparison of new measurements derived at 17 laboratories, using several different techniques. The new experiment allowed us to corroborate and refresh ?long-standing wisdom? but also provide new insights. Key outcomes include (i) a demonstration of the need for mass/volume-based recalibration to accurately estimate average ring density; (ii) a substantiation of systematic differences in MXD measurements that cautions for great care when combining density data sets for climate reconstructions; and (iii) insights into the relevance of analytical measurement resolution in signals derived from tree-ring density data. Finally, we provide recommendations expected to facilitate futureinter-comparability and interpretations for global change research.