PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)
3800 Years of quantitative precipitation reconstruction from the Northwest Yucatan Peninsula.
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.