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Science 26 July 1985:
Vol. 229. no. 4711, pp. 381 - 384
DOI: 10.1126/science.229.4711.381

Articles

Periodicity in Tree Rings from the Corn Belt

D. M. MEKO 1, C. W. STOCKTON 1, and T. J. BLASING 2

1 Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721
2 Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Post Office Box X, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37830

Previous tree-ring studies indicated that the total area affected by drought in the western United States has rhythmically expanded and contracted over the past 300 years, with a period near the 18.6-year lunar nodal and 22-year double-sunspot cycles. Recently collected tree-ring data from the U.S. Corn Belt for the years 1680 to 1980 were examined for evidence of either of these cycles on a regional scale. Spectral analysis indicated no periodicity in the eastern part of the Corn Belt, but a significant 18.33-year period in the western part. The period length changed from 17.60 to 20.95 years between the first 150 years and the last 151. High-resolution frequency analysis showed that the structure of the 18.33-year spectral peak was complex, with contributions from several frequencies near both the lunar nodal and double-sunspot periods. A t-test of difference of means in reconstructed annual precipitation weakly corroborated a previous finding of an association between drought area and the phase of the double-sunspot cycle. Both the high-resolution frequency analysis and the t-test results indicate that the periodic component of drought near 20 years is too weak and irregular to be of use in drought forecasting for the Corn Belt.

Submitted on January 29, 1985
Accepted on May 16, 1985





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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)