Giant Sequoia Ring-Width Chronologies from the Central Sierra Nevada, California

Abstract

Giant sequoia was one of the first species that A. E. Douglass examined in his pioneering tree- ring research. Recent attention to sequoia, stimulated by fire history studies in sequoia groves, has resulted in new ring-width chronologies based on both recently collected tree-ring material and Douglass' original samples. The development and characteristics of four new multimillennial sequoia chronologies are described here. Three of these chronologies are based on tree-ring series from individual sites: Camp Six (347 B.C. to A.D. 1989), Mountain Home (1094 B.C. to A.D. 1989), and Giant Forest (1235 B.C. to A.D. 1988). The fourth is a composite chronology (1235 B.C. to A.D. 1989) that includes radii from the other three chronologies. Sequoia ring series are generally complacent with occasional narrow rings ("signature years"). Ring-width standardization was complicated by growth releases, many of which are known to have been caused by fires. Such growth releases confuse climatic interpretation of low-frequency signals in the time series. Ring- width series were detrended with cubic splines with 50% frequency response function at 40 years to de-emphasize low-frequency variation and were fit with autoregressive time series models to remove persistence. The resulting prewhitened chronologies contain primarily a high frequency climate signal and are useful for assessing the past occurrence of extreme drought events and for dating applications. The dating chronology originally developed by Douglass is confirmed and the annual nature of giant sequoia tree rings unequivocally verified.This item is part of the Tree-Ring Research (formerly Tree-Ring Bulletin) archive. It was digitized from a physical copy provided by the Laboratory of Tree-Ring research at The University of Arizona. For more information about this peer-reviewed scholarly journal, please email the Editor of Tree-Ring Research at [email protected]

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