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U.S. desert areas to become even more arid

Climate change: US desert areas to become even drier
Kathleen Wendt rappels down to the narrow lower chamber in Devils Hole 2 cave, part of the Devils Hole system. There is not a lot of room for movement, which makes working in the cave a special challenge. Credit: Robbie Shone

Geologists from the University of Innsbruck study rainfall patterns in the distant past to better understand how deserts in the southwest United States will be impacted by future climate change.

Beneath the Amargosa desert of the southwest United States lies a hidden gem for climate research. The Devils Hole cave system, named after its bottomless depths, provides a window into the vast desert aquifer below. The cave system is home to a peculiar type of calcite deposit. As groundwater slowly passes through the cave, calcite precipitates layer by layer on the rock walls. "These thin layers have been accumulating on the walls for nearly 1 million years," explains Kathleen Wendt from the Quaternary Research Group in the Department of Geology at the University of Innsbruck. "The height of ancient deposits in Devils Hole cave tell us how high the water table was in the past."

Together with her colleagues, the geologist has conducted research in the cave for several years. In the current study, the Innsbruck team used special drilling equipment to collect calcite deposits from several points above and below the current water table. The ages of the deposits were then determined using the thorium-uranium method. The results have now been published in Science Advances. "This study reveals how the height of the water table has changed over the last 350,000 years. We were surprised to discover repeated swings as high as 10 meters above today's levels," explains Wendt.

Follow the water

Rises and falls in the local water table provide important clues to changes in in the southwest United States. Most of the rainfall that recharges the desert aquifer comes from that move east along the Pacific storm track. The position and intensity of these winter storms depend on many factors, including surface ocean temperatures and the strength of pressure systems in the eastern Pacific. Whenever these factors changed dramatically in the past, such as during an ice age, the position of the Pacific storm track shifted in latitude. "Shifts in the Pacific storm track influenced the amount of rainfall reaching the southwest United States, resulting in pronounced changes in the Devils Hole height," says Kathleen Wendt. "The past has shown us that this ' supplier' is incredibly sensitive to global climate changes."

Drying out

Lessons from the Amargosa desert's distant past point to an even drier future. The already hot and dry southwest United States region is particularly sensitive to increasing global temperatures. "Climate models predict that this region will experience even higher temperatures and less precipitation in the next century," says Kathleen Wendt. The predicted drying trend is largely due to a gradual northward shift of the Pacific storm track, which will further reduce the amount of rainfall reaching the southwest in the future. "Understanding the natural variability of the Pacific track over long periods of time is an important part of understanding how it will behave in the future," explains the geologist. "This data helps improve our long-term prognoses of future climate developments, which are expected to be even more rapid and extreme due to human influences."

More information: Kathleen A. Wendt et al. Moisture availability in the southwest United States over the last three glacial-interglacial cycles, Science Advances (2018).

Journal information: Science Advances

Citation: U.S. desert areas to become even more arid (2018, October 25) retrieved 20 June 2025 from /news/2018-10-areas-arid.html
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