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Authordc.contributor.authorAceituno Gutiérrez, Patricio 
Authordc.contributor.authorPrieto, María del Rosario es_CL
Authordc.contributor.authorSolari, María Eugenia es_CL
Authordc.contributor.authorMartínez, Alejandra es_CL
Authordc.contributor.authorPoveda, Germán es_CL
Authordc.contributor.authorFalvey, Mark es_CL
Admission datedc.date.accessioned2013-03-21T19:38:24Z
Available datedc.date.available2013-03-21T19:38:24Z
Publication datedc.date.issued2009
Cita de ítemdc.identifier.citationClimatic Change (2009) 92:389–416en_US
Identifierdc.identifier.otherDOI 10.1007/s10584-008-9470-5
Identifierdc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125772
General notedc.descriptionArtículo de publicación ISIen_US
Abstractdc.description.abstractAt times when attention on climate issues is strongly focused on the assessment of potential impacts of future climate change due to the intensification of the planetary greenhouse effect, it is perhaps pertinent to look back and explore the consequences of past climate variability. In this article we examine a large disruption in global climate that occurred during 1877–1878, when human influence was negligible. The mechanisms explaining this global disturbance are not well established, but there is considerable evidence that the major El Niño episode that started by the end of 1876 and peaked during the 1877–1878 boreal winter contributed significantly to it. The associated regional climate anomalies were extremely destructive, particularly in the Northern Hemisphere, where starvation due to intense droughts in Asia, South-East Asia and Africa took the lives of more than 20 million people. In South America regional precipitation anomalies were typical of El Niño events, with rainfall deficit and droughts in the northern portion of the continent as well as in northeast Brazil and the highlands of the central Andes (Altiplano). In contrast, anomalously intense rainfall and flooding episodes were reported for the coastal areas of southern Ecuador and Northern Perú, as well as along the extratropicalWest coast of the continent (central Chile, 30◦ S–40◦ S), and in the Paraná basin in the southeast region. By far the most devastating impacts in terms of suffering and loss of life occurred in the semiarid region of northeast Brazil where several hundreds of thousands of people died from starvation and diseases during the drought that started in 1877.en_US
Patrocinadordc.description.sponsorshipThis research was sponsored in Chile by Conicyt research grants Fondecyt N◦ 1000445 and N◦ 1040326, and ACT-19.en_US
Lenguagedc.language.isoenen_US
Publisherdc.publisherSpringeren_US
Títulodc.titleThe 1877–1878 El Niño episode: associated impacts in South Americaen_US
Document typedc.typeArtículo de revista


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