climate at hokkaido

Tracking Climate Change on Historic Cultures in Hokkaido

Japan(RS)– It is vital to understand how human communities react to climate change so that we can predict how it will influence our lives and mitigate its effects. One way to achieve this is to combine archeological evidence and climate reconstructions of the past to understand how historic and prehistoric cultures were affected by climate change.

Professor Masanobu Yamamoto and Associate Professor Osamu Seki at Hokkaido University have created climate reconstructions for Hokkaido Island, Japan, dating back to 4400 years ago. Their results, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, reveal the relationship between changes in the climate and changes in human cultures in Hokkaido.

climate at hokkaido
Minamihama moor, Rishiri Island, the location sampled for the study (top left); Collection of a core sample from the moor (top right); the core sample (bottom; Photos: Masanobu Yamamoto). Image: Masanobu Yamamoto

Climate reconstruction is a field of study in which scientists use clues from Earth’s natural environmental records to deduce the climate in the past. For this study, the scientists chose to use sphagnum moss from the Minamihama peatland on Rishiri Island. The moss has been present in this peatland for the last 4500 years and could provide a record of climate changes in that time span.

The scientists measured the concentration of oxygen-18 in the sphagnum moss and plant matter in core samples collected from the peatland. Water from precipitation has a higher oxygen-18 concentration than water from relative humidity.

Further, precipitation is dependent on the position of the summer westerly jet, and relative humidity is dependent on the strength of the Tsushima Warm Current. From this information, the scientists were able to reconstruct the climate conditions over the last 4400 years. By comparing their measurements to those from samples from another location on Hokkaido, they were able to determine major climate shifts across Hokkaido during that period. 

They correlated these shifts in the climate with the changes in the cultures in Hokkaido. During this period, Hokkaido was inhabited by the related Jomon, Zoku-Jomon, Satsumon, and Ainu cultures, which are inland hunter-fisher-gatherer-farmer cultures; it was also inhabited by the Okhotsk culture, a marine hunter-fisher culture. The spread of the Okhotsk culture was linked to the weakening of the ocean currents, while the spread of the inland cultures was linked to the position of the summer westerlies.

This study contains the first well-dated robust climate records based on hydrological proxies in Hokkaido. More importantly, it shows that, historically, cultures of different lifestyles responded differently to climate changes. The summer westerly jet and the TWC influence agriculture and fisheries in Hokkaido to this day; it is predicted that they will change due to global warming, which in turn will affect the future of these industries.