WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.520 --> 00:00:04.010 Ancient trees are revealing new findings about human-caused drought 2 00:00:04.010 --> 00:00:05.580 3 00:00:05.580 --> 00:00:10.650 NASA has only been studying soil moisture from space since 1980 4 00:00:10.650 --> 00:00:12.020 5 00:00:12.020 --> 00:00:14.370 Which meant that scientists needed an older, 6 00:00:14.370 --> 00:00:17.710 but reliable record to understand our past climate 7 00:00:17.710 --> 00:00:18.500 8 00:00:18.500 --> 00:00:23.340 Researchers can use tree data to map droughts as far back as 1400 9 00:00:23.340 --> 00:00:25.930 The result? 10 00:00:25.930 --> 00:00:28.770 We now know that greenhouse gases caused by humans 11 00:00:28.770 --> 00:00:32.860 have been affecting global drought since the early 20th century 12 00:00:32.860 --> 00:00:35.190 How do we know? 13 00:00:35.190 --> 00:00:38.490 Tree ring data is amazingly accurate 14 00:00:38.490 --> 00:00:46.570 The rings are thinner in years when it’s dry and may not grow at all in stressful conditions like drought 15 00:00:46.570 --> 00:00:48.590 16 00:00:48.590 --> 00:00:57.340 Look Closer: Signal for human-caused climate change 17 00:00:57.340 --> 00:00:58.680 18 00:00:58.680 --> 00:01:02.300 This is the first study to provide historical evidence connecting human-generated emissions 19 00:01:02.300 --> 00:01:06.190 and drought at near-global scales between 1900 and 2005 20 00:01:06.190 --> 00:01:07.000 21 00:01:07.000 --> 00:01:10.610 Together, modern soil moisture measurements and tree ring-based records 22 00:01:10.610 --> 00:01:13.610 of the past create a more complete data set 23 00:01:13.610 --> 00:01:19.860 Verifying the accuracy of climate models that predict more frequent drought in the near future 24 00:01:19.860 --> 00:01:23.216