Climate change adaption in Chinese ancient architecture
Siyang Li, Ke Ding, Aijun Ding, Lejun He, Xin Huang, Quansheng Ge,, Congbin Fu

TL;DR
This study reveals how ancient Chinese architecture adapted to climate change over a millennium, especially through modifications in roof slopes driven by snowfall fluctuations, highlighting climate's influence on human behavior.
Contribution
It provides evidence that ancient Chinese architecture adapted to climate change over a thousand years, emphasizing the role of snowfall fluctuations in roof design modifications.
Findings
Roof slope changes reflect climate adaptation over centuries.
Snowfall fluctuations influenced architectural modifications.
Climate change significantly impacted ancient human behavior.
Abstract
As an important symbol of civilization and culture, architectures originally were built for sheltering human beings from weather disasters and therefore should be affected by climate change, particularly the associated change in the occurrence of extreme weather events. However, although meteorology has been considered as a factor in modern architecture design, it remains unclear whether and how the ancients adapted to climate change from the perspective of architecture design, particularly on a millennium time scale. Here we show that the periodic change and trend of the roof slope of ancient architectures in northern China clearly demonstrate the climate change adaptation over the past thousand years. We show that the snowfall fluctuation caused by the paleo-climate change was an essential driving factor within the roof modification process of ancient Chinese timber architecture. Our…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTree-ring climate responses · Plant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics · Urban Heat Island Mitigation
