Atmospheric Circulation Changes in the Tropical Pacific Inferred from the Voyages of the Manila Galleons in the Sixteenth–Eighteenth Centuries

Rolando R. Garcia
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Henry F. Díaz
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Ricardo García Herrera
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Jon Eischeid
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María del Rosario Prieto
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Emiliano Hernández
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Luis Gimeno
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Francisco Rubio Durán
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Ana María Bascary
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Historical accounts of the voyages of the Manila galleons derived from the Archivo General de Indias (General Archive of the Indies, Seville, Spain) are used to infer past changes in the atmospheric circulation of the tropical Pacific Ocean. It is shown that the length of the voyage between Acapulco, Mexico, and the Philippine Islands during the period 1590–1750 exhibits large secular trends, such that voyages in the middle of the seventeenth century are some 40% longer than those at the beginning or at the end of the century, and that these trends are unlikely to have been caused by societal or technological factors. Analysis of a series of “virtual voyages,” constructed from modern wind data, indicates that sailing time to the Philippines depended critically on the strength of the trade winds and the position of the western Pacific monsoon trough. These results suggest that the atmospheric circulation of the western Pacific underwent large, multidecadal fluctuations during the seventeenth century.

*National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado.

+Climate Diagnostics Center, NOAA, Boulder, Colorado.

#Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Spain.

@CRICYT, Mendoza, Argentina.

&Universidad de Vigo, Orense, Spain.

**Universidad de Sevilla, Seville, Spain.

Corresponding author address: Dr. Rolando R. García, Atmospheric Chemistry Division, National Center for Atmospheric Research, P.O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307-3000. E-mail: rgarcia@ncar.ucar.edu

Historical accounts of the voyages of the Manila galleons derived from the Archivo General de Indias (General Archive of the Indies, Seville, Spain) are used to infer past changes in the atmospheric circulation of the tropical Pacific Ocean. It is shown that the length of the voyage between Acapulco, Mexico, and the Philippine Islands during the period 1590–1750 exhibits large secular trends, such that voyages in the middle of the seventeenth century are some 40% longer than those at the beginning or at the end of the century, and that these trends are unlikely to have been caused by societal or technological factors. Analysis of a series of “virtual voyages,” constructed from modern wind data, indicates that sailing time to the Philippines depended critically on the strength of the trade winds and the position of the western Pacific monsoon trough. These results suggest that the atmospheric circulation of the western Pacific underwent large, multidecadal fluctuations during the seventeenth century.

*National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado.

+Climate Diagnostics Center, NOAA, Boulder, Colorado.

#Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Spain.

@CRICYT, Mendoza, Argentina.

&Universidad de Vigo, Orense, Spain.

**Universidad de Sevilla, Seville, Spain.

Corresponding author address: Dr. Rolando R. García, Atmospheric Chemistry Division, National Center for Atmospheric Research, P.O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307-3000. E-mail: rgarcia@ncar.ucar.edu
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