Multiproxy evidence for abrupt climate change impacts on terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems in the Ol'khon region of Lake Baikal, central Asia
Multiproxy evidence for abrupt climate change impacts on terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems in the Ol'khon region of Lake Baikal, central Asia
A palaeolimnological study of Lake Khall was undertaken to reconstruct impacts from five thousand years of climate change and human activity in the Ol'khon region of Lake Baikal. Taiga biome dominated regional landscapes, although significant compositional turnover occurred due to the expansion of eurythermic and drought resistant Scots pine. Climate during the mid-Holocene was wetter than the present, and Lake Khall was fresh, with abundant molluscs. By 4.4 cal ka BP, sedimentary geochemistry indicated a gradual change in lake water chemistry with an increase in lake salinity up to the present day, most likely controlled by groundwater influences. Vegetation turnover rate was highest between 2.75 and 2.48 cal ka BP, with the onset of drier, more continental climate, which resulted in an influx of aeolian particles to the lake. This abrupt shift was coincident with ice rafted debris event (IRD-2) in North Atlantic sediments and an attenuation of the East Asian summer monsoon. A second arid period occurred shortly afterwards (2.12–1.87 cal ka BP) which resulted in the decline in ostracod numbers, especially Candona sp. A rather more quiescent, warmer period followed, between 1.9 and 0.7 cal ka BP, with very little change in vegetation composition, and low amounts of detrital transfer from catchment to the lake. Peak reconstructed temperatures (and low amounts of annual precipitation) were concurrent with the Medieval Climate Anomaly. Between 0.77 and 0.45 cal ka BP, climate in the Ol'khon region became colder and wetter, although Lake Khall did not become fresher. Cold, wet conditions are seen at other sites around Lake Baikal, and therefore represent a regional response to the period concurrent with the Little Ice Age and IRD-0. After AD 1845 the region warms, and Pediastrum appears in the lake in high abundances for the first time. This increase is ascribed to nutrient enrichment in the lake, linked to the rapid increase in regional pastoral farming
46-56
Mackay, Anson W.
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Bezrukova, Elena V.
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Boyle, John F.
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Holmes, Jonathan A.
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Panizzo, Virginia N.
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Piotrowska, Natalia
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Shchetnikov, Alexander
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Shilland, Ewan M.
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Tarasov, Paval
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White, Dustin
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21 March 2013
Mackay, Anson W.
8b55734f-3c1c-4b7e-9677-000271d13137
Bezrukova, Elena V.
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Boyle, John F.
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Holmes, Jonathan A.
60fde704-0a5f-4a03-b18d-2bcf598bb937
Panizzo, Virginia N.
c0d1f452-308a-4c27-9b4e-bc8bdb30f2f0
Piotrowska, Natalia
84dabb87-76d8-4db8-82fe-a51d94bf4b19
Shchetnikov, Alexander
db2afbbb-9634-4a1b-8f74-2a5f1826e907
Shilland, Ewan M.
859baae0-c782-4218-8787-dfd68e383ecb
Tarasov, Paval
5e10eb9f-235f-45dc-bb4e-a2b68122d55f
White, Dustin
5c77fb12-78b8-4a94-b25a-8697ccf5480b
Mackay, Anson W., Bezrukova, Elena V., Boyle, John F., Holmes, Jonathan A., Panizzo, Virginia N., Piotrowska, Natalia, Shchetnikov, Alexander, Shilland, Ewan M., Tarasov, Paval and White, Dustin
(2013)
Multiproxy evidence for abrupt climate change impacts on terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems in the Ol'khon region of Lake Baikal, central Asia.
[in special issue: The Baikal-Hokkaido Archaeology Project: Environmental Archives, Proxies and Reconstruction Approaches]
Quaternary International, 290-291, .
(doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2012.09.031).
Abstract
A palaeolimnological study of Lake Khall was undertaken to reconstruct impacts from five thousand years of climate change and human activity in the Ol'khon region of Lake Baikal. Taiga biome dominated regional landscapes, although significant compositional turnover occurred due to the expansion of eurythermic and drought resistant Scots pine. Climate during the mid-Holocene was wetter than the present, and Lake Khall was fresh, with abundant molluscs. By 4.4 cal ka BP, sedimentary geochemistry indicated a gradual change in lake water chemistry with an increase in lake salinity up to the present day, most likely controlled by groundwater influences. Vegetation turnover rate was highest between 2.75 and 2.48 cal ka BP, with the onset of drier, more continental climate, which resulted in an influx of aeolian particles to the lake. This abrupt shift was coincident with ice rafted debris event (IRD-2) in North Atlantic sediments and an attenuation of the East Asian summer monsoon. A second arid period occurred shortly afterwards (2.12–1.87 cal ka BP) which resulted in the decline in ostracod numbers, especially Candona sp. A rather more quiescent, warmer period followed, between 1.9 and 0.7 cal ka BP, with very little change in vegetation composition, and low amounts of detrital transfer from catchment to the lake. Peak reconstructed temperatures (and low amounts of annual precipitation) were concurrent with the Medieval Climate Anomaly. Between 0.77 and 0.45 cal ka BP, climate in the Ol'khon region became colder and wetter, although Lake Khall did not become fresher. Cold, wet conditions are seen at other sites around Lake Baikal, and therefore represent a regional response to the period concurrent with the Little Ice Age and IRD-0. After AD 1845 the region warms, and Pediastrum appears in the lake in high abundances for the first time. This increase is ascribed to nutrient enrichment in the lake, linked to the rapid increase in regional pastoral farming
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e-pub ahead of print date: 4 October 2012
Published date: 21 March 2013
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Archaeology
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Local EPrints ID: 345469
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/345469
ISSN: 1040-6182
PURE UUID: 59931957-51f3-4fe7-8760-7a9b6ea9cd9f
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Date deposited: 22 Nov 2012 11:52
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:25
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Author:
Anson W. Mackay
Author:
Elena V. Bezrukova
Author:
John F. Boyle
Author:
Jonathan A. Holmes
Author:
Virginia N. Panizzo
Author:
Natalia Piotrowska
Author:
Alexander Shchetnikov
Author:
Ewan M. Shilland
Author:
Paval Tarasov
Author:
Dustin White
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