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A 31,000 year record of paleoenvironmental and lake-level change from Harding Lake, Alaska, USA

A 31,000 year record of paleoenvironmental and lake-level change from Harding Lake, Alaska, USA
A 31,000 year record of paleoenvironmental and lake-level change from Harding Lake, Alaska, USA
Physical and geochemical proxy analyses of sediment cores from Harding Lake in central Alaska are used to reconstruct paleoenvironmental change and millennial scale fluctuations in lake level for the last similar to 31,000 years. We analyzed a composite 422 cm core from the lake depocenter (42.1 m water depth) and identified 4 distinct lithologic units based on variability in dry bulk density, organic matter, biogenic silica, carbon to nitrogen mass ratios (C/N), organic matter carbon isotopes (delta C-13), pollen, and elemental abundances via scanning X-ray fluorescence, with age control provided by 16 Accelerator Mass Spectrometry radiocarbon dates and Pb-210 dating. In addition, we analyzed a transect of cores from 7.1 m, 10.75 m, 15.91 m, and 38.05 m water depths to identify lake level fluctuations and to characterize sediment compositional changes as a function of water depth. Organic matter content and magnetic susceptibility values in surface sediments from all transect cores show a strong correlation with water depth. Interpretation of four lithologic units with well-dated contacts produced a record of water-depth variations that is consistent with independent climate records from eastern Beringia. Basal coarse-grained sediments (quartz pebble diamicton) were deposited prior to 30,700 calendar years before present (yr BP), possibly from fluvial reworking or deflation during a period of severe aridity. Unit 1 sediments were deposited between 30,700 and 15,700 yr BP and are characterized by a low organic matter content, a high magnetic susceptibility, and low biogenic silica concentrations resulting from very low lake levels, low terrestrial and in-lake productivity and a high flux of clastic sediment. An abrupt increase in organic matter and biogenic silica concentration marks the transition into Unit 2 sediments, which were deposited between 15,700 and 9,400 yr BP when lake levels were higher and variable (relative to Unit 1). The transition to full interglacial conditions at 9,400 yr BP marks the beginning of Unit 3. Here an abrupt increase in the sedimentation rate, organic matter and biogenic silica concentration occurs (along with a corresponding decrease to low magnetic susceptibility). These high values persist until 8,700 yr BP, signifying a rapid rise to higher lake levels (in comparison to Units 1 and 2). Unit 4 sediments were deposited between 8,700 yr BP to 2010 AD and generally contain high concentrations of organic matter and biogenic silica with low magnetic susceptibility, suggesting that lake levels were relatively high and stable during the middle to late Holocene.
lake sediment geochemistry, alaska, late-quaternary, paleolimnology, climate change, lake-level
0277-3791
98-113
Finkenbinder, M.
cea1c11b-2195-4b36-88d9-f11ed2e42016
Abbott, M.
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Edwards, M.
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Langdon, C.
9b12df98-005b-4aa5-a9d9-3aa0b2c7b398
Steinman, B.
2f1c4f43-adbd-490c-93bb-b5f1c7364822
Finney, B.
805ee241-c854-4a75-9ee7-f61bac6d77ae
Finkenbinder, M.
cea1c11b-2195-4b36-88d9-f11ed2e42016
Abbott, M.
d806f658-929d-4ba9-83cd-41ebf8bc8250
Edwards, M.
4b6a3389-f3a4-4933-b8fd-acdfef72200e
Langdon, C.
9b12df98-005b-4aa5-a9d9-3aa0b2c7b398
Steinman, B.
2f1c4f43-adbd-490c-93bb-b5f1c7364822
Finney, B.
805ee241-c854-4a75-9ee7-f61bac6d77ae

Finkenbinder, M., Abbott, M., Edwards, M., Langdon, C., Steinman, B. and Finney, B. (2014) A 31,000 year record of paleoenvironmental and lake-level change from Harding Lake, Alaska, USA. Quaternary Science Reviews, 87, 98-113. (doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.01.005).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Physical and geochemical proxy analyses of sediment cores from Harding Lake in central Alaska are used to reconstruct paleoenvironmental change and millennial scale fluctuations in lake level for the last similar to 31,000 years. We analyzed a composite 422 cm core from the lake depocenter (42.1 m water depth) and identified 4 distinct lithologic units based on variability in dry bulk density, organic matter, biogenic silica, carbon to nitrogen mass ratios (C/N), organic matter carbon isotopes (delta C-13), pollen, and elemental abundances via scanning X-ray fluorescence, with age control provided by 16 Accelerator Mass Spectrometry radiocarbon dates and Pb-210 dating. In addition, we analyzed a transect of cores from 7.1 m, 10.75 m, 15.91 m, and 38.05 m water depths to identify lake level fluctuations and to characterize sediment compositional changes as a function of water depth. Organic matter content and magnetic susceptibility values in surface sediments from all transect cores show a strong correlation with water depth. Interpretation of four lithologic units with well-dated contacts produced a record of water-depth variations that is consistent with independent climate records from eastern Beringia. Basal coarse-grained sediments (quartz pebble diamicton) were deposited prior to 30,700 calendar years before present (yr BP), possibly from fluvial reworking or deflation during a period of severe aridity. Unit 1 sediments were deposited between 30,700 and 15,700 yr BP and are characterized by a low organic matter content, a high magnetic susceptibility, and low biogenic silica concentrations resulting from very low lake levels, low terrestrial and in-lake productivity and a high flux of clastic sediment. An abrupt increase in organic matter and biogenic silica concentration marks the transition into Unit 2 sediments, which were deposited between 15,700 and 9,400 yr BP when lake levels were higher and variable (relative to Unit 1). The transition to full interglacial conditions at 9,400 yr BP marks the beginning of Unit 3. Here an abrupt increase in the sedimentation rate, organic matter and biogenic silica concentration occurs (along with a corresponding decrease to low magnetic susceptibility). These high values persist until 8,700 yr BP, signifying a rapid rise to higher lake levels (in comparison to Units 1 and 2). Unit 4 sediments were deposited between 8,700 yr BP to 2010 AD and generally contain high concentrations of organic matter and biogenic silica with low magnetic susceptibility, suggesting that lake levels were relatively high and stable during the middle to late Holocene.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 January 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 January 2014
Published date: 1 March 2014
Keywords: lake sediment geochemistry, alaska, late-quaternary, paleolimnology, climate change, lake-level
Organisations: Palaeoenvironment Laboratory (PLUS)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 380367
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380367
ISSN: 0277-3791
PURE UUID: e812cbf8-6673-4581-ae25-5e71b6d1b661
ORCID for M. Edwards: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3490-6682

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2015 13:26
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: M. Finkenbinder
Author: M. Abbott
Author: M. Edwards ORCID iD
Author: C. Langdon
Author: B. Steinman
Author: B. Finney

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