The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Preliminary paleoenvironmental analysis of permafrost deposits at Batagaika megaslump, Yana Uplands, northeast Siberia

Preliminary paleoenvironmental analysis of permafrost deposits at Batagaika megaslump, Yana Uplands, northeast Siberia
Preliminary paleoenvironmental analysis of permafrost deposits at Batagaika megaslump, Yana Uplands, northeast Siberia
A megaslump at Batagaika, in northern Yakutia, exposes a remarkable stratigraphic sequence of permafrost deposits ~50–80 m thick. To determine their potential for answering key questions about Quaternary environmental and climatic change in northeast Siberia, we carried out a reconnaissance study of their cryostratigraphy and paleoecology, supported by four rangefinder 14C ages. The sequence includes two ice complexes separated by a unit of fine sand containing narrow syngenetic ice wedges and multiple paleosols. Overall, the sequence developed as permafrost grew syngenetically through an eolian sand sheet aggrading on a hillslope. Wood remains occur in two forest beds, each associated with a reddened weathering horizon. The lower bed contains high amounts of Larix pollen (>20%), plus small amounts of Picea and Pinus pumila, and is attributed to interglacial conditions. Pollen from the overlying sequence is dominated by herbaceous taxa (~70%–80%) attributed to an open tundra landscape during interstadial climatic conditions. Of three hypothetical age schemes considered, we tentatively attribute much of the Batagaika sequence to Marine Oxygen Isotope Stage (MIS) 3. The upper and lower forest beds may represent a mid–MIS 3 optimum and MIS 5, respectively, although we cannot discount alternative attributions to MIS 5 and 7.
Beringia Permafrost Pleistocene environments Marine Oxygen Isotope Stage 3 Siberia
0033-5894
314-330
Murton, Julian B.
c6412f6a-d772-4375-8391-ed91de4b29d8
Edwards, Mary E.
4b6a3389-f3a4-4933-b8fd-acdfef72200e
Lozhkin, Anatoly
06372d95-7cd9-4ce0-9530-369216c82409
Anderson, Patricia M.
f8889c66-d89d-4614-bf36-8259a4abb3b8
Savvinov, Grigoriy N.
45df6e99-4632-4e4d-94bd-ebcb21ff7bc2
Bakulina, Nadezhda
3fc72168-a9c2-4595-9d37-a6dfe35b7bc2
Bondarenko, Olesya V.
d2066107-fefc-42db-9bc9-d011573aa82e
Cherepanova, Marina V.
18666b16-846e-41e8-b04f-a6fa0f87d674
Danilov, Petr P.
f0272112-50d2-4ab4-820a-1d905ec94175
Boeskorov, Vasiliy
845974a7-a997-4339-907d-19cb70dc6653
Goslar, Tomasz
5bfdb481-e623-420e-970f-794539a0e9b5
Grigoriev, Semyon
e517999e-b86a-4dc6-a5f7-094c4f583273
Gubin, Stanislav V.
4fb99060-44f7-4845-bf92-3fb2c3238aa5
Korzun, Julia A.
ca177f95-8cb6-4f47-8d49-16c76f44268b
Lupachev, Alexei V.
dd3e6998-e337-4bcd-8e47-1f40e318a6ad
Tikhonov, Alexei
6957f4d9-1709-4000-8dd0-a522524fd3e6
Tsygankova, Valeriya I.
f0c797f5-f051-4289-8435-c7fc58ebb40d
Vasilieva, Galina V.
a8d94cd5-e356-4ccd-b0d2-9b0ed0df6c00
Zanina, Oksana G.
b83d3036-03db-4f41-b3ae-e96e71844edd
Murton, Julian B.
c6412f6a-d772-4375-8391-ed91de4b29d8
Edwards, Mary E.
4b6a3389-f3a4-4933-b8fd-acdfef72200e
Lozhkin, Anatoly
06372d95-7cd9-4ce0-9530-369216c82409
Anderson, Patricia M.
f8889c66-d89d-4614-bf36-8259a4abb3b8
Savvinov, Grigoriy N.
45df6e99-4632-4e4d-94bd-ebcb21ff7bc2
Bakulina, Nadezhda
3fc72168-a9c2-4595-9d37-a6dfe35b7bc2
Bondarenko, Olesya V.
d2066107-fefc-42db-9bc9-d011573aa82e
Cherepanova, Marina V.
18666b16-846e-41e8-b04f-a6fa0f87d674
Danilov, Petr P.
f0272112-50d2-4ab4-820a-1d905ec94175
Boeskorov, Vasiliy
845974a7-a997-4339-907d-19cb70dc6653
Goslar, Tomasz
5bfdb481-e623-420e-970f-794539a0e9b5
Grigoriev, Semyon
e517999e-b86a-4dc6-a5f7-094c4f583273
Gubin, Stanislav V.
4fb99060-44f7-4845-bf92-3fb2c3238aa5
Korzun, Julia A.
ca177f95-8cb6-4f47-8d49-16c76f44268b
Lupachev, Alexei V.
dd3e6998-e337-4bcd-8e47-1f40e318a6ad
Tikhonov, Alexei
6957f4d9-1709-4000-8dd0-a522524fd3e6
Tsygankova, Valeriya I.
f0c797f5-f051-4289-8435-c7fc58ebb40d
Vasilieva, Galina V.
a8d94cd5-e356-4ccd-b0d2-9b0ed0df6c00
Zanina, Oksana G.
b83d3036-03db-4f41-b3ae-e96e71844edd

Murton, Julian B., Edwards, Mary E., Lozhkin, Anatoly, Anderson, Patricia M., Savvinov, Grigoriy N., Bakulina, Nadezhda, Bondarenko, Olesya V., Cherepanova, Marina V., Danilov, Petr P., Boeskorov, Vasiliy, Goslar, Tomasz, Grigoriev, Semyon, Gubin, Stanislav V., Korzun, Julia A., Lupachev, Alexei V., Tikhonov, Alexei, Tsygankova, Valeriya I., Vasilieva, Galina V. and Zanina, Oksana G. (2017) Preliminary paleoenvironmental analysis of permafrost deposits at Batagaika megaslump, Yana Uplands, northeast Siberia. Quaternary Research, 87 (2), 314-330. (doi:10.1017/qua.2016.15).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A megaslump at Batagaika, in northern Yakutia, exposes a remarkable stratigraphic sequence of permafrost deposits ~50–80 m thick. To determine their potential for answering key questions about Quaternary environmental and climatic change in northeast Siberia, we carried out a reconnaissance study of their cryostratigraphy and paleoecology, supported by four rangefinder 14C ages. The sequence includes two ice complexes separated by a unit of fine sand containing narrow syngenetic ice wedges and multiple paleosols. Overall, the sequence developed as permafrost grew syngenetically through an eolian sand sheet aggrading on a hillslope. Wood remains occur in two forest beds, each associated with a reddened weathering horizon. The lower bed contains high amounts of Larix pollen (>20%), plus small amounts of Picea and Pinus pumila, and is attributed to interglacial conditions. Pollen from the overlying sequence is dominated by herbaceous taxa (~70%–80%) attributed to an open tundra landscape during interstadial climatic conditions. Of three hypothetical age schemes considered, we tentatively attribute much of the Batagaika sequence to Marine Oxygen Isotope Stage (MIS) 3. The upper and lower forest beds may represent a mid–MIS 3 optimum and MIS 5, respectively, although we cannot discount alternative attributions to MIS 5 and 7.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 December 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 February 2017
Published date: March 2017
Keywords: Beringia Permafrost Pleistocene environments Marine Oxygen Isotope Stage 3 Siberia

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413196
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413196
ISSN: 0033-5894
PURE UUID: 7360e478-1a58-4416-900f-e4546f77232d
ORCID for Mary E. Edwards: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3490-6682

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 Aug 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:27

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Julian B. Murton
Author: Mary E. Edwards ORCID iD
Author: Anatoly Lozhkin
Author: Patricia M. Anderson
Author: Grigoriy N. Savvinov
Author: Nadezhda Bakulina
Author: Olesya V. Bondarenko
Author: Marina V. Cherepanova
Author: Petr P. Danilov
Author: Vasiliy Boeskorov
Author: Tomasz Goslar
Author: Semyon Grigoriev
Author: Stanislav V. Gubin
Author: Julia A. Korzun
Author: Alexei V. Lupachev
Author: Alexei Tikhonov
Author: Valeriya I. Tsygankova
Author: Galina V. Vasilieva
Author: Oksana G. Zanina

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×