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RESEARCH PRODUCT
A 5500-year oxygen isotope record of high arctic environmental change from southern Spitsbergen
Matthew J. WoollerEija KurkiLaura ArppeAntti E.k. OjalaMarek ZajączkowskiTomi P. Luotosubject
TEMPERATURE VARIABILITY1171 GeosciencesSpitsbergen010506 paleontologyArcheology010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEnvironmental change"Little Ice Age'NORTH-ATLANTIC CLIMATE01 natural sciencesIsotopes of oxygenSVALBARD ICE CORESvalbardArcticSea iceEAST GREENLAND CURRENTPrecipitationRoman Warm Periodclimate0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processes‘Little Ice Age’Global and Planetary ChangegeographyHOLOCENE GLACIER FLUCTUATIONSgeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyLATE-PLEISTOCENEoxygen isotopesBaseline (sea)LAKE-WATER DELTA-O-18North AtlanticPaleontologytemperatureGlacierPALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONOceanographyArctic13. Climate actionta1181SEA-ICEGeologyHIGH-RESOLUTIONdescription
The oxygen isotope composition of chironomid head capsules in a sediment core spanning the past 5500 years from Lake Svartvatnet in southern Spitsbergen was used to reconstruct the oxygen isotope composition of lake water (δ18Olw) and local precipitation. The δ18Olw values display shifts from the baseline variability consistent with the timing of recognized historical climatic episodes, such as the Roman Warm Period, the Dark Ages Cold Period and the ‘Little Ice Age’. The highest values of the record, ca. 3‰ above modern δ18Olw values, occur at ca. 1900–1800 cal. yr BP. Three negative excursions increasing in intensity toward the present, at 3400–3200, 1250–1100, and 350–50 cal. yr BP, are tentatively linked to roughly synchronous episodes of increased glacier activity and general cold spells around the northern North Atlantic. Their manifestation in the Svartvatnet δ18Olw record not only testify to the sensitivity and potential of high Arctic lacustrine δ18Ochir records in tracking terrestrial climate evolution but also highlight nonlinear dynamics within the northern North Atlantic hydroclimatic system. The ‘Little Ice Age’ period at 350–50 cal. yr BP displays a remarkable 8–9‰ drop in δ18Olw values, construed to predominantly represent significantly decreased winter temperatures during a period of increased seasonal differences and extended sea ice cover inducing changes in moisture source regions.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-07-04 | Holocene |