2 research outputs found
The fast\u2011acting \u201cpulse\u201d of Heinrich Stadial 3 in a mid\u2011latitude boreal ecosystem
A 3800 year-long radiocarbon-dated and highly-resolved palaeoecological record from Lake Fimon
(N-Italy) served to investigate the effects of potential teleconnections between North Atlantic and
mid-to-low latitudes at the transition from Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 to 2. Boreal ecosystems
documented in the Fimon record reacted in a sensitive way to millennial and sub-millennial scale
Northern Hemisphere atmospheric circulation patterns. The high median time-resolution of
58 years allows the identification of five abrupt event-boundaries (i.e., main forest expansion
and decline excursions) synchronous with the sharp stadial/interstadial (GS/GI) transitions within
dating uncertainties. During Heinrich Stadial 3 (HS 3) we reconstruct more open and dry conditions,
compared to the other GS, with a dominant regional scale fire signal. Linkages between local fires
and climate-driven fuel changes resulted in high-magnitude fire peaks close to GI/GS boundaries,
even exacerbated by local peatland conditions. Finally, palaeoecological data from the HS 3 interval
unveiled an internal variability suggesting a peak between 30,425 and 29,772 cal BP (2\u3c3 error)
which matches more depleted \u3b418O values in alpine speleothems. We hypothesise that this signal,
broadly resembling that of other mid-latitudes proxies, may be attributed to the southward shift
of the Northern Hemisphere storm tracks and the associated delayed iceberg discharge events as
documented during other HS