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Bulk organic geochemistry of sediments from Puyehue Lake and its watershed (Chile, 40°S) : implications for paleoenvironmental reconstructions
Authors
Ackert
Arnaud
+73 more
Arrigo
Baier
Barrows
Bennett
Bentley
Bertrand
Bertrand
Bertrand
Bertrand
Blunier
Boström
Boës
Brady
Campos
Charlet
Colman
De Batist
Denton
Elser
EPICA Community Members
Fry
Gilles Lepoint
Godoy
Hajdas
Healey
Hecky
Heiri
Hubbard
Kaiser
Kendall
Lamy
Lamy
Lazerte
Lourdes Vargas-Ramirez
Lowell
Marc De Batist
McGroddy
Meyers
Meyers
Meyers
Mieke Sterken
Moreno
Moreno
Moreno
Muñoz
Nadelhoffer
Nathalie Fagel
Nierop
O'Leary
Osborne
Parada
Perdue
Post
Prahl
Rostad
Schiefer
Sifeddine
Sowers
Sterken
Sterner
Stocker
Stott
Sudgen
Sébastien Bertrand
Talbot
Thomasson
Vannote
Vargas-Ramirez
Verardo
Vuorio
Wim Vyverman
Wissel
Wynn
Publication date
4 March 2009
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 294 (2010): 56-71, doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2009.03.012.Since the last deglaciation, the mid-latitudes of the southern Hemisphere have undergone considerable environmental changes. In order to better understand the response of continental ecosystems to paleoclimate changes in southern South America, we investigated the sedimentary record of Puyehue Lake, located in the western piedmont of the Andes in south-central Chile (40°S). We analyzed the elemental (C, N) and stable isotopic (δ13C, δ15N) composition of the sedimentary organic matter preserved in the lake and its watershed to estimate the relative changes in the sources of sedimentary organic carbon through space and time. The geochemical signature of the aquatic and terrestrial end-members was determined on samples of lake particulate organic matter (N/C: 0.130) and Holocene paleosols (N/C: 0.069), respectively. A simple mixing equation based on the N/C ratio of these end-members was then used to estimate the fraction of terrestrial carbon (ƒT) preserved in the lake sediments. Our approach was validated using surface sediment samples, which show a strong relation between ƒT and distance to the main rivers and to the shore. We further applied this equation to an 11.22 m long sediment core to reconstruct paleoenvironmental changes in Puyehue Lake and its watershed during the last 17.9 kyr. Our data provide evidence for a first warming pulse at 17.3 cal kyr BP, which triggered a rapid increase in lake diatom productivity, lagging the start of a similar increase in sea surface temperature (SST) off Chile by 1500 years. This delay is best explained by the presence of a large glacier in the lake watershed, which delayed the response time of the terrestrial proxies and limited the concomitant expansion of the vegetation in the lake watershed (low ƒT). A second warming pulse at 12.8 cal kyr BP is inferred from an increase in lake productivity and a major expansion of the vegetation in the lake watershed, demonstrating that the Puyehue glacier had considerably retreated from the watershed. This second warming pulse is synchronous with a 2°C increase in SST off the coast of Chile, and its timing corresponds to the beginning of the Younger Dryas Chronozone. These results contribute to the mounting evidence that the climate in the mid-latitudes of the southern Hemisphere was warming during the Younger Dryas Chronozone, in agreement with the bipolar see-saw hypothesis.This research was partly supported by the Belgian OSTC project EV/12/10B "A continuous Holocene record of ENSO variability in southern Chile". S.B. is supported by a BAEF fellowship (Belgian American Educational Foundation), and by an EU Marie Curie Outgoing Fellowship under the FP6 programme
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