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  • 550 - Earth sciences  (2)
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  • 550 - Earth sciences  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: The Altai mountains, southern Siberia, represent an area of significant scientific interest and exceptional palaeoecological potential. To assess the influence of climate on the stable isotopic composition of tree-ring cellulose and the potential of this record as a palaeoclimate proxy, replicated stable oxygen and carbon isotope time-series were developed for the twentieth century from four Siberian Pine (Pinus sibirica Du Tour) trees growing near the settlement of Aktash, Russian Altai mountains, southern Siberia. Bootstrapped calibrations for the local instrumental period (AD 1954–2000) reveal strong correlations between summer (July–August) growing season temperatures and tree-ring oxygen (r2=0.55) and carbon (r2=0.30) isotopes. Covariance observed between both carbon and oxygen isotope data suggest a common (stomatal) control. The resulting empirical model was used to reconstruct regional summer temperatures for the twentieth century. No divergence is observed between the non-detrended tree-ring isotope series and instrumental data nor is there any twentieth-century summer warming trend. The strong isotopic signal preserved in the tree-ring series supports the wider application of this approach to explore climatic variability and environmental trends during past millennia through analysis of new and existing long tree-ring chronologies from this region.
    Keywords: 550 - Earth sciences
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: Lake high-stand sediments are found in three onshore terraces at Lake Donggi Cona, northeastern Tibetan Plateau, and reveal characteristics of hydrological changes on lake shorelines triggered by climate change, geomorphological processes, and neo-tectonic movements. The terraces consist of fluvial–alluvial to littoral-lacustrine facies. End-member modeling of grain-size distributions allowed quantification of sediment transport processes and relative lake levels during times of deposition. Radiocarbon dating revealed higher than modern lake levels during the early and mid Holocene. Lake levels follow the trend of Asian monsoon dynamics, and are modified by local non-climatic drivers. Site-specific impacts explain fluctuations during the initial lake-level rise ~ 11 cal ka BP. Maximum lake extension reached ~ 9.2 cal ka BP, at ~ 16.5 m above present lake level (a.p.l.l.). Littoral and lacustrine sediment deposition paused during a phase of fluvial activity and post-depositional cryoturbations at ~ 8.5 cal ka BP, when the lake level fell to ~ 8 m a.p.l.l. After a second maximum at ~ 7.5 cal ka BP, lake level declined slightly at ~ 6.8 cal ka BP, probably due to a non-climatic pulse that caused lake opening. The level remained high until a transition towards drier conditions ~ 4.7 cal ka BP. Though discontinuous, high-stand sediments provide a unique, high-resolution archive.
    Keywords: 550 - Earth sciences
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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