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  • Articles  (2)
  • paleolimnology  (2)
  • Springer  (2)
  • 1980-1984  (2)
  • Biology  (2)
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  • Articles  (2)
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  • Springer  (2)
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  • Biology  (2)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 205-210 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; colluvium ; soil chemistry ; clay ; phosphorus loading ; tropical lakes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The long-term impact of Maya culture on a lowland tropical watershed is assessed, using data from a 9.2 m sediment core taken from deep water (28 m) in Lake Quexil. Human population growth, estimated by the 1980 archaeological survey, is associated with a shift in the composition of the sediment to a dominance by inorganic material, the Maya clay formation, beginning ca. 3500 B.P. Increasing settlement densities are correlated with accelerated influxes of phosphorus, carbonates, and siliceous sediment. However, chemical data do not track short-term population fluctuations closely. Because much of the sediment is delivered as colluvium, and not by running water, there is a lag between terrestrial disturbance and impact on the aquatic system. As an indication of this lag, contemporary high sedimentation rates are a residual of Maya activity that virtually ceased some 300–400 years B.P. Comparison of the deep-water core with a shallow-water (7 m) section, based on palynological correlation, reveals only minor differences in proximate chemical composition. Chemical influxes are much higher at the deep-water site, however, as a consequence of sediment focusing in this hyperconical basin. Chemical analyses of soil samples from 21 test pits in the Quexil basin support the principal conclusion that bulk soil movement was the mode of nutrient transfer to the lake, following forest clearance by the Maya.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 211-216 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Pleistocene aridity ; calcite ; dolomite ; gypsum ; laminated gyttja
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The transition from an arid, glacial Late Pleistocene to an early Holocene (Gamblian ‘pluvial’) moist period has not been documented in Central America. Finding accessible volcanic lakes too youthful, and knowing that most Florida and Yucatan lakes were dry during glacial ages, we sought appropriate deposits lying deeper than 40 m in the deeper karst lakes of the Peten, in northern Guatemala. The bottom half of a 19.7 m core from Lake Quexil, and the bottom third of a 15 m core from Lake Salpeten, appear to be of Pleistocene age. The sediments contain lacustrine shells, sponge spicules, and Pinus pollen, and include several bands of humified gyttja with fragments of wood, but are dominantly montmorillonitic and mixed-layer clays and may be in part colluvial, like the later Holocene Maya clay. Calcite, gypsum, and (in presently saline Lake Salpeten only) dolomite indicate shallow, closed, moderately saline lakes 30–40 m lower than at present. In both cores a layer of inorganic sediment with gypsum dominant, perhaps recording the most arid phase of the glacial Late Pleistocene, overlies a similar clay layer with calcite dominant. As calcite and dolomite occur throughout the section(s), both minerals are believed to be detrital, but one source of calcite is algal crusts, formed and exposed today in the littoral and supralittoral zones. The early Holocene rise of lake levels formed several meters of fossiliferous gyttja with pollen of mesic tropical forest, now assigned to the pan-tropical Gamblian moist episode. Where deposited in oligomictic or meromictic lakes 〉 30 m deep, Gamblian gyttja of pollen zone Pl is finely laminated, the dark layers being richer in Ptot and Stot and poorer in Fe, Mn, Mg, and K than the light (clay) layers, but we cannot yet say that the laminae are annual.
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