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  • paleolimnology  (72)
  • Springer  (72)
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  • Springer  (72)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: geochemistry ; Guatemala ; Holocene ; lakesediment ; Maya ; magnetic susceptibility ; paleolimnology ; pollen ; stable isotopes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract We used multiple variables in a sediment core from Lake Peten-Itza, Peten, Guatemala, to infer Holocene climate change and human influence on the regional environment. Multiple proxies including pollen, stable isotope geochemistry, elemental composition, and magnetic susceptibility in samples from the same core allow differentiation of natural versus anthropogenic environmental changes. Core chronology is based on AMS 14C measurement of terrestrial wood and charcoal and thus avoids the vagaries of hard-water-lake error. During the earliest Holocene, prior to ∼9000 14C yr BP, the coring site was not covered by water and all proxies suggest that climatic conditions were relatively dry. Water covered the coring site by ∼9000 14C yr BP, coinciding with filling of other lakes in Peten and farther north on the Yucatan Peninsula. During the early Holocene (∼9000 to ∼6800 14C yr BP), pollen data suggest moist conditions, but high δ 18O values are indicative of relatively high E/P. This apparent discrepancy may be due to a greater fractional loss of the lake's water budget to evaporation during the early stages of lake filling. Nonetheless, conditions were moist enough to support semi-deciduous lowland forest. Decrease in δ 18O values and associated change in ostracod species at ∼6800 14C yr BP suggest a transition to even moister conditions. Decline in lowland forest taxa beginning ∼5780 14C yr BP may indicate early human disturbance. By ∼2800 14C yr BP, Maya impact on the environment is documented by accelerated forest clearance and associated soil erosion. Multiple proxies indicate forest recovery and soil stabilization beginning ∼1100 to 1000 14C yr BP, following the collapse of Classic Maya civilization.
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  • 2
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    Journal of paleolimnology 19 (1998), S. 297-307 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: eutrophication ; algae ; bluegreen akinetes ; non-siliceousmicro fossils ; diatoms ; paleolimnology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Although the phytoplankton and protozoan assemblages of Lake Winnipeg are quite variable both, spatial and temporally, knowledge of their current distribution and ecology enables them to be used as indicators providing unique information concerning past and recent ecosystem conditions. Many of the main taxa have been similar throughout history although there have been dramatic changes in their abundance. Lake Winnipeg is currently very responsive to the climatic conditions in its drainage basin and it appears, historically, to have been a diatom-bluegreen algal lake with Tintinnids and thecate amoeba forming significant components of the protozoan community. A wide variety of microfossil remains have been used to infer past conditions in this large prairie lake. Microfossils reported from the long core 103 (8 m) taken from the north basin of LakeWinnipeg and short core Namao 7a taken from the south basin of the lake in August 1994 indicate that the lake has experienced several changes over its history. Diatom assemblages, low throughout the core 103 below 50 cm, except for a peak around 300–400 cm are virtually absent below 690–800 cm (Lake Agassiz). Stephanodiscus and Aulacoseira are the two major pelagic diatom genera represented throughout the lake's history. Species changes occur near the top of the core indicate increased anthropogenic eutrophication. Shallow water littoral taxa were never abundant at either coring sites. The presence of planktic cyanoprokaryote (cyanophyte, cyanobacteria, bluegreen algae) remains (akinetes) from 600 cm depth and the progressive increase in abundance from 400 cm to through the top 100 cm of the core indicates increasing phosphorus levels, warming summer temperatures and increasing summer nitrogen limitation in the lake. Nitrogen fixing bluegreens (especially Anabaena and Aphanizomenon akinetes) and the diatoms (Aulacoseira ambigua, A. granulata, A. islandica, S. binderanus, and S. niagarae) were abundant in the upper sediments and changes after 100 cm can be interpreted as the effects of human impact. These taxa indicative of increase eutrophication, in addition to S. agassizensis, Melosira varians and Cyclostephanos dubius, are representative of present day plankton. The short core Namao 7a was dated by Pb210 and the fossil remains also show a rise in the Aulacoseira (particularly A. granulata and A. ambigua) and bluegreen akinetes in the last 40 years as was seen in the upper sediments of the 103 core. There was an interesting peak in chrysophyte cysts during the 1930's which corresponds nicely with climatic conditions during this period. The fires accompaning the hot dry period in the mid 70's can be seen in the dramatic rise in charcoal during this period. Multiple types of micro fossils remains provides several useful tools for interpreting past lacustrine conditions.
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  • 3
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    Journal of paleolimnology 19 (1998), S. 399-416 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: saline lakes ; paleolimnology ; paleoclimate ; diatoms ; transfer functions ; Spain ; CCA
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Diatom-salinity transfer functions for interpretation of palaeosalinity and palaeoclimate change have been developed successfully for parts of North America and North and East Africa, but there is a need for data-sets in other saline lake regions of the world. A data-set of 74 modern diatom samples and associated water chemistry data is described from Spain. The influence of conductivity and other environmental variables on diatom distribution is explored using canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) and partial CCAs. A transfer function is derived for conductivity (70 samples) whose apparent predictive ability is high (apparent r2 = 0.91). Performance under jackknifing is poor due to the heterogeneous nature of the data-set and poor coverage of the freshwater end of the salinity gradient. There is a lack of suitable low-salinity sites in Spain, and the accuracy of estimated salinity optima and tolerance ranges may be improved by merging this data-set with those of other regions. The Spanish transfer function has strong affinities with the African data-set and contributes important ecological data for diatom taxa which are absent or poorly represented in the modern flora of African lakes, and for which, in fossil material, there were previously no good modern analogues.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: Pliocene ; Oklahoma ; Pyrgophorus hibbardi ; paleolimnology ; stable isotopes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The basal portion of the Ogallala Formation (=‘Laverne Formation’) (Lower Pliocene) Beaver County, Oklahoma, contains an interesting assemblage of non-marine fossil molluscs that include both spinose and non-spinose forms of the aquatic gastropod species Pyrgophorus hibbardi. The origin and paleolimnological significance of the spinose morph has been a source of much conjecture that has influenced environmental reconstructions of this assemblage. In one hypothesis the spinose forms of P. hibbardi are assumed to be associated with brackish water conditions by analogy with some populations of a related hydrobiid Potamopyrgus jenkinsi. To test the hypothesis that the spinose forms lived under different water conditions than the non-spinose morphs, we analyzed 10 specimens each of the two varieties for stable oxygen and carbon isotope ratios in the shell aragonite. The mean isotope ratios for the smooth and spinose morphs show no significant difference (oxygen: t = 0.28, df = 18, P (T ≤ t) 0.78 n.s.; carbon: t = 0.96, df = 18, P (T ≤ t) 0.35 n.s). We conclude that the lack of a statistically significant difference between the means of the oxygen and carbon isotope values for the smooth and spinose morphs suggests that the two forms lived in waters having similar isotope signatures. The considerable range in oxygen isotope values recorded by both morphs of P. hibbardi, including values as high as 5–6‰, suggest that both morphs were associated with waters which were periodically evaporatively enriched in 18O.
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  • 5
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    Journal of paleolimnology 20 (1998), S. 253-265 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: Late Quaternary ; diatoms ; climate change ; vegetation change ; shallow ; subalpine ; Crowfoot Lake ; Alberta ; paleolimnology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The late Quaternary diatom record from subalpine Crowfoot Lake, Banff National Park, Alberta (lat. 51° 61′N; long. 116° 31′W) has been analyzed. Results are related to independently inferred vegetation and climate changes. No diatoms were found in the basal diamict that predates 11330 14C yr BP. Very few occur until ca. 10 10014 C yr BP probably due to the short time between de-glaciation and an advance of the Crowfoot Glacier during the ‘Younger Dryas Chron’. Initial pioneering species were characteristic of alkaline water and calcareous organic sediments. They appeared as sediments became organic and laminated suggesting increasing water clarity, and as the Pinus-dominated forest expanded and the climate warmed. After ca. 9060 14C yr BP diatom numbers increased rapidly, reaching a maximum prior to the Mazama tephra; they remained high until ca. 3500 14C yr BP. The period between ca. 9060 and 3500 14C yr saw timberline elevation increase and the dominance of xerophytic taxa. These are consistent with early to mid-Holocene warmth and aridity. Diatom productivity reflects the warm climate and presumably longer ice-free season, a stable catchment and transparent water. Decreases in diatom productivity coincide with a vegetation change with reduction of xerophytic taxa and the appearance of a closed Picea-Abies forest, hence a cooler, wetter climate at ca. 4100 to 3500 14C yr BP. The diatom numbers during the Neoglacial were of the same magnitude as prior to ca. 9060 14C yr BP. Small species of Fragilaria (overwhelmingly Fragilaria construens v. venter) became extremely dominant during the period of high diatom productivity, and remained so thereafter. Recovery of the lake appears to have been rapid after deposition of the Mazama tephra. Maximum occurrence of Cyclotella radiosa occurred ca. 8000 14C yr BP during the warm early Holocene and may reflect this warmer climate, a longer ice-free season than presently, perhaps less turbid water, or it may reflect a subtly higher nutrient status of the lake water. The diatom record of Crowfoot Lake has responded with sensitivity, particularly in terms of productivity, to the Holocene vegetation and climate changes.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: bulk geochemistry ; Holocene ; lacustrine sediments ; paleoenvironments ; paleolimnology ; statistical methods
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The paper involves detailed geochemical and mineralogical analysis of lacustrine sediments from a 95 cm core profile collected in the closed lake basin of the Laguna de Gallocanta, central Iberian Chain. The environmental and depositional changes are confirmed by: (1) variations in concentrations of SiO2, CaO and P2O5, (2) Fe2O3:MnO-ratios, (3) ς(CaO,MgO):SiO2-ratio, (4) statistical relationship of silica and phosphate content to metallic oxide content, (5) the Mg:Ca-ratio of protodolomites in relation to the position of the diffraction angle of dolomite's major diffraction peak (dol100, and (6) changes in mineralogical composition. Three sedimentary units were identifyed and characterized by their mineralogical and geochemical composition. The deposition of the underlying strata (section 1) occurred under sub-arid conditions. The environment changed to sub-humid conditions during deposition of the sediments in section 2 (post Middle Ages). Increasing aridity influenced the accumulation of the upper sediments (section 3). It is also proven that mineralogical analyses of lacustrine sediments allows mostly conclusions on the limnic environments during deposition. In contrast to this, geochemical features of lacustrine sediments indicate weathering and soil forming processes during deposition and the overall geomorphological system.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: fire ; disturbance ; paleoecology ; paleolimnology ; pollen ; chrystophytes ; charcoal ; Chile
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract A 1600 year paleoecological record of environmental change is developed from a small lake in the Nothofagus forest of southern Chile (45.5°S, 72°W). High resolution fossil pollen, charcoal, sedimentological, and chrysophycean stomatocyst analyses are used to investigate the impacts of natural and anthropogenic disturbances on terrestrial and lacustrine environments. Chronological control is based on a combination of 210Pb and 14C dating. Temporal resolution during the past 150–200 yr is ca. 8 yr/sample. The macroscopic charcoal record correlates very closely with historical and dendroecological records of 20th century anthropogenic burning in this region. The chrysophyte stratigraphy indicates that this burning had immediate impacts on the lake itself, while the pollen record provides evidence for a succession of vegetation changes lagging slightly behind the disturbance. These palynological changes are very similar to the pollen signal of European disturbance in northeastern North America. Pre-European shifts in chrysophyte assemblages may be due to the influence of earthquake activity on the lake, though there is no corroborative evidence in the pollen or charcoal records. This study demonstrates that high resolution paleoecological methods can be used to help bridge the temporal gap between traditional ecological and paleoecological studies of environmental change in the temperate forests of southern South America.
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  • 8
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    Journal of paleolimnology 19 (1998), S. 309-328 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: agglutinated rhizopods ; testate amoebae ; thecamoebians ; Lake Winnipeg ; paleolimnology ; Holocene
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Holocene sediments in Lake Winnipeg are expressed in the lower Lake Agassiz sequence which is unconformably overlain by the Lake Winnipeg sequence. Nine sites, covering the North and South basins and the connecting Narrows, were selected for analysis of Holocene changes in thecamoebian faunae. Only the Lake Winnipeg sequence contains thecamoebians. This study indicates that biologic productivity and consequently the type of organic material in the sediments is the main control on thecamoebian taxa in Lake Winnipeg. Other factors controlling the distribution of thecamoebians are water chemistry and turbidity. Inorganic sediment geochemistry and water temperature do not appear to significantly influence the thecamoebian fauna of Lake Winnipeg. Variations in the abundance of key thecamoebian species along a north-south transect divide Lake Winnipeg into three distinct areas. The North Basin has remained relatively unchanged since the retreat of Lake Agassiz as indicated by the domination of Difflugia manicata throughout its history. This species appears to prefer Cyanophyta and diatoms as its food source. In the Narrows harsh conditions created by turbid waters and lack of algal food taxa result in Centropyxis aculeata replacing Difflugia manicata as the dominant species. In the South Basin three thecamoebian assemblages are recognized. Cucurbitella tricuspis, indicative of eutrophic conditions, dominates the most recent sediments of the South Basin. The underlying sediments are characterized by Difflugia globulus. In Lake Winnipeg this species is not a cold climate (arctic) indicator as suggested elsewhere but instead seems to prefer sediments containing green and yellow-green algal material. A Centropyxis-Arcella Assemblage occurs only at the base of the southernmost core where it is indicative of an early phase of hyposaline conditions as developed in shallow pools during the southward transgression of Lake Winnipeg. This study illustrates the usefulness of thecamoebians as paleolimnological indicators. Environmental changes are more significant in the restricted South Basin resulting in distinct thecamoebian assemblages. In contrast, the North Basin provided a stable environment throughout the late Holocene reflected in only subtle faunal changes.
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  • 9
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    Journal of paleolimnology 20 (1998), S. 91-98 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: opal-A ; biogenic silica ; lake levels ; Allerød ; Weichselian Late-glacial ; paleolimnology ; Belgium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Macroscopic opal-A concretions were observed in lake marl deposited in a small Flemish lake (Belgium) during the Allerød biozone of the Weichselian Late-glacial (ca. 12–11 ka BP). The silica from these concretions was derived within the profile, by the leaching of siliceous microfossils – mainly diatom frustules. Formation of the concretions probably resulted from pH- and/or evaporation related precipitation of the silica at a lower stratigraphic level, presumably corresponding more or less to a former low position of the groundwater table. The presence of these concretions is probably related to alternatingly wet and dry local conditions during the middle and later part of the Allerød.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: diatoms ; Carolina bays ; paleolimnology ; calibration set ; non-metric multidimensional scaling ; weighted averaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Inferences of past climate from the fossil record in lakes rely on the accurate quantification of a relationship of fossilizing organisms to their environment. Whereas the relationship of diatoms to water chemistry parameters has been modeled in many systems, few studies adequately address the relationship of diatoms to physical properties, such as water depth or hydrology, that may be more directly tied to climate. We examined the composition of modern diatoms in surface sediments of 75 isolated ponds (mostly Carolina bays) of the Atlantic Coastal Plain to: (1) assess the influence of physical and chemical variables on the distribution of diatoms among ponds of the region, and (2) develop a model that predicts hydroperiod (a measure of pond permanence) from diatom assemblages. We constructed two hydroperiod calibration models: the first infers hydroperiod from the weighted-average optima and tolerances of taxa along the hydroperiod gradient, the second bases inferences on the hydroperiod estimates of compositionally similar samples. Both approaches incorporate a-priori and post-hoc tests of assumptions often inherent in the construction of transfer functions. Diatom assemblage composition had strong, approximately linear relationships to hydroperiod, water depth, and calcium concentration in non-metric multidimensional ordination space; effects of other variables, including pH, were non-linear or ambiguous. Overall, the assemblages reflected the dilute, acidic chemical characteristics of bays. The assemblages contained differing abundances of euterrestrial, benthic and planktonic taxa, depending on a pond's susceptibility to drying. A weighted-averaging regression model based on taxon-specific hydroperiod optima generated adequate, unbiased hydroperiod inferences from diatom species composition (r2 = 0.81). This model may be used to infer past drought episodes from fossil diatom assemblages at appropriate sites on the Atlantic Coastal Plain.
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  • 11
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    Journal of paleolimnology 20 (1998), S. 205-215 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: subarctic lakes ; diatoms ; paleolimnology ; climate change ; Cyclotella ; Finnish Lapland
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Diatoms were analysed from a 30-cm long sediment core obtained from remote subarctic Lake Saanaärvi (69°03′N, 20°52′E) in order to trace possible changes in the lake. Diatom assemblages were relatively constant throughout the core, except in the top 4–5 cm (approx 1850 A.D.) where relative frequencies of Aulacoseira italica subsp. subarctica, A. lirata var. biseriata, Cyclotella comensis and C. glomerata increased markedly. No significant trends were observed in the weighted averaging (WA) reconstructed pH values. Several hypotheses, including (i) airborne pollution, (ii) climatic change, and (iii) catchment disturbances have been put forth to explain the recent changes in diatom assemblages. The diatom change coincides with a marked increase in mean annual temperature that has been documented in the area since the termination of the Little Ice Age. Our evidence favours climate change as the main causative mechanism for the observed diatom compositional changes, although other explanations cannot be ruled out.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: chironomid ; Holocene ; paleoclimate ; paleolimnology ; treeline ; lake sediment ; British Columbia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Analysis of the distributions of chironomid (midge) and other dipteran subfossils from two high elevation lake sediment cores in the Cascade Mountains reveals changes in midge communities and inferred climate since the late-glacial. Cabin Lake and 3M Pond are located near treeline in the subalpine Engelmann Spruce/Subalpine Fir biogeoclimatic zone of British Columbia. In Cabin Lake, chironomid head capsule assemblages depict a typical late-glacial community, and three distinct Holocene communities. In Cabin Lake, the late-glacial community is composed of cold-stenothermous taxa dominated by Stictochironomus, Mesocricotopus, Heterotrissocladius, Parakiefferiella nigra, Protanypus and Paracladius, whereas warm water midges are absent or rare, indicating cold conditions. A late-glacial chironomid community was not found in 3M Pond. In both lakes the early Holocene is dominated by a diverse warm-adapted assemblage, corresponding to the warm climatic conditions of the xerothermic period. Cabin Lake's mid-Holocene zone records a decrease in relative abundance of the warm water types and is accompanied by an increase in cold-stenotherms. At 3M Pond this period shows a dramatic loss in diversity of warm-adapted taxa, as the temperate genus Dicrotendipes dominates. This zone corresponds to Hebda's (1995) mesothermic period. Further cooling in the late Holocene (to modern conditions) is inferred from continued reduction of warm water midges and persistence (at Cabin Lake) or appearance (at 3M Pond) of a cold-stenothermal community. This late Holocene cooling is similar in timing to Neoglacial advances in the Coast, Cascade, and Rocky Mountains of southern British Columbia. Similarities in the timing of chironomid and vegetation community changes at these high elevation sites, along with the more rapid response time of the Chironomidae, support the sensitivity of midges to postglacial climatic change at high elevation sites.
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  • 13
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    Journal of paleolimnology 20 (1998), S. 353-368 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: Argentina ; Holocene ; paleolimnology ; diatom assemblages ; paleoclimatology ; paleoenvironments ; brackish water
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract We present a climatic reconstruction of Holocene lacustrine episodes in the Salinas del Bebedero basin (Argentina), based on geological and diatom information. Morphological, sedimentological and diatom evidence between 11600 ± 140 yr BP and 325 ± 95 yr BP, allowed us to interpret the paleoenvironments of the basin. Episodes of high energy (sandy levels) are linked to large inflow of meltwater through the Desaguadero River, related to development of glaciers on the Andes. This inflow is characterized by peaks of relative abundance of the brackish water diatom Cyclotella choctawatcheeana Prasad. The values of C. choctawatcheeana decrease in deposits of low energy (clay levels), where it co-dominates with oligohalobous Fragilaria and Epithemia spp. To the last two peaks of large inflow of meltwater, radiocarbon dates corrected to sidereal ages, are AD 1280/1420 and AD 1443/1656. These ages agree with two cold episodes clearly recorded in dendrological studies from the Patagonian Andes and were correlated to the Little Ice Age. Thus, older Holocene episodes of large inflow of water to the basin were correlated with the Neoglacial Advances defined by Mercer (1976) for the Andes.
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  • 14
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    Journal of paleolimnology 20 (1998), S. 381-407 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; ostracode ; paleoecology ; Great Salt Lake ; Pliocene ; Pleistocene
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract This study summarizes the results of micropaleontological, sedimentological, and isotope geochemical analyses of cuttings from five deep wells drilled in the Great Salt Lake (Utah, USA). Spanning the last 5.0 million yrs, our environmental history of the Great Salt Lake distinguishes four intervals based on paleobiological and sedimentological characteristics, using a previously developed tephrochronology for age control. For most of its history, the Great Salt Lake Basin has been occupied by a mixture of marsh, shallow lacustrine and sand flat conditions. In contrast, open lake conditions, typical of the Bonneville cycles and the modern Great Salt Lake apparently have only dominated the basin for the past 0.6-0.8 Ma. The two main structural basins in the study area (the North and South Basins) experienced different lacustrine histories. Large but frequently saline lakes occupied the North Basin after about 0.6 Ma. In the South Basin, ephemeral, saline lacustrine conditions started at 2.1 Ma and developed to full lacustrine conditions at 0.3 Ma. Our paleoenvironmental interpretations are broadly consistent with the aquatic palynological records from the same wells, as well as with the prior core- and outcrop-based lines of evidence. However, the differences in lake history between the North and South Basin have not been previously recognized.
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  • 15
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    Journal of paleolimnology 19 (1998), S. 129-137 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: saline lakes ; paleolimnology ; paleoclimate ; diatoms ; taphonomy ; preservation ; Spain
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract In palaeoclimate research, fossil diatoms from saline lakes can be excellent indicators of past salinity, a proxy for climate change, although they are sometimes poorly preserved in sediment cores. Spain has numerous salt lakes but the potential of diatoms for studies of climate change has never been investigated. A comprehensive survey of diatom preservation is described based on modern and fossil diatoms from short cores (〈50 cm depth) in a representative data-set of 59 sites, and the main factors affecting preservation are investigated using principal components analysis (PCA). Most lakes do not preserve a diatom record; four sites in southern Spain are identified which both contain diatoms and have suitable limnological characteristics for a climate study. Many lakes are ephemeral and the physical effects of desiccation, coupled with other factors such as turbidity and high salinity, are the main factors enhancing diatom dissolution or their failure to be incorporated into the sediment record.
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  • 16
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    Journal of paleolimnology 19 (1998), S. 77-79 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: copepods ; egg sacs ; resting eggs ; paleolimnology ; Denmark ; Greenland
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract In contrast to the exoskeleton or normal egg sacs of copepods, egg sacs with resting eggs of Diaptomus castor are exceptionally robust and can be preserved in the Quaternary sedimentary record. Egg sacs referred to Diaptomus cf. castor have been recovered from Late- and Postglacial lake sediments in Denmark and Greenland. The identification of fossil copepod egg sacs is important, since Copepoda is a very important group of invertebrate animals in freshwater bodies; but a group that is rarely reported from lake sediments.
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  • 17
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    Journal of paleolimnology 19 (1998), S. 41-54 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: Lake Arendsee (Germany) ; paleolimnology ; nutrients ; eutrophication ; diatoms
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract To study the algal microfossil assemblages of eutrophic Lake Arendsee (Germany) prior to the beginning of a restoration project, a 47-cm long freeze core, dating back to ca 1800, was taken from the deepest area of the lake. Based on the CRS modeled 210Pb and 137Cs profiles from the core, 1948 is around 15 cm and the sedimentation rate has increased from ∼ 21.2 mg cm-2 yr-1 in 1900 to ∼ 56.6 mg cm-2 yr-1 in 1986. The sediments were dominated by three centric diatoms. Stephanodiscus binatus, a species associated with eutrophic environments, dominated the upper 19 cm of the core. Cyclotella rossii, a species commonly found in less productive freshwater systems, was found to dominate the lower portion of the core and was absent above 16 cm. S. agassizensis was found throughout the core. In addition to the centric diatoms, three penate diatoms were found to be abundant. Fragilaria crotonensis was found throughout the core, but was most abundant from 19 cm to 16 cm. Asterionella formosa was prevalent below 15 cm, while Diatoma elongatum was found to be common from 17 cm to the surface. The abundances of algal remains of cyanobacteria, chlorophytes, cryptophytes and dinoflagellates decrease dramatically below 25 cm. Zooplankton remains were most abundant around 20 cm, with copepod spermatophores, fecal pellets and protozoa remains most common in the lower portion of the core. The major species shifts observed in the core from Lake Arendsee occur in a transition zone between 20 cm and 15 cm (1920–1940), a time when agricultural production was being increase with the use of inorganic fertilizer.
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  • 18
    ISSN: 1572-9834
    Keywords: Florida ; lake ; 210Pb dating ; macrophytes ; nutrients ; paleolimnology ; river ; sediment ; wetland
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We used paleolimnological methods to investigate spatial and temporal patterns of bulk sediment and nutrient (C, N, P) accumulation in Lakes Hell ‘n’ Blazes (A = 154 ha, zmax = 240 cm), Sawgrass (A = 195 ha, zmax = 157 cm) and Washington (A = 1766 ha, zmax = 322 cm), in the Upper St. Johns River Basin, Florida. The study was designed to evaluate long-term changes in sedimentation and nutrient storage in the basin, and was one component of a larger project addressing flood control, wetland restoration, and water quality improvement. These three study lakes are wide, shallow waterbodies in the upper reaches of the St. Johns River channel. Sediment mapping indicates soft, organic deposits are distributed uniformly throughout Lakes Hell ‘n’ Blazes and Sawgrass. In contrast, much of Lake Washington is characterized by sandy bottom, and organic sediment is largely restricted to the north end of the lake. Lakes Hell ‘n’ Blazes and Sawgrass are effective sediment traps because dense submersed macrophytes and their associated epiphytes reduce flow velocity, intercept suspended particles, and utilize dissolved nutrients. Abundant Hydrilla, combined with short fetch, prevents resuspension and downstream transport of sediments. Larger Lake Washington is probably wind-mixed and resuspended organic sediments are redeposited to downstream sites. 210Pb-dated sediment cores show that organic sediment accumulation began in all three lakes before 1900, but that bulk sediment and nutrient accumulation rates have generally increased since then. The increases are probably attributable, in part, to anthropogenic activities including 1) hydrologic modifications that reduced flow rates in the channel, 2) discharge of nutrient-rich waters from urban, agricultural and ranching areas, and, 3) introduction and periodic herbicide treatment of the exotic macrophytes Eichhornia and Hydrilla.
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    Hydrobiologia 106 (1983), S. 43-57 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: eutrophication ; paleolimnology ; diatoms ; sediment chemistry ; peatland management
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Stratigraphy of diatoms and chemistry in the surface sediment deposited at 35 m depth in Lake Polvijärvi was studied. The existence of annual laminations or varves in the sediment allowed a precise dating of the profile. Diatoms were analysed in 0.5 cm sequences; from 0 to 16.0 cm continuously and then intermittently every fourth 0.5 cm down to 44.0 cm. Sediment chemistry (loss-on-ignition, C, N, Fe, Mn, Mg, P, chlorophyll and carotenoids) was analysed from sediment surface down to 10.5 cm of altogether 33 subsamples, each containing 1–3 varves, and spanning the period 1921–1980. From 4.5 cm depth upwards the diatom concentration strongly increases, and the plankton diatom succession from Tabellaria flocculosa through Asterionella formosa to Melosira ambigua and Fragilaria crotonensis reflects a marked eutrophication of the lake. This algal succession occurs in pace with an increase in sediment accumulation rate and changes in sediment chemistry, which indicate increased allochthonous inputs and enhanced algal production in the lake. The change of the lake ecosystem is contemporaneous with extensive peatland draining and fertilizing that was carried out on its watershed during the past two decades. Existing chemical data from a number of lakes situated within the drainage area prove that at present the treated peatlands are the main source of nutrient loading of Lake Polvijärvi. A former period with indications of slightly increased productivity of the lake was dated by varve counting to AD 1690–1910 (35–12 cm). This period (characterised by Asterionella formosa) may coincide with that of the slash-and-burn cultivation in the area.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 45-51 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; magnetism ; dating ; Australia ; North America ; Japan ; Europe ; Near East
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Paleolimnomagnetic records from five regions of the world have been combined with historical magnetic field observations in order to produce regional geomagnetic master curves.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 141-146 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lakes ; sediments ; eutrophication ; Cladocera ; Switzerland
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Species composition and density of cladoceran populations changed in Lakes Zürich, St. Mortiz and Baldegg as human populations increased in these watersheds. Lake Zürich sediments became annually laminated in the 1890's as a result of increased organic input as the size of the cities surrounding the lake grew. At the same time, the Bosmina species changed from a oligotrophic form (longispina) to a eutrophic form (longirostris). An increase in Daphnia spp. populations also occurred at this time in the lake's history. Bosmina longispina reappeared in the lake in 1965 as the lake's trophic status changed from eutrophic to mesotrophic due to effective sewage treatment facilities. Annual laminations appear in the Lake St. Moritz sediments about 1910. Shortly thereafter, a shift from B. longispina to B. longirostris occurred. This change in trophic status is associated with increased tourism in the area. Lake Baldegg sediments also show annual laminations beginning in 1885 and a similar shift in the Bosmina species. Other cladoceran remains were too scarce to be useful in interpreting the histories of these lakes.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 37-44 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; magnetic minerals ; sediment sources
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This review outlines the origin and environmental significance of magnetic minerals in lake sediments. Attention is drawn to situations where the patterns of mineral magnetic variation is a reflection of processes other than changing erosion rates and fire incidence. The use of mineral magnetic techniques in sediment source tracing, palaeoclimatic studies and the reconstruction of particulate pollution history is illustrated by means of case studies from Britain and N. America. The value of magnetic susceptibility as an on-site core logging technique is shown by reference to data from Lake Washington.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 53-58 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; secondary ferrimagnetic oxides ; S.I.R.M. ; magnetic susceptibility ; laminated sediments
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The magnetic parameters S.I.R.M. and magnetic susceptibility have been used to try and establish the fire histories of lake drainage basins. The technique is demonstrated using sediments from three lakes: Llyn Bychan (N. Wales), a lake with a recently burnt catchment, Lake Biscarrosse (S. W. France), a lake with a well documented fire history, and Lake Laukunlampi (E. Finland), a lake with laminated sediments and a long, but unknown fire history.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 59-64 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sedimentation pattern ; magnetic susceptibility ; Scanian lakes ; palaeomagnetism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Magnetic susceptibility measurements have been used to correlate synchronous depths in ca. 50 l m. cores of recent sediment from a small lake (area ca. 55 ha) in Scania, southern Sweden. The three-dimensional picture of sediment accumulation which emerges provides a basis for studying sediment deposition patterns through time. Using a palaeomagnetic chronology, the results show that the pattern and rate of accumulation have dramatically altered during the past 350 years, thus making semiquantitative studies of downcore sediment properties in a single core problematical. Possible reasons for these phenomena are briefly discussed.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 65-69 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; X-ray radiography of sediment cores ; sedimentary properties ; sediment accumulation
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    Notes: Abstract X-ray radiographs of unextruded sediment cores are used for the documentation and the interpretation of primary and secondary sedimentary structures, and for the correlation of synchronous laminations between different cores. The vertical variation in bulk density, water content and void ratio, and the increase of solids with increasing sediment depth are calculated from the recorded film density along the radiographs. The X-ray radiographic technique for the study of sedimentary properties is fast and non-destructive. The technique is especially valuable when studying the uppermost part of the sediment cover and the processes of sediment redistribution and sediment accumulation. Studies are being undertaken in several Swedish lakes and coastal bays, where mono- and stereoradiographs are being used to classify bottom and sediment types, to interpret changes in the depositional environment, and to calculate past and present rates of sediment accumulation.
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  • 26
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    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sediment core positioning ; hydrographic survey ; computer contouring ; morphometric calculation
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    Notes: Abstract Automated techniques for sediment core site positioning, hydrographic survey, and contour mapping are described. The computer contouring system can be extended to calculate values for morphometric variables such as maximum length (1max), maximum width (wmax), lake perimeter (10), lake area (A) and lake volume (V). The techniques are exemplified using results from Augher Lough, Northern Ireland.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 75-79 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Dead Sea climate ; pore-waters ; diffusion ; sediments ; salinity ; porosity
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    Notes: Abstract The salinity of lakes is subject to variations imposed by climatic changes. These variations are recorded in the salinity profile of pore waters. Meromictic lakes, such as the Dead Sea, are a special case where waters which underlie the mixolimnion reflect salinity variations. In a sediment core from Dead Sea shallow waters, the salinity profile exhibited a minimum at about 1.9 m depth. It is shown by a diffusion model that this minimum can be attributed to lower salinities which prevailed at the sediment water interface for several decades around the turn of this century. No such minimum was observed in a sediment core from the deepest part of the lake where, during the last two centuries, the overlying brines had a constant salinity.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 81-84 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; geochemistry ; trace elements
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A geochemical study of lacustrine sediments was undertaken as part of a major paleolimnological project concerned with the impact of man on lakes. Factor analysis was applied to the geochemical data obtained from a core from one lake. Three principal factors which explained most of the variance of the initial data were identified. Factor I is related to the organic:mineral component ratio of the sediment, and can be considered as an indirect index of change in lake trophic status through time. Factor II is related to the granulometric composition of the sediment and matches evidence for changes in the hydrological regime of the lake. Factor III reflects changes in redox potential and is more closely related to processes occurring within the lake than other factors. Specific geochemical associations of elements are connected with each factor and are the factor indicators. The correlation of these associations are analyzed as geochemical indices of the variability of sediment accumulation conditions in time.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 91-97 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; assemblage indicators ; Finland
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Diatom assemblages from the topmost sediment of 49 lakes were ordinated by means of a program for detrended correspondence analysis and reciprocal averaging (Decorana). Five lake groups were separated, each having more or less characteristic diatom assemblages and water quality. Shifts from one group to another caused by factors such as acidification, artificial drainage, diffuse nutrient loading and sewage are discussed.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 85-90 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; East Africa ; transfer functions ; pH-indicators
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Our purpose is to establish the quantitative relationship between recent diatom floras and ecological parameters, in order to extrapolate the results to the past. The parameter pH is here considered as an example. This work is based on the study of about I60 diatom samples from East Africa and of their corresponding biotopes. We propose some statistical methods to interpret the data. Correspondence analysis allows us to define the pH-indicator species. The regression calculations allow pH values to be calculated using the percentage of the diatom species in a sample.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 99-102 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; organic matter ; bacteria ; aerobic decomposition ; oxygen consumption
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The investigations were carried out in lakes situated in the forest zone (Karelian Isthmus, Baltic zone, South Ural) and in the forest-steppe (South Ural) of the USSR. The lakes differ in their bioproductivity and in the intensity of their human influence. The amount of organic matter accumulating in the sediments is closely related to production and decomposition processes in the trophogenic layer. Processes of organic matter transformation were found to be most active in the uppermost sediment. The quantity of bacteria shows no correlation with the organic matter content of the sediment. Increase in organic matter, up to 70–80% of dry weight, is often accompanied by a decrease in bottom bacteria. The intensity of aerobic decomposition of the labile organic matter can be judged from the oxygen demand of the sediments. However, it is important to differentiate between chemical and biological oxidation processes. The quantity of bottom bacteria correlates closely with the value of oxygen consumption only in cases of high sediment redox potentials.
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    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sedimentary pigments ; primary production ; core analyses
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    Notes: Abstract A statistically significant correlation of the type y = axb between sedimentary plant pigments and contemporary algal primary production has been found in a study of the recent trophic evolution of twelve Italian lakes. The equation is used to assess baseline production levels in periods (50–70 years ago) when human influence was low.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 107-111 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lake ontogeny ; lake succession ; eutrophication
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Paleolimnologists frequently invoke the term ‘eutrophication’ for describing apparent enrichment phases in the history of a lake. I argue that this term is often used incorrectly and that alternative explanations can serve as more accurate descriptions. Increased organic content in the sedimentary record may result from increased nutrient availability (eutrophication), but it can also reflect decreased residence time of water, or changes in biotic interactions, or changes in lake morphometry. Additionally, I argue that ‘eutrophication’ is an inappropriate term for describing the aging process of lakes. Lake ontogeny is the preferred term, as it does not imply directional changes in nutrients, nor in community structure.
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  • 34
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lakes ; eutrophication
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    Notes: Abstract Problems relating to the disappearance and eutrophication of lakes as a result of human activity are presented. A study area was selected located in an agricultural/forest region where human influence on lakes used to be minimal. In the past 25 years a number of lakes have completely disappeared and others have become rapidly enriched. Human interference has included: the pulling down of water mills, drainage and river canalisation, construction of holiday resorts, development of intensive farming, increased mineral fertilization, and the extension of roads and road traffic.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 177-179 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sediment chemistry ; heavy metals ; ATP
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This investigation is concerned with the impact of industrial and municipal waste discharge on lakes near the city of Tampere, Finland. The record of P, Zn and ATP in the recent sediments of Vanajavesi I, a polluted lake, and Mallasvesi, a largely unpolluted lake, are compared.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 169-175 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Chironomidae ; subfossil remains ; shallow lake ; eutrophication ; Lake Balaton
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Lake Balaton, the largest shallow lake in Central Europe, is about 20 000 years old. An enormous increase in tourism and the disproportionate building development of the last few decades has resulted in the acceleration of eutrophication in the lake. Widespread research to reveal the causes of water-quality deterioration and possible ways of protection against it have recently started. The investigation of the larvae of non-biting midges (Diptera: Chironomidae) in the sediment of the open-water zone has also begun. The contemporary faunal composition strongly correlates with the trophic gradient along the longitudinal axis of the lake. We therefore supposed that the eutrophication process should be identifiable from the analysis of subfossil chironomid head capsules from the upper (15 cm thick) layer of the sediment. We found that quantitative results could only be obtained when fragments as well as relatively intact head capsules are considered. Our data verify that the originally oligo-mesotrophic community has been gradually replaced by eutrophic species in a west to east direction. Large-bodied larvae belonging to the Chironomus plumosus group mix the sediment down to 15 cm as they build their tubes and consequently alter the original proportions of head capsules at the different levels. So the sequence of communities through the sediment-layers is not quite reliable.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 181-184 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Clostridium perfringens ; sewage pollution ; eutrophication
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The horizontal and vertical distribution of the gram-positive, non-motile, spore-forming and rod-shaped bacterium Clostridium perfringens Holland was studied. The aim of the study was to estimate the quantity of C. perfringens at different depths of the sediment and evaluate the effect of human effluent which the lake received between 1940 and 1956. C. perfringens lives in the colon of man. Because it is spore forming and cannot multiply under a temperature of 20 °C and, according to the studies of Seppänen et al. (1979) it can be at least 300 years old, it may be a suitable paleolimnological indicator of pollution by human effluent. The results showed that the amounts of Clostridium increased at the same level where redox potential decreased in the sediment due to the beginning of effluent disposal at a depth of 40 mm. The maximum number of Clostridium colonies occurred between 0–30 mm depth.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 193-198 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Lake Michigan ; geochemistry ; stratigraphy ; Quaternary ; trace elements
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The stresses placed on Lake Michigan since the advent of industrialization require knowledge of the sedimentology of the whole lake in order to make informed decisions for environmental planning. Sediment accumulation rates are low: areas of the lake receiving the most sediment average only 1 mm a−1; deep-water basins average 0.1 to 0.5 mm a−1; and large areas are not receiving any sediment. Sediment was deposited rapidly (typically 5 mm a−1), in the form of rock flour, during the deglaciation of both Lake Michigan and Lake Superior Basins. Then the rate of accumulation decreased by 80–90% and has remained relatively constant since final deglaciation. Because active sedimentation occurs mostly in the deep water areas of the lake, the sediment remains undisturbed and contains a record of the chemical history of the lake.
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  • 39
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; annual laminations ; magnetism ; sediment influx ; sediment chemistry ; eutrophication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The sediments of Loe Pool, a eutrophic coastal lake in south west England, consist largely of laminated clays and clay-gyttjas. Studies of the diatom microstratigraphy of frozen sediment cores from the Pool indicate that the laminations are annual, and that they contain pairs of light and dark bands formed by seasonal variations in the supply of sediment to the Pool from its catchment. Analysis of the magnetic properties of individual laminations demonstrates the presence of physical and mineralogical microstratigraphic variations, which may also be related to seasonality. A varve chronology, which is confirmed by 137Cs analysis and historical records, has been used to provide a timescale for the interpretation of data from other paleolimnological studies. A close agreement between variations in the abundance of sedimentary Sn, and the history of mining in the catchment, has been found. Similarly, analysis of total organic matter, total phosphorus, sedimentary chlorophyll a, sterols, diatoms and Cladocera in the uppermost sediments all indicate eutrophication of the Pool in the period AD 1940 to the present.
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    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.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 199-203 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; clay ; cultural disturbance ; erosion ; Guatemala ; Mayan archaeology ; silt ; particle-size analysis ; tropical lakes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Long-term changes of sedimentary particle-size distribution in two tropical lowland lakes were compared with changes of human population sizes, estimated archaeologically, in the drainage basins. Mean particle size of silt and clay fractions (〈64 µm) varied between 3 and 15 µm. High positive skewness and kurtosis of the distributions were associated with smaller particle sizes; hence small mean size resulted from greater influx of small particles while influx of larger particles was probably constant. An inverse correlation between mean particle size and human population size is interpreted to mean that disturbance-induced erosion results in delivery of very fine inorganic particles at higher rates. Within any one basin, particle-size stratigraphy is more precisely related to archaeological time periods than is pollen stratigraphy. An absolute chronology still eludes us, owing to the failure of 14C dating of calcareous, colluvial sediments, but our relative chronology is now more precise than before. If certain assumptions about past hydrologic relations can be met, particle-size analysis is a way of comparing the histories of geographically very different lakes, including lakes from tropical, temperate, and arctic regions.
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    Hydrobiologia 98 (1983), S. 223-235 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: diatoms ; paleolimnology ; lakes ; Minnesota ; sediments ; microfossils
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Fossil diatom assemblages from the sediment/water interface in 105 Minnesota lakes were compared with measurements of alkalinity, sulphate, total phosphorus, transparency, and water depth at the sample site. Similar assemblages were placed together using cluster analysis and comparisons of environmental variables between diatom clusters were made using an analysis of variance. Total alkalinity and transparency showed the greatest difference among clusters. Samples from shallow eutrophic prairie lakes were dominated by Melosira granulata, Stephanodiscus niagarae and, occasionally, by Stephanodiscus hantzschii. Deep oligotrophic lakes had modest percentages of Cyclotella comta. Dilute acid lakes were dominated either by Melosira distans and M. italica or by Tabellaria fenestrata, Cyclotella stelligera, and in some cases C. glomerata. Assemblages with Cyclotella glomerata and Synedra nana were found in naturally meromictic lakes. Stephanodiscus hantzschii showed a preference for extremely eutrophic lakes. The relationships between recently deposited diatom assemblages and the lake environmental conditions studied here can be used to evaluate the extent of past environmental change in lakes.
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  • 43
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    Keywords: Chrysophycea ; cultural eutrophication ; paleolimnology ; resting cyst ; statospore ; stratigraphy
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The recent sediments of Frains Lake, Michigan contain a rich and well preserved association of chrysophycean cysts. Forty one forms are revealed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and light microscopy (LM). Taxonomic descriptions. and SEM micrographs are provided for the dominant forms. The three dominant taxa throughout the sediments, Cysta minima, C. modica and C. subbavaricum, do not show significant shifts in proportional abundance associated with European settlement and the onset of cultural eutrophication. However, certain subdominant taxa do show clear trends. Density counts indicate a dramatic decline in cyst concentration (by volume and by dry mass) and a sharp increase in absolute accumulation (net annual influx) following settlement. The Frains Lake profile of chrysophycean cysts is compared to sequences of other North American and European temperate lakes. The utility of chrysophycean cysts as paleoenvironmental indicators is considered on the basis of these results.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 125-130 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; pollen ; diatoms ; Synuraceae ; Chrysophyta ; meromixis ; eutrophication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The recent history of Little Round Lake, a small meromictic lake in southeastern Ontario, is considered. Pollen analyses were used to identify past changes in terrestrial vegetation, whilst limnological conditions were interpreted on the basis of diatom and chrysophyte microfossils. Contemporaneous with the arrival of European settlers (ca. A. D. 1850), the predisturbance assemblage of oligotrophic Cyclotella diatoms was replaced by Synedra spp., which then succeeded to a eutrophic flora dominated by Stephanodiscus hantzschii. Meanwhile, synuracean algae were almost completely excluded. Over the last 30 years, the algal microfossils indicate that the lake underwent a marked return to oligotrophy. Evidence is presented which suggests that this shift was related to the cultural enhancement of meromixis by the seepage of road salt.
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  • 45
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    Keywords: paleolimnology ; acidic precipitation ; lake acidification ; heavy metal pollution ; diatoms ; cladocerans
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Sediment cores from nine lakes in southern Norway (N) and six in northern New England (NE) were dated by 137Cs, 210Pb and in NE also by pollen, and were analyzed geochemically and for diatoms. Cores from two N and three NE lakes were analyzed for cladocerans. 137Cs dating is unreliable in these lakes, probably due to mobility of Cs in the sediment. In Holmvatn sediment, an up-core increase in Fe, starting ca. 1900, correlates with geochemical indications of decreasing mechanical erosion of soils. Diatoms indicate a lake acidification starting in the 1920's. We propose that soil Fe was mobilized and runoff acidified by acidic precipitation and/or by soil acidification resulting from vegetational succession following reduced grazing. Even minor land use changes or disturbances in lake watersheds introduce ambiguity to the sedimentary evidence relating to atmospheric influences. Diatom counts from surface sediments in 36 N and 31 NE lakes were regressed against contemporary water pH to obtain coefficients for computing past pH from subsurface counts. Computed decreases of 0.3–0.8 pH units start between I890 and I930 in N lakes already acidic (pH 5.0–5.5) before the decrease. These and lesser decreases in other lakes start decades to over a century after the first sedimentary indications of atmospheric heavy metal pollution. It is proposed that the acidification of precipitation accompanied the metal pollution. The delays in lake acidification may be due to buffering by the lakes and watersheds. The magnitude of acidification and heavy metal loading of the lakes parallels air pollution gradients. Shift in cladoceran remains are contemporary with acidification, preceding elimination of fishes.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 131-133 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; recent sediments ; diatoms ; chrysophytes ; 210lead
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    Notes: Abstract Diatom and chrysophyte remains in recent sediments have been examined. The upper stratigraphy is dated by reference to phytoplankton records whilst the lower depends on dates from 210Pb analysis, which shows some unexplained variation. Recent changes, due to farming and domestic drainage, form part of the long term response of the lake to events upon the catchment.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 135-139 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Traunsee ; artificial meromixis ; ostracods
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Traunsee is the deepest (189 m) lake in Austria and has been holomictic until the beginning of industrial discharges from the alkali works in Ebensee. The input of soluble compounds such as CaCl2 and NaCl have produced meromictic conditions. The relatively high oxygen content of the monimolimnion is due to water movements promoted by the large inflow and wind-action. The industrial discharges have caused both meromictic conditions and the deposition of highly alkaline sediment in the southern portion of the profundal zone. The effect of the discharges on the benthic fauna was evaluated by comparing the subfossil benthic fauna of four cores taken inside and outside the affected area. The ostracod fauna resembles that of other large lakes in the Salzkammergut, but also includes groundwater species such as Kovalevskiella and Cypridopsis subterranea. Leucocythere mirabilis has been found for the first time in an Austrian lake. Ostracods and other benthic organisms such as Testacea were not apparently influenced by the meromictic condition. They are, however, missing in all areas covered by the alkaline sludge.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; salinity ecology ; annual lamination ; sulphide mud ; meromixis ; Baltic
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    Notes: Abstract Diatoms have been studied in an annually laminated sulphide mud which was deposited after the impoundment of the sea-bay of Gennarbyviken. It was possible to follow how the measured decrease in salinity in the basin was reflected by the diatom flora of the sediment which had been deposited concurrently
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 153-158 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; eutrophication ; reservoirs ; Bosmina ; Chironomidae
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Eutrophication of reservoirs can be detected by changes in the abundance of insect and crustacean remains in the sediments. In recently constructed reservoirs, the time of impoundment can be determined through the presence of chironomid head capsules. The initial phase is characterised by highly enriched water as can be seen by the abundance of Bosmina remains. If further nutrient input into the reservoir remains low, the upper part of the sediment column is almost completely lacking in invertebrate remains.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 159-163 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; marine/brackish-freshwater ; transition basin ; wildfowl ; gregarious waterfowl ; allochthonous nutrients ; seasonal eutrophication
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A new and very special course of events starts in a freshwater basin, just isolated from the sea. In NW Europe this is mainly caused by land uplift in Holocene times or by regression of the sea. It has been thoroughly documented by the gradual change in the composition of the fossil diatom floras. Attention is drawn to the possible impact of migrating birds, especially wildfowl, breeding, resting and moulting in those often shallow, sheltered lakes along the Scandinavian coastlines. The gregarious wildfowl species might seasonally increase the allochthonous input of nutrients in the lake ecosystems and cause marked changes in biotic interactions. A working hypothesis is suggested, that the wildfowl species in question were appreciably more numerous before the arrival of man. Consequently, their effect on seasonal eutrophication cannot be neglected in the paleolimnological context.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 217-224 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Greenland ; Holocene ; oligotrophication ; pollen analysis ; macrofossils ; arctic
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    Notes: Abstract During the Holocene most West Greenland lakes passed from an early eutrophic stage, rich in both flora and fauna, through a mesotrophic to an oligotrophic stage with very low productivity. Temperature conditions were limiting factors only in the very beginning, whereas chemical factors alone were decisive later on.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 211-216 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Pleistocene aridity ; calcite ; dolomite ; gypsum ; laminated gyttja
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    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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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 225-230 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; pollen analysis ; sediment accumulation rate ; vegetation history ; Holstein ; Postglacial
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    Notes: Abstract Pollen analysis was carried out on the sediments of 10 lakes in eastern Holstein. Sediment accumulation rates varied considerably both from lake to lake and also between respective periods. Increases in sediment accumulation rate often coincide with the Neolithic settlement periods. Faunal remains have been examined from two of these lakes (cf. Günther 1983; Hofmann 1983).
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 231-234 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lake development ; trophic status ; Chironomidae ; Cladocera ; Ostracoda
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Microfossil analysis was carried out on 90 samples of a sediment core from Grossensee. The diversity of subfossil Cladocera, Chironomidae, Chaoborus, and Ostracoda reflects at least five different stages of development. Three extended cycles correspond to different climatic periods in the first 10 000 years of the lake's history, while during the last 2 000 years, two shorter cycles can be identified which correlate with proofs or even historical events for human activity in the catchment area. During this time the profundal fauna changed from stenoxibiontic to euryoxibiontic species. In the planktonic fauna a succession of three Eubosmina types, B. longispina, B. coregoni kessleri, and B. coregoni coregoni, was observed. The chydorid and ostracod assembly of the littoral showed no clear change.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 235-239 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; cladoceran analysis ; chironomid analysis ; successions ; lake development
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    Notes: Abstract In the subfossil assemblages of chironomids and cladocerans significant changes were found during the late-glacial and postglacial development of a small, shallow North German lake. The successions observed were obviously not related to eutrophication but to factors such as climatic conditions and lake siltation. The absence of species of the subgenus Eubosmina during postglacial times as well as the predominance of Alonella species among the chydorids was due to the small dimensions of the water body.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 247-250 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Pannonian lakes ; infilling process ; environmental change ; hydrosere
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Data on the stratigraphy and development of a former lake near the town of Vracov, SE Moravia, Czechoslovakia, are presented. The infilling process and vegetation succession are described. An attempt to reconstruct changes in habitat conditions during the last ca. 13 000 years has been made.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 241-245 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatom succession ; lake development
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    Notes: Abstract The Late-glacial and Postglacial sediments of the former Komořany Lake in North-West Bohemia were studied by means of diatom analysis to trace the pattern of past environmental change in the lake. Several phases of lake development could be distinguished. Originally the Komořany Lake was a eutrophic shallow water basin. The diatom succession in the early Postglacial sediment indicates alternating alkaliphilic, epiphytic and planktonic diatom communities associated with changes in water level in the basin. At the beginning of the Subatlantic period the water level began to rise and the development of planktonic diatoms, typical of small eutrophic lakes, occurred. Later, the basin became shallow again and the number of indifferent and acidophilous diatoms increased. This is typical for the final phase of the infilling process of a lake before its transformation to peatland
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  • 58
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatom flora ; sediments ; Vistula Lagoon ; Poland
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    Notes: Abstract The variability of Actinocyclus kuetzingii (A.S.) Sim. in the Littorina deposits of the Vistula Lagoon and Lake Druzno were studied. During the time of the Littorina Lake Druzno was a part of the Vistula Lagoon. In the different parts of the Lagoon both the abundance of A. kuetzingii and the diameter of its valves change in a manner associated with phases of the Littorina transgression. Coscinodiscus (Actinocyclus) kuetzingii fo. subsalsa Brockmann is probably an ecotype of A. kuetzingii (A.S.) Sim.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 257-260 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; palynology ; bacteriology
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    Notes: Abstract There are many lake basins in the Soviet Union, both in the humid and the arid regions, including lowland and alpine, and shallow and deep-water lakes. Lithological, geochemical, radiological and paleobiological methods have been utilized in studying the history of these lakes. Lake Zaisan in Kazakhstan is described as an example of lake development in the arid zone, whilst the lake systems of the Pribaltica, where human influence on the environment is clearly recorded, exemplifies the humid zone.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 261-263 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; eutrophication ; Ladoga
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Combined paleolimnological investigations of a 1.8 m sediment core from the deepest north-western part of Lake Ladoga show stratigraphic changes in granulometric and chemical composition, organic matter content, diatom species composition and chlorophyll ‘a’ concentration. The sediment accumulation rate was calculated and 5 stages of lake history over the last 4 000 years were described. Changes in lake environment were mainly caused by changes in climate and lake water balance. Human impact on the lake was also traced.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 265-268 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; plankton ; eutrophication ; sediment accumulation rate
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    Notes: Abstract Species composition, quantity and distribution of diatoms in both the plankton and the surface sediments (0–30 cm) of mesotrophic Lake Krasnoye and eutrophic Lake Vishnevskoye (Karelian Isthmus) were studied. In the mesotrophic lake the composition of dominant diatoms (mainly Melosira) corresponded to those in the plankton. The Araphidineae/Centrales (A/C) ratio was 0.2–0.3%, increasing in the upper layers to 7%. Alkaliphilous and alkalibiontic forms constituted 60% of the total. In the eutrophic lake diatoms with thin valves (mainly Synedra) predominated in the plankton but their quantity in the sediments was insignificant in comparison with other plankton. Nevertheless, the A/C ratio was much higher, 17–35%. Alkaliphilous and alkalibiontic forms accounted for 78–90% of the total number of valves. In both lakes the highest number of diatom valves was registered in the upper layer of the sediments. From the ratio of the total number of diatoms in the upper 5 cm layer to their annual flux to the sediment from the plankton the approximate sediment accumulation rate was calculated to be 1.9 mm a−1 for the mesotrophic lake and 2.5 mm a−1 for the eutrophic one.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 269-273 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; palynology ; pollen diagram ; Holocene
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In the last decade palynological investigations of the sediments of large lakes in the USSR (Ladoga, Onega, Kubenskoye, Vozhe, Lacha, Beloye) and the Baltic Sea have been carried out. Limnic and marine sediments are notable for their high pollen and spore concentrations and pollen diagrams from these deposits have a regional significance. The diagrams from Lakes Onega and Ladoga belong to the Kola-Karelian type while the sediments of Lacha, Vozhe, Kubenskoye and Beloye belong to the North-Russian type (Neustadt 1957). Three types of Holocene pollen diagrams are registered for the Baltic Sea. Modern and fossil pollen spectra reflect the composition of the zonal vegetation. Late-glacial sediments are found in several profiles of lake and sea deposits. Holocene deposits are divided into eight stratigraphic zones: Late-glacial sediments (DR2-Al-DR3) and Post-glacial sediments (PB, BO, AT, SB, SA). The zonations of lake and sea sediments can be clearly correlated.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 275-279 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; freshwater diatoms ; Middle-Valdaj
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This paper presents results of diatom analyses of dated Upper-Pleistocene lacustrine deposits from the Shapkina river in the Bolshezemelskaja tundra of the USSR. Both diatom systematics and palaeoecology have been studied. A marine diatom assemblage was found in the lower part of the sedimentary sequence and a rich freshwater assemblage, including more than 200 taxa, was found in the upper part. Some of the characteristic diatoms are typical of standing or slowly-moving waters of more southern and western districts but are not found in the Bolshezemelskaja tundra lakes today. According to 14C dating, the age of the deposit is about 40 000 years, and represents the Middle-Valdaj (Middle-Weichselian). Palynological and diatom analysis suggest that the climate was similar to the present, that of an interglacial.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 281-285 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Lake Baikal ; Pliocene ; Pleistocene ; pollen ; diatoms
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    Notes: Abstract The following stages in the formation of sediments in Lake Baikal have been distinguished. In the Middle Miocene lacustrine deposits accumulated in the southern depression. In Early and Middle Pliocene, as well as in Early-Middle Pleistocene the bottom of the southern and middle Baikal depressions was occupied by large lakes, but the northern basin was mainly dry with a system of small lakes, streams and rivers. This accounts for the great facies variety and the genetic heterogeneity of sediments in the northern depression. At the end of Middle and in the Late Pleistocene an abrupt warping of the depression took place, and a shore-line similar to the present one was formed. Sands in the upper part of the sediments are considered to be the product of intensive erosion which probably occurred in the pluvial epoch in the Late Pleistocene period.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 287-293 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sedimentation ; sediment laminations ; diatom microstratigraphy
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Laminated sediment is deposited in the deep areas (〉 30 m) of Lake Pääjärvi. In the diatom microstratigraphy a regular alteration of planktonic and littoral floras, which goes in pace with the visual structure, reflects the yearly cycle of sedimentation. Considerable variation in sedimentation was found to have occurred during the past two decades. A sequence, dated to the early 1960's, in which the organic content was exceptionally high, could be identified in the sediment at 6–14 cm depth even in shallower areas where laminations are not formed. This level was used as a marker horizon when determining the recent distribution of sediment by means of 19 cores taken from different parts of the lake. The average annual sediment accumulation in the profundal zone of the lake is 340 g m−2a−1 dry weight, of which 25 g m−2 a−1 (1100 kJ m−2 a−1) is organic carbon.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 295-301 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Flandrian biostratigraphy ; Tabellaria binalis
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The Early and Middle Flandrian geological development and paleolimnology of Lake Spitaalijärvi was studied using pollen, diatom and cladoceran analysis and 14C dating. Spitaalijärvi was isolated from the Ancylus Lake about 9000 B.P., at which time birch and pine and plants typical of open habitat communities grew on the solitary island. The rational limits for Alnus and Picea were ca. 8300 B.P. and 3700 B.P., respectively. During the first few hundred years after isolation Spitaalijärvi was probably fairly eutrophic, with a low water level. Water level began to rise before the Alnus rise (A°) and the lake became oligotrophic. After another transgression, which started before the Picea rise (P°), Tabellaria binalis and Semiorbis hemicyclus appear in the diatom stratigraphy indicating ultra-oligotrophic conditions. The main reason for the ultra-oligotrophy of Lake Spitaalijärvi is the character of the parent material in the catchment, consisting of glacial and littoral deposits derived from the local quartz sandstone of highly siliceous nature.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 303-308 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; acid waste-water ; liming ; diatoms ; heavy metals
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Lake Sysmäjärvi is located inside the municipal boundary of Outokumpu in North Karelia, Finland. Since 1928 metalliferous, and at a later stage highly acid waste-water, has been discharged into the lake. Neutralization of the lake water by liming was introduced, and by the end of 1966 the pH of the water had become neutral to alkaline. Two sediment cores (0.5 m and 5 m long, respectively) were analyzed for pollen, diatoms, loss-on-ignition, organic carbon, Fe, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn and Hg. The maximum concentrations of organic matter and heavy metal content occur 30 cm below the sediment surface. Evidence of the liming and of accelerated eutrophication appear close to the surface of the sediment (0–10 cm), indicated by an increase in Nitzschia plana.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 309-318 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; heavy metals ; polluted lake ; sedimentary chemistry
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Macro nutrients N, P, K, Ca, Mg, Na and S as well as heavy metals Pb, Cu, Zn, Co, Cr, Ni, Fe and Mn were analysed from a sediment core representing a 7000-year long history of a lake including the preceding brackish (Litorina Sea) and freshwater (Ancylus Lake) stages. Sediments were also analysed for sedimentary pigments, algal growth potential (AGP) of the interstitial water, phosphorus fractions, pH, specific conductivity and redox potential. The annual accumulation values of several chemical elements were interpreted in light of other paleolimnological data from the same core. In the uppermost sediment stratum the influence of sewage pollution is clearly reflected by increases in total electrolyte content, pH, AGP and sedimentary pigments including myxoxanthophyll. Nickel, copper and manganese only slightly increase in the recent sediment, whilst other heavy metals (especially Cr and Zn) and sulphur, phosphorus, nitrogen and total organic matter are heavily concentrasted in the polluted surface sediment. The interpretation of the chemostratigraphy of the lake accords with evidence of lake development based on biological analyses.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 15-19 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; dating ; radioactive fallout ; sediment ; 137Cs ; 239,240Pu ; varves
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The distribution of 137Cs and 239,240Pu in sediment core samples of the Finnish lakes Laukunlampi, Lovojärvi and Pääjärvi were determined. The sediment samples were collected using dry ice and liquid nitrogen freezing methods. The sediments of these lakes are annually laminated. A clear maximum concentration of 137Cs and 239,240Pu was found in sediment layers formed during 1962–1964, the years of maximum fallout, and the middle of the 1950's can be estimated from the 137Cs and 239,240Pu profiles. The highest concentrations, 11 500 and 820 pCi kg−1 dry wt for 137Cs and 239,240Pu, respectively, were found in the sediment of Laukunlampi. The vertical distribution was similar for 137Cs and 239,240Pu in the lakes investigated. A slight migration of 239,240Pu and 137Cs was found and the migration of 137Cs seems to be higher than that of 239,240Pu. The advantages of 137Cs dating method are rapidity and simplicity. 239,240Pu is preferable when the sample size is small. The agreement found between 137Cs and 239,240Pu dates and the annual laminae show that these fallout radio isotopes can be used for dating sediments formed during the past 25 years.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 29-35 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; 210Pb ; sediment accumulation
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The last few years have seen a dramatic growth in the use of 210Pb sediment dating. Despite this, considerable doubt still surrounds the nature of the processes by which 210Pb is deposited in lake sediments, and this has lead to a situation where there is a choice of dating models offering different interpretations of 210Pb data. In assessing 210Pb data it is therefore essential to first of all determine whether data is consistent with the assumptions of the dating model, and to then compare the 210Pb chronology with independent dating evidence. We have tested 210Pb data from a wide variety of sites, and our calculations indicate that the crs (constant rate of 210Pb supply) model provides a reasonably accurate chronology when the total 210Pb contents of cores from neighbouring locations are comparable.
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    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; caesium-137 ; perched lake ; meromictic ; diffusion ; bioconcentration ; sediment accumulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Hidden Lake is a perched, brown-water lake located in the centre of Great Sandy Island (Fraser Is.), S.E. Queensland. It is highly acid (pH 4.0), oligotrophic and is thermally and chemically stratified for most of the year. The sediments revealed a 137Cs profile which departed from the temporal pattern of 137Cs fallout in Brisbane and was represented by an exponential increase of 137Cs towards the surface sediments from ca. 32 cm depth. The possible causes of the divergent profile are discussed, including physical and biological mixing, lag in the transport of catchment material to the sedimentary basin, diffusion, recycling and biological concentration. It is hypothesised that a combination of the last four processes, with diffusion facilitated by the highly acid conditions, are the major causes of the observed 137Cs profile. Possible recycling and bioconcentration of 137Cs raises questions as to the validity of this method of dating in similar environmental conditions, and as to the interpretation of other palaeochemical data. These hypotheses are to be tested against profiles obtained from 14C, 210Pb, 239/240Pu analyses of the sediment, and the measurement of 137Cs activity in the water and biota of the lake.
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  • 72
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; pollen analysis ; land drainage ; sediment accumulation ; 210Pb dating ; 14C reservoir effect
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Previous measurements of the 14C activity of lake sediments and Potamogeton plants from Säynäjälampi, collected in 1970, indicated a severe hard-water effect (Donner et al. 1971). Samples from new cores, collected in 1977, were sliced into thin sections down to 18 cm. The 14C concentration in samples down to 7 cm was similar to that obtained by the Helsinki Laboratory. The corresponding apparent 14C age is almost 2 000 years. Light-coloured layers, apparently due to catchment drainage, were used together with density diagrams to correlate the cores. The drainage history gives a time-scale showing that the lowest samples dated to correlate the cores. The drainage history gives a time-scale showing that the lowest samples dated were just old enough to be pre-bomb sediments. Three samples of submerged plants were also examined, indicating some exchange with the air and an appreciable reservoir age. The activity of the plants was significantly lower in 1978 than in 1970. One sample, well below the lowest drainage stratum, indicates a reservoir age of ca. 1 100 years. This sample yielded an apparent age of the INS fraction which was significantly different from that of the SOL fraction. The difference was determined to ca. 600 years. Total 210Pb was determined via 210Po using isotope dilution while 226Ra was measured with the help of radon emanation. The 226Ra was used to estimate the supported 210Pb. The unsupported 210Pb showed a higher sediment accumulation rate for the top nine cm of one core (the length investigated was 16.5 cm). The varying accumulation rate was explained by human activities, as could be seen from the heterogenous sediment composition of the cores. Recent vegetational change is described from direct observations since 1957. Pollen analysis does not give any reliable indication of agriculture.
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