Groundwater chemistry and arsenic mobilization in the Holocene flood plains in south-central Bangladesh

2009 ◽  
Vol 31 (S1) ◽  
pp. 23-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prosun Bhattacharya ◽  
M. Aziz Hasan ◽  
Ondra Sracek ◽  
Euan Smith ◽  
K. Matin Ahmed ◽  
...  
The Holocene ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 485-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Scott Anderson ◽  
Darrell S Kaufman ◽  
Edward Berg ◽  
Caleb Schiff ◽  
Thomas Daigle

Several important North American coastal conifers – having immigrated during the Holocene from the southeast – reach their northern and upper elevation limits in south-central Alaska. However, our understanding of the specific timing of migration has been incomplete. Here, we use two new pollen profiles from a coastal and a high-elevation site in the Eastern Kenai Peninsula–Prince William Sound region, along with other published pollen records, to investigate the Holocene biogeography and development history of the modern coastal Picea (spruce)– Tsuga (hemlock) forest. Tsuga mertensiana became established at Mica Lake (100 m elevation, near Prince William Sound) by 6000 cal. BP and at Goat Lake (550 m elevation in the Kenai Mountains) sometime after 3000 years ago. Tsuga heterophylla was the last major conifer to arrive in the region. Although driven partially by climate change, major vegetation changes during much of the Holocene are difficult to interpret exclusively in terms of climate, with periods of slow migration alternating with more rapid movement. T. mertensiana expanded slowly northeastward in the early Holocene, compared with Picea sitchensis or T. heterophylla. Difficulty of invading an already established conifer forest may account for this. We suggest that during the early Holocene, non-climatic factors as well as proximity to refugia, influenced rates of migration. Climate may have been more important after ~2600 cal. BP. Continued expansion of T. mertensiana at Goat Lake at the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA)–‘Little Ice Age’ (‘LIA’) transition suggests warm and wet winters. But expansion of T. mertensiana at both sites was arrested during the colder climate of the ‘LIA’. The decline was more extensive at Goat Lake, where climatic conditions may have been severe enough to reduce or eliminate the T. mertensiana population. T. mertensiana continued its expansion around Goat Lake after the ‘LIA’.


2009 ◽  
Vol 378 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 105-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Aziz Hasan ◽  
Prosun Bhattacharya ◽  
Ondra Sracek ◽  
Kazi Matin Ahmed ◽  
Mattias von Brömssen ◽  
...  

1972 ◽  
Vol 2 (02) ◽  
pp. 217-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eberhard Grüger

Pollen and macrofossil evidence for the nature of the vegetation during glacial and interglacial periods in the regions south of the Wisconsinan ice margin is still very scarce. Modern opinions concerning these problems are therefore predominantly derived from geological evidence only or are extrapolated from pollen studies of late Wisconsinan deposits. Now for the first time pollen and macrofossil analyses are available from south-central Illinois covering the Holocene, the entire Wisconsinan, and most probably also Sangamonian and late Illinoian time. The cores studied came from three lakes, which originated as kettle holes in glacial drift of Illinoian age near Vandalia, Fayette County. The Wisconsinan ice sheet approached the sites from the the north to within about 60 km distance only.One of the profiles (Pittsburg Basin) probably reaches back to the late Illinoian (zone 1), which was characterized by forests with muchPicea. Zone 2, most likely of Sangamonian age, represents a period of species-rich deciduous forests, which must have been similar to the ones that thrive today south and southeast of the prairie peninsula. During the entire Wisconsinan (14C dates ranging from 38,000 to 21,000 BP) thermophilous deciduous trees likeQuercus, Carya, andUlmusoccurred in the region, although temporarily accompanied by tree genera with a more northerly modern distribution, such asPicea, which entered and then left south-central Illinois during the Woodfordian. Thus it is evident that arctic climatic conditions did not prevail in the lowlands of south-central Illinois (about 38°30′ lat) during the Wisconsinan, even at the time of the maximum glaciation, the Woodfordian. The Wisconsinan was, however, not a period of continuous forest. The pollen assemblages of zone 3 (Altonian) indicate prairie with stands of trees, and in zone 4 the relatively abundantArtemisiapollen indicates the existence of open vegetation and stands of deciduous trees,Picea, andPinus. True tundra may have existed north of the sites, but if so its pollen rain apparently is marked by pollen from nearby stands of trees. After the disappearance ofPinusandPiceaat about 14,000 BP (estimated!), there developed a mosaic of prairies and stands ofQuercus, Carya, and other deciduous tree genera (zone 5). This type of vegetation persisted until it was destroyed by cultivation during the 19th and 20th century. Major vegetational changes are not indicated in the pollen diagram for the late Wisconsinan and the Holocene.The dating of zones 1 and 2 is problematical because the sediments are beyond the14C range and because of the lack of stratigraphic evidence. The zones dated as Illinoian and Sangamonian could also represent just a Wisconsinan stadial and interstadial. This possibility, however, seems to be contradicted by the late glacial and interglacial character of the forest vegetation of that time.


Radiocarbon ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 1087-1102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex da Silva de Freitas ◽  
Cintia Ferreira Barreto ◽  
Alex Cardoso Bastos ◽  
José Antônio Baptista Neto

AbstractVitória Bay is located in the south-central part of the State of Espírito Santo (SES). Multiproxy analyses were performed on samples from a 490-cm-long sediment core collected at the coordinates 40°18′23′′W and 20°14′48′′S. The objective of this study was to identify and integrate the multiproxy data to determine the environmental dynamics during the Holocene. The material was subsampled every 10 m and submitted to standard methodological processing. The sediment core was dated to two depths: the oldest age was between 9396 and 9520 cal yr BP at a 480-cm depth, and the youngest age was from 7423 to 7511 cal yr BP at a 304-cm depth. The integrated analysis revealed evidence of three major environmental changes in Vitória Bay. The first phase had a fluvial influence (depth of 490–480 cm; 9396–9520 cal yr BP). This was followed by a transitional period (depth of 480–290 cm; 7423–7511 cal yr BP) with a salt influence due to the Last Marine Transgression (LMT). Later, the environmental stability was similar to that of today (290 cm to the core top). This was a reflection of the Last Marine Regression (LMR) in the Holocene.


1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 1746-1755 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Bovis ◽  
Penny Jones

Large earthflows in south-central British Columbia have exhibited regionally consistent fluctuations in their movement during the Holocene. Over the past 60 years, air photographs show that many earthflows were reactivated during the relatively wet period 1950–1985. Over the past 300 years, a fairly coherent relationship is established between periods of wetter climate, defined by the tree-ring record, and phases of slope movement, defined by the record of compression-wood development in conifers located near earthflow headscarps. On a time scale of several thousand years, stratigraphic evidence shows that many large earthflows in the region underwent significant reactivation of movement in the post-Mazama period, during the relatively wet, cool Neoglacial interval of the Holocene. These lines of evidence indicate that Holocene hydroclimatic changes have exerted an important influence on the regimen of large earthflows. Earthflows present a wealth of paleogeomorphic information, hitherto largely neglected, that allows a reconstruction of the changing rate of mass movement with time.


2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 184-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthieu Ghilardi ◽  
Stéphane Cordier ◽  
Jean-Michel Carozza ◽  
David Psomiadis ◽  
Jean Guilaine ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 1973-1996 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Joannin ◽  
E. Brugiapaglia ◽  
J.-L. de Beaulieu ◽  
L. Bernardo ◽  
M. Magny ◽  
...  

Abstract. A high-resolution pollen record from Lago Trifoglietti in Calabria (southern Italy) provides new insights into the paleoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic changes which characterise the Holocene period in the southern Italy. The chronology is based on 11 AMS radiocarbon dates from terrestrial organic material. The Holocene history of the vegetation cover shows the persistence of an important and relatively stable Fagus forest present over that entire period, offering a rare example of a beech woodstand able to withstand climate changes for more than 11 000 yr. Probably in relation with early Holocene dry climate conditions which affected southern Italy, the Trifoglietti pollen record supports a southward delay in thermophyllous forest expansion dated to ca. 13 500 cal BP at Monticchio, ca. 11 000 cal BP at Trifoglietti, and finally ca. 9800 cal BP in Sicily. Regarding the human impact history, the Trifoglietti pollen record shows only poor imprints of agricultural activities and anthopogenic indicators, apart from those indicating pastoralism activities beneath forest cover. The selective exploitation of Abies appears to have been the strongest human impact on the Trifoglietti surroundings. On the basis of (1) a specific ratio between hygrophilous and terrestrial taxa, and (2) the Modern Analogue Technique, the pollen data collected at Lago Trifoglietti led to the establishment of two palaeoclimatic records tracing changes in (1) lake depth and (2) annual precipitation. On a millennial scale, these records give evidence of increasing moisture from ca. 11 000 to ca. 9400 cal BP and maximum humidity from ca. 9400 to ca. 6200 cal BP, prior to a general trend towards the drier climate conditions that have prevailed up to the present. In addition, several successive centennial-scale oscillations appear to have punctuated the entire Holocene. The identification of a cold dry event around 11 300 cal BP, responsible for a marked decline in timberline altitude and possibly equivalent to the PBO, remains to be confirmed by further investigations verifying both chronology and magnitude. Two cold and possibly drier Boreal oscillations developed at ca. 9800 and 9200 cal BP. At Trifoglietti, the 8.2 kyr event corresponds to the onset of cooler and drier climatic conditions which persisted until ca. 7500 cal BP. Finally, the second half of the Holocene was characterised by dry phases at ca. 6100–5200, 4400–3500, and 2500–1800 cal BP, alternating with more humid phases at ca. 5200–4400 and ca. 3500–2500 cal BP. Considered as a whole, these millennial-scale trends and centennial-scale climatic oscillations support contrasting patterns of palaeohydrological changes recognised between the north- and south-central Mediterranean.


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