Synchronisation of palaeoenvironmental records over the last 60,000 years, and an extended INTIMATE event stratigraphy to 48,000 b2k

2012 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 2-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon P.E. Blockley ◽  
Christine S. Lane ◽  
Mark Hardiman ◽  
Sune Olander Rasmussen ◽  
Inger K. Seierstad ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Peter C. Almond ◽  
Sándor Gulyás ◽  
Pál Sümegi ◽  
Balázs P. Sümegi ◽  
Stephen Covey-Crump ◽  
...  

Abstract Calcareous loess in North Canterbury, eastern South Island, New Zealand (NZ), preserves subfossil bird bone, terrestrial gastropods, and eggshell, whose abundances and radiocarbon ages allowed us to reconstruct aspects of palaeoenvironment at high resolution through 25 to 21 cal ka BP. This interval includes millennial-scale climatic variability during the extended last glacial maximum (30–18 ka) of Australasia. Our loess palaeoclimatic record shows good correspondence with stadial and interstadial climate events of the NZ Climate Event Stratigraphy, which were defined from a pollen record on the western side of South Island. An interstade from 25.4 to 24 cal ka BP was warm but also relatively humid on eastern South Island, and loess grain size may indicate reduced vigour of the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds. The subsequent stade (24–22.6 cal ka BP) was drier, colder, and probably windier. The next interstade remained relatively dry on eastern South Island, and westerly winds remained vigorous. The 25.4–24 ka interstade is synchronous with Heinrich stade 2, which may have driven a southward migration of the subtropical front, leading to warming and wetting of northern and central South Island and retreat of Southern Alps glaciers at ca. 26.5 ka.


The Holocene ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 406-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Wilson ◽  
John McGourty ◽  
Mark D. Bateman

1996 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
pp. 365-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Brasier ◽  
D. Dorjnamjaa ◽  
J. F. Lindsay

In this collection of papers, we attempt to document, through interdisciplinary studies in southwest Mongolia, the interlinked evolution of the biosphere and lithosphere over the Neoproterozoic–Cambrian interval. In so doing, we bring together the fruits of two expeditions to the Altay mountains, sponsored by IGCP Project 303 on Precambrian–Cambrian Event Stratigraphy. Both expeditions took place during an interval of great socio-economic change in the region. The first expedition, in 1991, was one of the last in a series of Joint Soviet–Mongolian Palaeontological Expeditions, organized by A. Yu. Rozanov and R. Barsbold, and led by E. A. Zhegallo and A. Yu. Zhuravlev. Scientists from Sweden and the UK also participated. The second, 1993, expedition was one of the first IGCP project meetings organized independently by the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, and was led by M. D. Brasier and D. Dorjnamjaa.


Author(s):  
Mike WALKER ◽  
John LOWE

ABSTRACTThis paper reviews the evidence for environmental change during the Lateglacial period (c.14.7–11.7 ka), perhaps the most intensively studied episode in the Quaternary history of Scotland. It considers first the stratigraphic subdivision and nomenclature of the Lateglacial, before proceeding to a discussion of the various lines of proxy evidence that have been used to reconstruct the spatial and temporal patterns of environmental change during this time period. These include pollen and plant macrofossil data; coleopteran and chironomid records; diatom data; stable isotope and geochemical records; and evidence for human activity. The paper then considers the principal methods that have been employed to date and correlate Lateglacial events: radiocarbon dating; surface exposure dating; varve chronology; and tephrochronology. This is followed by an examination of the constraints imposed on environmental reconstructions, an account of the ways in which the evidence can be employed in the development of an event stratigraphy for the Lateglacial in Scotland, and a proposal for a provisional Lateglacial type sequence (stratotype) at Whitrig Bog in SE Scotland. Emphasis is placed throughout on the potential linkages between the Scottish records and the isotopic signal in the Greenland ice cores, which forms the stratigraphic template for the N Atlantic region. The paper concludes with a discussion of the strategies and approaches that should underpin future research programmes on Lateglacial environmental change in Scotland.


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