annually laminated sediments
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michał Słowiński ◽  
Achim Brauer ◽  
Piotr Guzowski ◽  
Tomasz Związek ◽  
Milena Obremska ◽  
...  

AbstractConnecting pathways are essential for cultural and economic exchange. Commonly, historians investigate the role of routes for cultural development, whereas the environmental impacts of historical routes attract less attention. Here, we present a high-resolution reconstruction of the impact of the major trade route via Marchionis in the southern Baltic lowlands on landscape evolution since more than 800 years. We combine precisely dated annually laminated sediments from Lake Czechowskie alongside via Marchionis and pollen data at 5-year resolution together with historical data. The transformation from a quasi-natural to a cultural landscape occurred in three phases (1) an early phase until the mid-fourteenth century with slowly increasing human impact. (2) an intensification of environmental disturbance until (3) the mid-nineteenth century when via Marchionis became a modern traffic route with strong environmental impacts. Superimposed on the long-term development were repeated interruptions by short-term downturns related to societal crisis and political decisions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentí Rull

This manuscript is an abridged translation of the Catalan book entitled: "Història del Pallars. Dels origens als nostres dies", edited by C. Marugan and V. Rapalino, published by Pagès Editors (Lleida) in 2005. The manuscript contains the archaeological and historical information needed for paleoecological research in the Pyrenean Pallars region, especially for the interpretation of vegetation and landscape dynamics inferred from high-resolution palynological analyses of the annually-laminated sediments of Lake Montcortès, which contain the longest, continuous and absolutely varve-dated sequence of the Mediterranean region encompassing the last 3000 years (Late Bronze Age to present).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eirik Gottschalk Ballo ◽  
Manon Bajard ◽  
Eivind Støren ◽  
Jostein Bakke

<p>Annually laminated sediments, also called varves, are valuable natural archives to reconstruct past environments and climate. Until now, the most common and reliable procedure to count varves has been to produce overlapping thin sections of the entire sediment sequence and counting in the microscope — a process that can take months to complete. Replacing this laborious method has been a long ongoing process within the varve community, and a task that we now may be getting with advancements in analytical tools. This study assesses the use of CT scanning to produce varve chronologies, applying it to the ferruginous sediments of Lake Sagtjernet in southeastern Norway — the first non-glacial varved lake sediment sequence in Norway continuously covering the last 4300 years.</p><p>Microfacies analyses of the sediments show that the varves are formed by cyclical deposition of iron and manganese. Oxygen measurements through 2013-2014 show permanent anoxic bottom waters while the seasonal turnover only reaching a depth of c. 6 m (out of a total 12 m depth). Combined with measurements of iron from the water column (highly enriched in the bottom waters) we suggest to classify Lake Sagtjernet as a ferruginous meromictic lake.</p><p>Varve counting on CT scans resulted in a 4300-year chronology, which we compared to an independent radiocarbon chronology (based on 17 <sup>14</sup>C dates, radionuclide and <sup>210</sup>Pb analyses). Our results show that all of the varve ages fall within the 95% confidence interval of the radiocarbon chronology. However, some sections of the sediments with lower concentrations of iron and manganese illustrate vague boundaries between laminae in the CT scans — increasing age uncertainties in the chronology. These age uncertainties can be reduced by using XRF scanning or thin sections in parallel with CT scans to evaluate the boundaries. Based on these results, we conclude that CT scanning is a fast and non-destructive method for producing varve chronologies.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 419-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
Małgorzata Kinder ◽  
Wojciech Tylmann ◽  
Iwona Bubak ◽  
Magdalena Fiłoc ◽  
Michał Gąsiorowski ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary B. Hughes ◽  
Jordan Adams ◽  
Jaclyn M.H. Cockburn

Annually laminated sediments (varves) form in particular depositional settings, e.g., where seasonal climate produces fluctuations in runoff volume; variations in runoff affect the amount and type of sediment delivered to a catchment. Prior studies confirm that variations in selected varve traits correlate with inter-annual climate signals. In some locations, solar activity also appears to be expressed in varve characteristics, either through a direct effect or indirectly via influence of solar activity on climate. Evidence from proglacial Iceberg Lake, Alaska, indicates that solar activity may have directly contributed to varve deposition. A varve thickness sequence is compared to sunspot observations from 1610–1995 CE. Maunder and Dalton minima are clearly expressed in a varve power spectrogram; varve signal amplification beginning ca. 1950s CE coincides with increasing activity evident in a sunspot spectrogram, features that are only vaguely discernible in the raw time-series plots. Spectral relationships at sunspot periodicities are consistent with direct solar forcing of varve thickness, independent of any effect solar activity might otherwise have on climate. Simulations based on a meltwater model indicate that direct forcing could result from amplified ultraviolet (UV) emission during solar maxima, combined with lower UV albedo of glacial ice. The plausible forcing mechanism bolsters epistemology for concluding a cause–effect relationship: solar variability likely contributed directly to inter-decadal patterns in Iceberg Lake varve thicknesses. The putative effect could be enhanced at higher latitudes, where Earth’s atmosphere absorbs less of the UV energy emitted by the Sun; periods of lowered ozone concentration near the poles would exacerbate the natural abetting UV phenomena, potentially linking human activity to recent and accelerated polar ice cap melting.


The Holocene ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (7) ◽  
pp. 1173-1180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing Sun ◽  
Guoqiang Chu ◽  
Manman Xie ◽  
Yuan Ling ◽  
Youliang Su ◽  
...  

Abrupt temperature changes during the last deglaciation are well recognized in Greenland ice cores and in deep-sea sediment records. On the continent of monsoonal Asia, however, only a few terrestrial temperature reconstructions extend to the Younger Dryas (YD). This hampers the understanding of how the Asian monsoon system responded to large-scale boundary changes in ice-sheet dynamics and reorganizations of atmospheric–oceanic circulation between the last deglaciation and the Holocene. Here, we report an alkenone-inferred temperature record from varved sediments of the maar lake Sihailongwan, northeastern China. Alkenone provides temperatures that represent the water temperature during the growing season when the lake is ice-free. Annually laminated sediments provide a reliable time control. Reconstructed temperatures reveal a distinctive pattern of variations during the last deglaciation: a temperature increase of 6°C at the onset of the Bølling–Allerød, two cold intervals (during the Older Dryas and the intra-Allerød cold period), a relatively minor temperature decrease of 1–3°C during the YD, and a rapid temperature increase of 4–5°C at the early Holocene. The reconstructed temperature records from Lake Sihailongwan and adjacent regions indicate that summer (or growing season) temperature changes were smaller than is evident in Greenland ice core records that are weighted toward winter.


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