Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6445782 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The early Holocene cooling, which occurred around 8200 calendar years before present, was a prominent abrupt event around the north Atlantic region. Here, we investigate the timing, duration, magnitude and regional coherence of the event as expressed in carbonate oxygen-isotope records from three lakes on northwest Europe's Atlantic margin in western Ireland, namely Loch Avolla, Loch Gealáin and Lough Corrib. An abrupt negative oxygen-isotope excursion lasted about 200 years. Comparison of records from three sites suggests that the excursion was primarily the result of a reduction of the oxygen-isotope values of precipitation, which was likely caused by lowered air temperatures, possibly coupled with a change in atmospheric circulation. Comparison of records from two of the lakes (Loch Avolla and Loch Gealáin), which have differing bathymetries, further suggests a reduction in evaporative loss of lake water during the cooling episode. Comparison of climate model experiments with lake-sediment isotope data indicates that effective moisture may have increased along this part of the northeast Atlantic seaboard during the 8200-year climatic event, as lower evaporation compensated for reduced precipitation.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Jonathan A. Holmes, Julia Tindall, Neil Roberts, William Marshall, Jim D. Marshall, Ann Bingham, Ingo Feeser, Michael O'Connell, Tim Atkinson, Anne-Lise Jourdan, Anna March, Elizabeth H. Fisher,