Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7450226 | Quaternary International | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
During the maximal advance of the glaciers, their area was 26-times larger than now and the equilibrium line of altitude (ELA) was about 800â¯m lower. Assuming that the maximum glacier extent took place during MIS 4, then the average summer temperatures were 2.7â¯Â°C cooler than today and the amount of precipitation 2.1 times higher. Buried wood trunks by a glacier gave ages between 60 and 28â¯cal ka BP and were found 600-700â¯m higher than the present upper treeline. This evidences a distinctly elevated treeline during MIS 3a and c. With a correction for tectonics we reconstructed the summer warming to have been between 2.1 and 3.0â¯Â°C. During MIS 3c, the glaciated area was reduced to less than 0.5â¯km2 with an increase of the ELA of 310-470â¯m higher than today. Due to higher precipitation, the glaciated area during MIS 3a was close to the current ELA. Exposure dating (10Be) would indicate that the maximum glacier extension was 24â¯ka BP, but the results are questionable. From a geomorphic point of view, the maximum extent can more likely be ascribed to the MIS4 stage. We estimate a cooling of summer temperature of - 3.8 to - 4.2â¯Â°C and a decrease in precipitation of 37-46% compared to the present-day situation. Samples of wood having an age of 10.6-6.2â¯cal ka BP were found about 350â¯m higher than the present treeline. It seems that the summer temperature was 2.0-2.5â¯Â°C higher and annual precipitation was double that of the present-day. For that period, the reconstructed glaciation area was 1â¯km2 less than today. Three neoglacial glacier advances were detected. The glaciers covered about double the area during the Little Ice Age (LIA), summer cooling was 1.3â¯Â°C with 70% of the present-day precipitation. The reconstructed amplitude of climatic changes and the shift of the altitudinal zones show that the landscape has reacted sensitively to environmental changes and that dramatic changes may occur in the near future.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Dmitry Ganyushkin, Kirill Chistyakov, Ilya Volkov, Dmitry Bantcev, Elena Kunaeva, Dagmar Brandová, Gerald Raab, Marcus Christl, Markus Egli,