Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9537062 Quaternary Science Reviews 2005 19 Pages PDF
Abstract
Pollen in lake sediments is rare and dominated by exotic sources prior to 12 ka. Subsequently, grass tundra became established, followed by modern tundra vegetation ca. 8 ka, with subtle changes in pollen assemblages in the late Holocene. Lake primary productivity peaked in the early Holocene, before terrestrial vegetation or marine surface waters reached their apparent thermal maxima. Lacustrine, marine, and glacial proxies all reflect significant late Holocene cooling. The onset of Neoglaciation is well dated in lacustrine records at ca. 6 ka, with intensification after 2.5 ka. The expansion of local glaciers during the Little Ice Age represents the most extensive advance since 7 ka. We suggest that the replacement of Atlantic surface waters by cold, low-salinity Arctic Ocean water, coupled with the steady reduction of summer insolation, resulted in a significant positive sea-ice feedback that produced a larger late Holocene summer temperature depression over the Baffin region than in the Pacific sector of the Arctic.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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