TY - JOUR
T1 - A late quaternary diatom record of tropical climatic history from Lake Titicaca (Peru and Bolivia)
AU - Tapia, Pedro M.
AU - Fritz, Sherilyn C.
AU - Baker, Paul A.
AU - Seltzer, Geoffrey O.
AU - Dunbar, Robert B.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to acknowledge the assistance of the Autoridad Autonoma del Lago Titicaca and its directors, Ing. Julio Sanjines and Ing. Mario Revollo throughout the duration of our work in Lake Titicaca. James Broda, Harold Rowe, Mathew Grove, Nicolas Catari, and Gonzalo Mollaricon assisted with fieldwork. Mark Busch provided several 14 C dates. Simone Servant-Vildary shared surface-sediment data from Yunguyo Bay. Brian Cummings and Platt Bradbury gave valuable comments and editorial suggestions to improve this manuscript. Funds were provided by the National Science Foundation to S.C.F., G.O.S., P.A.B., and R.B.D. This contribution is in partial fulfillment of requirements of P.M.T. for a doctoral degree at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
PY - 2003/5/15
Y1 - 2003/5/15
N2 - A composite high-resolution diatom stratigraphy from three piston cores and one box-core in the deep sub-basin of Lake Titicaca reveals large moisture variations during the past 30 kyr in the Altiplano region. Diatom sequences indicate orbital and millennial-scale variability in water level and salinity. The pelagic freshwater diatom species Cyclotella andina and Cyclotella stelligera dominate Glacial-age sediments, suggesting that the lake was above its present outlet, Generally, wet conditions continued until 11 000 cal yr BP, as indicated by high percentages of freshwater planktonic diatoms. Large pulses of benthic diatom species between about 11 000 and 10 000 cal yr BP suggest brief intervals of large-amplitude declines in lake level. During the early Holocene (10 000-8500 cal yr BP), a freshwater diatom assemblage suggests overflowing conditions. Pelagic freshwater diatoms are replaced ca, 8500 cal yr BP by the salinity-indifferent species Cyclotella meneghiniana and by benthic taxa, indicating the beginning of lake regression. During the mid-Holocene (6000-3500 cal yr BP), the abundance of the saline taxon Chaetoceros muelleri, coupled with high abundances of epiphytic and epipelic diatoms, indicates maximum salinity and lowest lake levels in the entire 30 000 year record. Lake transgression began ca. 4000 cal yr BP, and the lake achieved modern levels by about 1500 cal yr BP. These water-level changes imply changes in effective moisture, most likely resulting from large precipitation changes. Precipitation was high throughout the Last Glacial Maximum (21 000-18 000 cal yr BP), likely due to an enhanced South American Summer Monsoon during peak summer insolation in the Southern Hemisphere. In contrast, the mid-Holocene transition was dryer than today in association with an austral summer insolation minimum and the subsequent weakening of the summer monsoon.
AB - A composite high-resolution diatom stratigraphy from three piston cores and one box-core in the deep sub-basin of Lake Titicaca reveals large moisture variations during the past 30 kyr in the Altiplano region. Diatom sequences indicate orbital and millennial-scale variability in water level and salinity. The pelagic freshwater diatom species Cyclotella andina and Cyclotella stelligera dominate Glacial-age sediments, suggesting that the lake was above its present outlet, Generally, wet conditions continued until 11 000 cal yr BP, as indicated by high percentages of freshwater planktonic diatoms. Large pulses of benthic diatom species between about 11 000 and 10 000 cal yr BP suggest brief intervals of large-amplitude declines in lake level. During the early Holocene (10 000-8500 cal yr BP), a freshwater diatom assemblage suggests overflowing conditions. Pelagic freshwater diatoms are replaced ca, 8500 cal yr BP by the salinity-indifferent species Cyclotella meneghiniana and by benthic taxa, indicating the beginning of lake regression. During the mid-Holocene (6000-3500 cal yr BP), the abundance of the saline taxon Chaetoceros muelleri, coupled with high abundances of epiphytic and epipelic diatoms, indicates maximum salinity and lowest lake levels in the entire 30 000 year record. Lake transgression began ca. 4000 cal yr BP, and the lake achieved modern levels by about 1500 cal yr BP. These water-level changes imply changes in effective moisture, most likely resulting from large precipitation changes. Precipitation was high throughout the Last Glacial Maximum (21 000-18 000 cal yr BP), likely due to an enhanced South American Summer Monsoon during peak summer insolation in the Southern Hemisphere. In contrast, the mid-Holocene transition was dryer than today in association with an austral summer insolation minimum and the subsequent weakening of the summer monsoon.
KW - Diatom biostratigraphy
KW - Lake Titicaca
KW - Lake level
KW - Last Glacial Maximum
KW - Mid-Holocene
KW - Paleoclimate
KW - Precipitation
KW - Quaternary
KW - South America
KW - Tropical Andes
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0038029951&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=0038029951&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0031-0182(03)00275-X
DO - 10.1016/S0031-0182(03)00275-X
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0038029951
SN - 0031-0182
VL - 194
SP - 139
EP - 164
JO - Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
JF - Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
IS - 1-3
ER -