Lateglacial and Holocene wet--dry cycles in southern Patagonia: chronology, sedimentology and geochemistry of a lacustrine record from Laguna Potrok Aike, Argentina

Haberzettl, Torsten ORCIDiD
Corbella, Hugo
Fey, Michael
Janssen, Stephanie
Lücke, Andreas ORCIDiD
Mayr, Christoph
Ohlendorf, Christian
Schäbitz, Frank
Schleser, Gerhard H.
Wille, Michael
Wulf, Sabine
Zolitschka, Bernd ORCIDiD

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683607076437
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/6834
Haberzettl, Torsten; Corbella, Hugo; Fey, Michael; Janssen, Stephanie; Lücke, Andreas; Mayr, Christoph; Ohlendorf, Christian; Schäbitz, Frank; Schleser, Gerhard H.; Wille, Michael; Wulf, Sabine; Zolitschka, Bernd, 2007: Lateglacial and Holocene wet--dry cycles in southern Patagonia: chronology, sedimentology and geochemistry of a lacustrine record from Laguna Potrok Aike, Argentina. In: The Holocene, 17, 3, 297-310, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683607076437. 

Abstract

A high-resolution multiproxy geochemical approach was applied to the sediments of Laguna Potrok Aike in an attempt to reconstruct moist and dry periods during the past 16 000 years in southeastern Patagonia. The age–depth model is inferred from AMS 14C dates and tephrochronology, and suggests moist conditions during the Lateglacial and early Holocene (16 000–8700 cal. BP) interrupted by drier conditions before the beginning of the Holocene (13 200–11 400 cal. BP). Data also imply that this period was a major warm phase in southeastern Patagonia and was approximately contemporaneous with the Younger Dryas chronozone in the Northern Hemisphere (12 700–11 500 cal. BP). After 8650 cal. BP a major drought may have caused the lowest lake level of the record. Since 7300 cal. BP, the lake level rose and was variable until the ‘Little Ice Age’, which was the dominant humid period after 8650 cal. BP.

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