Vegetation, climate and lake changes over the last 7000 years at the boreal treeline in north-central Siberia.

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dc.contributor.author Klemm, Juliane
dc.contributor.author Herzschuh, Ulrike
dc.contributor.author Pestryakova, Ludmila A
dc.coverage.spatial MEDIAN LATITUDE: 71.350829 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 115.920256 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 67.443000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 97.649170 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 73.387090 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 161.773350 * DATE/TIME START: 2006-07-14T13:00:00 * DATE/TIME END: 2011-08-14T00:00:00
dc.date.accessioned 2019-11-24T06:23:33Z
dc.date.available 2019-11-24T06:23:33Z
dc.date.issued 2016-07-18
dc.identifier https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.848292
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.848292
dc.identifier.citation Klemm, Juliane; Herzschuh, Ulrike; Pestryakova, Ludmila A (2016): Vegetation, climate and lake changes over the last 7000 years at the boreal treeline in north-central Siberia. Quaternary Science Reviews, 147(1), 422-434, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.08.015
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/7533
dc.description.abstract Palaeoecological investigations in the larch forest-tundra ecotone in northern Siberia have the potential to reveal Holocene environmental variations, which likely have consequences for global climate change because of the strong high-latitude feedback mechanisms. A sediment core, collected from a small lake (radius ~100 m), was used to reconstruct the development of the lake and its catchment as well as vegetation and summer temperatures over the last 7100 calibrated years. A multi-proxy approach was taken including pollen and sedimentological analyses. Our data indicate a gradual replacement of open larch forests by tundra with scattered single trees as found today in the vicinity of the lake. An overall trend of cooling summer temperature from a ~2 °C warmer-than-present mid-Holocene summer temperatures until the establishment of modern conditions around 3000 years ago is reconstructed based on a regional pollen-climate transfer function. The inference of regional vegetation changes was compared to local changes in the lake's catchment. An initial small water depression occurred from 7100 to 6500 cal years BP. Afterwards, a small lake formed and deepened, probably due to thermokarst processes. Although the general trends of local and regional environmental change match, the lake catchment changes show higher variability. Furthermore, changes in the lake catchment slightly precede those in the regional vegetation. Both proxies highlight that marked environmental changes occurred in the Siberian forest-tundra ecotone over the course of the Holocene.
dc.format application/zip, 2 datasets
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher PANGAEA
dc.rights CC-BY-3.0: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
dc.rights Access constraints: unrestricted
dc.source Supplement to: Klemm, Juliane; Herzschuh, Ulrike; Pestryakova, Ludmila A (2016): Vegetation, climate and lake changes over the last 7000 years at the boreal treeline in north-central Siberia. Quaternary Science Reviews, 147(1), 422-434, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.08.015
dc.subject AWI_PerDyn
dc.subject Permafrost Research (Periglacial Dynamics) @ AWI
dc.title Vegetation, climate and lake changes over the last 7000 years at the boreal treeline in north-central Siberia.
dc.title.alternative Arctic Siberia: Modern pollen dataset and pollen spectra changes over the last 7,000 years from a lacustrine sediment core (southern Taymyr region)
dc.type Dataset


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