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Early Holocene environment on Björnöya (Svalbard) inferred from multidisciplinary lake sediment studies
Wohlfarth, Barbara
Lemdahl, Geoffrey
Olsson, Siv
Persson, Thomas
Snowball, Ian
Ising, Jonas
Jones, Siv
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Responsible organisation
Swedish Polar Research Secretariat
1995 (English)
In:
Polar Research, Vol. 14, no 2, p. 253-275
Article in journal (Refereed)
Abstract [en]
Bjørnøya, a small (178 km2) island situated between the mainland of Norway and southern Spitsbergen, provides the opportunity for the reconstruction of early Holocene terrestrial and limnic palaeoenvironments in the southwestern Barents Sea. The AMS 14C dating technique, geochemical, mineral magnetic, micro and macrofossil analyses were applied to sediments recovered from lake Stevatnet and the results are interpreted in terms of palaeoenvironmental conditions between 9800 and 8300 14C bp. After the disappearance of local glaciers before ca 980014C BP, the lake productivity increased rapidly at the same time as pioneer plant communities developed on soils which gradually became more stable. Insect data indicates that strong seasonal contrasts with mean July temperatures around 9°C and mean January temperatures around −12°C prevailed between 9500 and 8300 14C BP. These high summer temperatures, possibly as much as 4-5°C higher than the present, favoured the development of a flora including Dryas and Angelica cf. archangelica. The enhanced freeze/thaw processes led to an increased erosion of minerogenic and organic material. After 8000 14C BP the temperatures may have gradually declined. The environmental reconstruction derived from our data set supports the conceptual insolation model which proposes maximum Holocene seasonality for the Northern Hemisphere at ca 9000 14C BP.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
1995, 5 MAY 2007. Vol. 14, no 2, p. 253-275
Keywords [en]
SWEDARCTIC 1993, Holocene, lake sediments, Arctic, Björnöya, Svalbard
Identifiers
URN:
urn:nbn:se:polar:diva-1726
DOI:
10.1111/j.1751-8369.1995.tb00693.x
OAI: oai:DiVA.org:polar-1726
DiVA, id:
diva2:569864
Note
Source: Polardok by Swedish Polar Research Secretariat
Available from:
2012-11-15
Created:
2012-11-15
Last updated:
2012-11-15
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