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DOI10.3389/feart.2019.00074
Pacific Southwest United States Holocene Droughts and Pluvials Inferred From Sediment delta O-18((calcite)) and Grain Size Data (Lake Elsinore, California)
Kirby, Matthew Edward Christopher1; Patterson, William Paul2; Lachniet, Matthew3; Noblet, James A.4; Anderson, Michael A.5; Nichols, Kevin6; Avila, Judith1
发表日期2019
ISSN2296-6463
卷号7
英文摘要

Records of past climate can inform us on the natural range and mechanisms of climate change. In the arid Pacific southwestern United States (PSW), which includes southern California, there exist a variety of Holocene records that can be used to infer past winter conditions (moisture and/or temperature). Holocene records of summer climate, however, are rare from the PSW. In the future, climate changes due to anthropogenic forcing are expected to increase the severity of drought in the already water stressed PSW. Hot droughts are of considerable concern as summer temperatures rise. As a result, understanding how summer conditions changed in the past is critical to understanding future predictions under varied climate forcings. Here, we present a c. 10.9 kcal BP delta O-18((calcite)) record from Lake Elsinore, California, interpreted to reflect delta O-18((lake water)) values as controlled by over-water evaporation from summer-to-early fall. Our results reveal three millennial scale intervals: (1) the highly evaporative Early Holocene (10.55-6.65 kcal BP), (2) the less evaporative Mid-Holocene (6.65-2.65 kcal BP); and (3) the evaporative Late Holocene (2.65-0.55 kcal BP). These results are coupled with an inferred winter precipitation runoff (sand content) record from Kirby et al. (2010). Using these data together, we estimate the duration and severity of centennial-scale Holocene droughts and pluvials (e.g., high delta O-18((calcite)) values plus low sand content = drought and vice versa). Furthermore, the coupled delta O-18((calcite)) and sand data provide a generalized Holocene lake level history. The most severe, long-lasting droughts (i.e., maximum summer-to-early fall evaporation and minimum winter precipitation runoff) occur in the Early Holocene. Fewer, less severe, and shorter duration droughts occurred during the Mid-Holocene as pluvials became more common. Droughts return with less severity and duration in the Late Holocene. Notably, the Little Ice Age is characterized as the wettest period during the Late Holocene.


WOS研究方向Geology
来源期刊FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/96424
作者单位1.Calif State Univ Fullerton, Dept Geol Sci, Fullerton, CA 92634 USA;
2.Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Geol Sci, Saskatoon, SK, Canada;
3.Univ Nevada, Dept Geosci, Las Vegas, NV 89154 USA;
4.Calif State Univ San Bernardino, Dept Chem & Biochem, San Bernardino, CA 92407 USA;
5.Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Environm Sci, Riverside, CA 92521 USA;
6.Calif State Univ Fullerton, Dept Math, Fullerton, CA 92634 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Kirby, Matthew Edward Christopher,Patterson, William Paul,Lachniet, Matthew,et al. Pacific Southwest United States Holocene Droughts and Pluvials Inferred From Sediment delta O-18((calcite)) and Grain Size Data (Lake Elsinore, California)[J],2019,7.
APA Kirby, Matthew Edward Christopher.,Patterson, William Paul.,Lachniet, Matthew.,Noblet, James A..,Anderson, Michael A..,...&Avila, Judith.(2019).Pacific Southwest United States Holocene Droughts and Pluvials Inferred From Sediment delta O-18((calcite)) and Grain Size Data (Lake Elsinore, California).FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE,7.
MLA Kirby, Matthew Edward Christopher,et al."Pacific Southwest United States Holocene Droughts and Pluvials Inferred From Sediment delta O-18((calcite)) and Grain Size Data (Lake Elsinore, California)".FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE 7(2019).
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