Abstract

The Last Glacial Termination is marked by changing environmental conditions affected by abrupt and rapid climate oscillations, such as Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1), which is characterized by extremely low sea surface temperatures (SST) and significant changes in northern hemisphere terrestrial landscape (e.g., vegetation) and human dispersion. Previous studies show that overall cold/dry conditions occurred during HS1, but the lack of high-resolution records precludes whether climate was stable or instead characterized by instability. A high-resolution paleoclimatic record from the Padul wetland (southern Iberian Peninsula), supported by a high-resolution chronology and contrasted with other records from southern Europe and the Mediterranean region, shows 1) that the age boundaries of HS1 in this area occurred at ∼18.0 kyr BP (median age = 17,970 cal yr BP; mean age = 18,030 ± 330 cal yr BP) and ∼15.2 kyr BP (median age = 15,210 cal yr BP; mean age = 15,200 ± 420 cal yr BP) and 2) that climate during HS1 was non-stationary and centennial-scale variability in moisture is superimposed on this overall cold climatic period. In this study, we improve the pollen sampling resolution with respect to previous studies on the same Padul-15-05 sedimentary core and suggest a novel subdivision of HS1 in 7 sub-phases, including: i) 3 sub-phases (a.1-a.3) during an arid early phase (HS1a; ∼18.4–17.2 kyr BP), ii) a relatively humid middle phase (HS1b; ∼17.2–16.9 kyr BP), and iii) 3 sub-phases (c.1-c.3) during an arid late phase (HS1c; ∼16.9–15.7 kyr BP). This climatic subdivision is regionally supported by SST oscillations from the Mediterranean Sea, suggesting a strong land-sea coupling. A cyclostratigraphic analysis of pollen data between 20 and 11 kyr BP indicates that the climate variability and the proposed subdivisions characterized by ∼2000 and ∼800-yr periodicities could be related to solar forcing controlling climate in this area.

Highlights

  • The Last Glacial Termination in southern Europe and Mediterranean areas present one the most inhospitable environmental conditions of the last 130 kyr, reaching one of the lowest SST record for this period (Martrat et al, 2004, 2007)

  • This study aims to improve the resolution of the pollen analysis for the HS1 time-period from a previous palynological study covering the last two glacial-interglacial cycles in the Padul-15-05 terrestrial sedimentary record (Camuera et al, 2019)

  • Kyr BP, and HS1c from 16.9 to 15.7 kyr BP) and a further subdivision in 7 smaller-scale phases within them (i.e., HS1: maximum xerophyte values at ~18 (HS1a).1, HS1a.2, HS1a.3, HS1b, HS1c.1, HS1c.2 and HS1c.3) (Fig. 4e and f and Fig. 5a), which are statistically supported by the significance test using the Significant Zero crossing of derivatives” (SiZer) method

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Last Glacial Termination in southern Europe and Mediterranean areas present one the most inhospitable environmental conditions of the last 130 kyr, reaching one of the lowest SST record for this period (Martrat et al, 2004, 2007). HS1 shows abrupt and complex climate signals under the roughest conditions, as observed by the presence of ice-rafted debris during Heinrich events (Hodell et al, 2017), the slowdown of Atlantic and Mediterranean thermohaline circulations (McManus et al, 2004; Sierro et al, 2020) and major genetic bottlenecks in humans (Fernandez-Lopez de Pablo et al, 2019) In this respect, deciphering rapid (e.g., millennial-scale) climate changes and environmental impacts due to Dansgaard/Oeschger and Heinrich-like climatic oscillations during the last glacial period and deglaciation have been the aim of ice, marine and terrestrial paleoclimate investigations (Cacho et al, 2006; Ho€big et al, 2012; Panagiotopoulos et al, 2014; Sanchez Gon~i et al, 2008).

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.