Abstract

Low-altitude lakes in eastern Africa have long been investigated and have provided valuable information about the Late Quaternary paleohydrological evolution, such as the African Humid Period. However, records often suffer from poor age control, resolution, and/or ambiguous proxy interpretation, and only little focus has been put on high-altitude regions despite their sensitivity to global, regional, and local climate change phenomena. Here we report on Last Glacial environmental fluctuations at about 4000 m asl on the Sanetti Plateau in the Bale Mountains (SE Ethiopia), based on biogeochemical and palynological analyses of laminated lacustrine sediments. After deglaciation at about 18 cal kyr BP, a steppe-like herb-rich grassland with maximum Chenopodiaceae/Amaranthaceae and Plantago existed. Between 16.6 and 15.7 cal kyr BP, conditions were dry with a desiccation layer at ~ 16.3 cal kyr BP, documenting a temporary phase of maximum aridity on the plateau. While that local event lasted for only a few decades, concentrations of various elements (e.g. Zr, HF, Nb, Nd, and Na) started to increase and reached a maximum at ~ 15.8–15.7 cal kyr BP. We interpret those elements to reflect allochthonous, aeolian dust input via dry northerly winds and increasingly arid conditions in the lowlands. We suggest an abrupt versus delayed response at high and low altitudes, respectively, in response to Northern Hemispheric cooling events (the Heinrich Event 1). The delayed response at low altitudes might be caused by slow negative vegetation and monsoon feedbacks that make the ecosystem somewhat resilient. At ~ 15.7 cal kyr BP, our record shows an abrupt onset of the African Humid Period, almost 1000 years before the onset of the Bølling–Allerød warming in the North-Atlantic region, and about 300 years earlier than in the Lake Tana region. Erica pollen increased significantly between 14.4 and 13.6 cal kyr BP in agreement with periodically wet and regionally warm conditions. Similarly, intense fire events, documented by increased black carbon, correlate with wet and warm environmental conditions that promote the growth of Erica shrubs. This allows to conclude that biomass and thus fuel availability is one important factor controlling fire events in the Bale Mountains.

Highlights

  • East African lakes have attracted scientific interest for decades

  • During the African humid period (AHP) maximum northern Hemisphere summer insolation shifted the rain belt associated with the Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) to the north (Bastian et al 2021), generating increased rainfall across Northern Africa which turned the Saharan desert into green savanna (Gasse 2000)

  • The upper lithostratigraphic unit 3 is about 70 cm thick, deposited during the last 10 cal kyr BP

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Summary

Introduction

East African lakes have attracted scientific interest for decades. This is because global atmospheric circulation systems strongly influence this region and its hydrological dynamics (e.g. Thompson et al 2002; Costa et al 2014; Lamb et al 2018). The southward shift of the Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) during ice rafting episodes throughout Heinrich event 1 (H1) are considered as a major cause for the dry event in northern and southeastern Africa around 16–17 cal kyr BP (Tierney et al 2008; Marshall et al 2007; Stager et al 2011; Mohtadi et al 2014). Palaeoclimatic studies suggest the southward extension of the AHP to eastern Africa (Tierney et al 2008; Tierney and DeMenocal 2013; Costa et al 2014)

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