Abstract

We report a fossil diatom record from small closed-basin Lago Lepué (43°S) to examine past changes in freshwater ecosystems and hydrologic balance in northwestern Patagonia since ∼18 ka. The record starts with abundant staurosiroids and the heavily silicified Aulacoseira granulata suggesting deep turbulent mixing during a low lake level stand between ∼18- 16.4 ka. A. distans increased shortly after ∼16.4 ka and achieved maximum abundance between ∼15.4-13.6 ka, while A. granulata disappeared at ∼15.8 ka and A. alpigena rose at ∼14.9 ka to its maximum between ∼13-12 ka. We infer turbulent, cold, and circumneutral to slightly acid lake conditions contemporaneous with a steady lake level rise that started at ∼16.4 ka and culminated between ∼13-12 ka. These trends reversed between ∼11-7.8 ka with the dominance of Discostella stelligera and staurosiroids, suggesting warmer lake conditions and shallower mixing. Subsequent changes include increases of A. distans with D. stelligera between ∼7.8-5.8 ka, dominance of the former between ∼5.8-3.3 ka, a rapid increase in A. perglabra at ∼3.3 ka, and ensuing diversification of benthic acidophilous species. We infer a rapid lake-level decline between ∼11-7.8 ka, with subsequent rising pulses at ∼7.8 ka and ∼5.8 ka, a multimillennial-scale lake acidification trend, and overall high lake levels with centennial-scale reversals between ∼6-0 ka. Coherent variations in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem changes recorded in the same core suggest negative hydrologic balance between ∼18-16.4 ka and ∼11–7.8 ka, positive balance between ∼14.9-12 ka and ∼6–0 ka, with transitional conditions in the interim, overprinted by millennial-scale changes and enhanced variability since ∼6 ka. Covariation with paleoclimate records at regional, pan-Patagonian, and hemispheric scale suggests millennial to centennial-scale variability superimposed upon a multi-millennial pacing of Southern Westerly Wind evolution since ∼18 ka.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

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