Abstract

The debate regarding the history of water‐level fluctuations in Lake Baikal extends back to the late 19th century and is rooted in the interpretation of the sequence of palaeo‐shoreline terraces observed around the Baikal trough. Modern studies identify terraces up to 200 m above and down to 40 m below the present‐day Lake Baikal water level, and opinions are split between (i) those who regard the lake‐level fluctuations as a function of shifts in water balance associated with glacial and interglacial periods, and (ii) those who attribute the changes to predominantly tectonic factors, permitting water‐balance fluctuations of not more than a few tens of metres. In either case, a definitive lake‐level scheme must also constrain the relative elevation of the Baikal's outlet, which has not been fixed over time. Here, we focus upon the lake‐level changes over the past 50 000 years with a new set of observations from an outstanding sequence of palaeo‐shoreline terraces on Bolshoi Ushkanii Island located in central Lake Baikal. By determining the 14C age of soils rapidly buried by beach deposits on two terraces, we provide direct evidence of lake‐level highstands at ~120–122 and ~72–83 m during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 (Karginsk interstadial). By integrating these results with the repeated subsidence of Baikal's outlet threshold since MIS 5e, we show that lake‐level fluctuations closely align with swings in glacial and interglacial climate.

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