Abstract

Late Pleistocene and/or Holocene high-resolution palynological studies are available for the south basin of the Caspian Sea (CS), the world's largest lake. However, the north and middle basins have not been the object of high-resolution palynological reconstructions. This new study presents the pollen, spores and dinoflagellate cysts records obtained from a 10 m-long sediment core recovered in the middle basin, which currently has brackish waters and is surrounded by arid and semi-arid vegetation.An age–depth model built based on six radiocarbon dates on ostracod shells indicates that the sequence spans the period from 14.47 to 2.43 cal. ka BP. The present palaeoenvironmental study focuses on the top 666 cm, or from 12.44 to 2.43 cal. ka BP.At the vegetation level, the Younger Dryas is characterised by an open landscape dominated by desert vegetation composed by Amaranthaceae with shrubs and salt-tolerant plants. However, although the Early Holocene is also characterised by desert vegetation, it is enriched in various shrubs such as Ephedra and Calligonum, but tree expansion is not important at the Holocene onset. After a major shift at 8.19 cal. ka BP, the Middle Holocene displays now both the character of desert and of steppe, although some trees such as Quercus and Corylus slightly spread. The Late Holocene records steppe vegetation as dominant, with more tree diversity.Regarding the lacustrine signal, the dinocyst assemblage record fluctuates between slightly brackish conditions highlighted by Pyxidinopsis psilata and Spiniferites cruciformis, and more brackish ones – similar to the present day – with the dominance of Impagidinium caspienense. The Late Pleistocene is characterised by low salinities, related to the Khvalynian highstand. From 11.56 cal. ka BP, slightly more saline waters are reconstructed with an increase of I. caspienense for a period of 1000 years, which could be attributed to the Mangyshlak lowstand. From 10.55 cal. ka BP, low salinity conditions return with remains such as Anabaena and Botryococcus abundant until 8.83 cal. ka BP, followed by a slow, progressive decrease of P. psilata and S. cruciformis until 4.11 cal. ka BP, which is the main assemblage change at lacustrine scale. Since then, higher salinities, similar to the present one, are reconstructed. Finally, Lingulodinium machaerophorum starts its development only at 2.75 cal. ka BP, in the Late Holocene.The present research revealed fundamental differences from previously published sea-level curves, in that a 6000 yr-long highstand suggested by low salinities is shown between 10.55 and 4.11 cal. ka BP. Amongst other arguments, using a comparison to a similar palynological regard but in the south basin, a N–S salinity gradient that is the reverse of the present one across the CS, suggests that the Amu Darya was flowing in the CS. Hence the CS levels during the Late Pleistocene and Holocene were influenced by a combination of precipitation over the high European latitudes and the indirect influence of the Indian summer monsoon over the Pamirs.

Highlights

  • The Caspian Sea (CS) forms a natural geographical border between Europe and Asia at 50 east of longitude

  • The sedimentation rate is very high being c. 160e130 cm/ cal. ka BP below 666 cm depth. It decreases above this depth, until its stabilisation with values of c. 75e55 cm/cal. ka BP (Fig. 3) reflecting the critical loss of the detritics brought by meltwater

  • The radiocarbon dates of core TM (SE corner of the CS) come from various shells with a 410 yr reservoir correction (Marine09) (Leroy et al, 2013a), the dates on core GS05 are from bulk sediment corrected from their detrital carbonate amount and calibrated with the IntCal09.14C curve (Leroy et al, 2013c), and those of core GS18 are from benthic ostracod shells, in which a reservoir effect of 370 yr was considered and the calibration was performed with the IntCal13.14C curve

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Summary

Introduction

The Caspian Sea (CS) forms a natural geographical border between Europe and Asia at 50 east of longitude. During the 20th century, the CS water levels have fluctuated suddenly, a hundred times faster than recent global sea level rise (Kroonenberg et al, 2007) This caused serious environmental and economic damages and adversely affected oil and gas exploration and exploitation, agriculture and fishing (such as sturgeon for caviar). Despite the importance of this area, no enough in-depth high-resolution palaeoenvironmental research has been performed on the CS sediments and the precise timing of these changes and even their causes remain not well understood yet. They have been suggested to be a combination of climate, human impact and tectonic activity Its correct representation over time, especially its changing area during lowstands (such as the Mangyshlak lowstand at the beginning of the Holocene) and highstands (such at the Late Khvalynian highstand during the last period of melting of the Eurasian icesheet), in the general circulation models is essential (Farley Nicholls and Toumi, 2013)

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