Abstract

A magnificent repository of Late Pleistocene terrestrial megafauna fossils is contained in ice-rich loess deposits of Alaska and Yukon, collectively eastern Beringia. The stable carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope compositions of bone collagen from these fossils are routinely used to determine paleodiet and reconstruct the paleoecosystem. This approach requires consideration of changes in C- and N-isotope dynamics over time and their effects on the terrestrial vegetation isotopic baseline. To test for such changes between the Late Pleistocene and modern time, we compared δ13C and δ15N for vegetation and bone collagen and structural carbonate of some modern, Yukon, arctic ground squirrels with vegetation and bones from Late Pleistocene fossil arctic ground squirrel nests preserved in Yukon loess deposits. The isotopic discrimination between arctic ground squirrel bone collagen and their diet was measured using modern samples, as were isotopic changes during plant decomposition; Over-wintering decomposition of typical vegetation following senescence resulted in a minor change (~0–1 ‰) in δ13C of modern Yukon grasses. A major change (~2–10 ‰) in δ15N was measured for decomposing Yukon grasses thinly covered by loess. As expected, the collagen-diet C-isotope discrimination measured for modern samples confirms that modern vegetation δ13C is a suitable proxy for the Late Pleistocene vegetation in Yukon Territory, after correction for the Suess effect. The N-isotope composition of vegetation from the fossil arctic ground squirrel nests, however, is determined to be ~2.8 ‰ higher than modern grasslands in the region, after correction for decomposition effects. This result suggests a change in N dynamics in this region between the Late Pleistocene and modern time.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe terminal Pleistocene ~13,000 years ago was a time of dynamic changes in large mammal communities [1], climate [2], ice sheet extent [3], and range and composition of vegetation [4], all of which was accompanied by a large global rise in atmospheric CO2 concentration (pCO2)

  • We examined ancient arctic ground squirrel nests collected from placer gold mines at Quartz Creek (QC), Independence Creek (IC), Sulphur Creek (SC) and Eureka Creek (EC) (Fig 1)

  • Plant macrofossils recovered from the nests are dominated by grass florets (Alopecurus sp., Deschampsia caespitose and Carex spp.) and the dried fruits of forbs (Taraxacum sp., Draba sp., Ranunculus sp., Lepidium densiflorum and Plantago cf. canescens) (Figs 2 and 3)

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Summary

Introduction

The terminal Pleistocene ~13,000 years ago was a time of dynamic changes in large mammal communities [1], climate [2], ice sheet extent [3], and range and composition of vegetation [4], all of which was accompanied by a large global rise in atmospheric CO2 concentration (pCO2). Change in Yukon 15N vegetation baseline between Late Pleistocene and modern time

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