Abstract

The reconstruction of environmental changes at the termination of the Last Glaciation range in NE Europe during the Late Glacial is hampered by the multiplicity of processes underway at that time and during the Holocene that dynamically modified the Young Glacial landscape. In lake sediments, these changes are recorded in a manner that is almost always incomplete or disturbed. For this reason, the succession that was successfully reconstructed in two profiles from the Osinki site in NE Poland is extremely valuable. Palynological, Cladocera and geochemical analyses, as well as fragmentary malacofauna and diatom analyses, made it possible to trace the changes in the environment that took place in two differently functioning parts of a single lake, in not interrupted periods from the Oldest Dryas to the Younger Dryas. Detailed research results show that despite the proximity of natural environment components, their developments in both cases were conducted in different ways, what they prove to the changes in pollen record, Cladocera, and geochemical composition of sediments. Climate changes affected the changes in the vegetation, the composition of malacofauna, Cladocera and diatoms. They also influenced the erosion processes within the catchment and the oxidation-reduction conditions. On the basis of the research results, changes in water trophy, from oligotrophic to eutrophic, were also observed. In this case, we also observe significant differences between the two analysed profiles. These changes first occurred in Allerød in the shallow part of the lake, and then in its deeper zone in Young Dryas.In addition, Late Weichselian profiles from the Poland–Belarus–Lithuania borderland area were analysed in detail, and the age of the bottom of sediments is usually estimated to the Allerød, and the Bølling. The results of analyses from Osinki and Osinki2 profiles (beginning of sedimentation in the Oldest Dryas) indicate that the reason for this discrepancy is to be found in, among other things, the methodological limitations of the palynological analysis for most of the sites. The above-standard amount of mineral sediment allows the age of the sediment to be established as being much older than if determined using only pollen analysis of organic sediments.

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