Abstract

Abstract. Ice wedges in the Yana Highlands of interior Yakutia – the most continental region of the Northern Hemisphere – were investigated to elucidate changes in winter climate and continentality that have taken place since the Middle Pleistocene. The Batagay megaslump exposes ice wedges and composite wedges that were sampled from three cryostratigraphic units: the lower ice complex of likely pre-Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 6 age, the upper ice complex (Yedoma) and the upper sand unit (both MIS 3 to 2). A terrace of the nearby Adycha River provides a Late Holocene (MIS 1) ice wedge that serves as a modern reference for interpretation. The stable-isotope composition of ice wedges in the MIS 3 upper ice complex at Batagay is more depleted (mean δ18O about −35 ‰) than those from 17 other ice-wedge study sites across coastal and central Yakutia. This observation points to lower winter temperatures and therefore higher continentality in the Yana Highlands during MIS 3. Likewise, more depleted isotope values are found in Holocene wedge ice (mean δ18O about −29 ‰) compared to other sites in Yakutia. Ice-wedge isotopic signatures of the lower ice complex (mean δ18O about −33 ‰) and of the MIS 3–2 upper sand unit (mean δ18O from about −33 ‰ to −30 ‰) are less distinctive regionally. The latter unit preserves traces of fast formation in rapidly accumulating sand sheets and of post-depositional isotopic fractionation.

Highlights

  • Interior Yakutia is currently the most continental region of the Northern Hemisphere

  • Opel et al.: Past climate and continentality inferred from ice wedges at Batagay megaslump enrich stable isotopes in summer precipitation at interior sites compared to coastal sites in the north, which reflects the strong continentality of interior Yakutia

  • A single example of clear ice sharply overlying the shoulder of an ice wedge in the lower ice complex (B17-IW1, Fig. 4) contained brown plant remains and round, few-millimetre diameter organic bodies identified as hare droppings

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Summary

Introduction

Interior Yakutia is currently the most continental region of the Northern Hemisphere. In Verkhoyansk, the cold pole of the Northern Hemisphere, mean monthly air temperature ranges exceed 60 ◦C and absolute temperature ranges can reach 100 ◦C (Lydolph, 1985). Mean annual precipitation is only 155 mm (Lydolph, 1985). During Late Pleistocene cold stages, when lower sea level exposed larger areas of continental shelves, interior Yakutia probably experienced even stronger continentality, with further decreased annual precipitation and increased annual temperature amplitudes. Such increased amplitudes must have resulted from either lower winter temperatures, higher summer temperatures, or a combination of both

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