Abstract

Abstract. The 3.6 Ma sediment record of Lake El'gygytgyn/NE Russia, Far East Russian Arctic, represents the longest continuous climate archive of the terrestrial Arctic. Its elemental composition as determined by X-ray fluorescence scanning exhibits significant changes since the mid-Pliocene caused by climate-driven variations in primary production, postdepositional diagenetic processes, and lake circulation as well as weathering processes in its catchment. During the mid- to late Pliocene, warmer and wetter climatic conditions are reflected by elevated Si / Ti ratios, indicating enhanced diatom production in the lake. Prior to 3.3 Ma, this signal is overprinted by intensified detrital input from the catchment, visible in maxima of clastic-related proxies, such as K. In addition, calcite formation in the early lake history points to enhanced Ca flux into the lake caused by intensified weathering in the catchment. A lack of calcite deposition after ca. 3.3 Ma is linked to the development of permafrost in the region triggered by cooling in the mid-Pliocene. After ca. 3.0 Ma the elemental data suggest a gradual transition to Pleistocene-style glacial–interglacial cyclicity. In the early Pleistocene, the cyclicity was first dominated by variations on the 41 kyr obliquity band but experienced a change to a 100 kyr eccentricity dominance during the middle Pleistocene transition (MPT) at ca. 1.2–0.6 Ma. This clearly demonstrates the sensitivity of the Lake El'gygytgyn record to orbital forcing. A successive decrease of the baseline levels of the redox-sensitive Mn / Fe ratio and magnetic susceptibility between 2.3 and 1.8 Ma reflects an overall change in the bottom-water oxygenation due to an intensified occurrence of pervasive glacial episodes in the early Pleistocene. The coincidence with major changes in the North Pacific and Bering Sea paleoceanography at ca. 1.8 Ma implies that the change in lake hydrology was caused by a regional cooling in the North Pacific and the western Beringian landmass and/or changes in the continentality. Further increases in total organic carbon and total nitrogen content after ca. 1.6 Ma are attributed to reduced organic matter decay in the sediment during prolonged anoxic periods. This points to more extensive periods of perennial ice coverage, and thus, to a progressive shifts towards more intense peak glacial periods. In the course of the Pleistocene glacial–interglacial sequence eight so-called "super-interglacials" occur. Their exceptionally warm conditions are reflected by extreme Si / Ti peaks accompanied by lows in Ti, K, and Fe, thus indicating extraordinary high lake productivity.

Highlights

  • Geochemical analysis by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) scanning has become a well-accepted and intensively used analytical method to investigate the elemental composition of Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union.V

  • We present the results of selected indicative elements and element ratios and discuss their distribution over the entire Pliocene–Pleistocene sediment record with respect to changes in the detrital flux, bioproduction, sediment transport, and diagenetic sediment alteration

  • Being a minor element in Lake El’gygytgyn sediments, titanium has proven to be a useful indicator of the climatic history of the lake and its catchment of the past ca. 250 and 340 kyr (Minyuk et al, 2007, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Supported by complementary proxy analyses of the record (e.g., Andreev et al, 2013; Francke et al, 2013; Gebhardt et al, 2013; Meyer-Jacob et al, 2013; Sauerbrey et al, 2013; Tarasov et al, 2013; Vogel et al, 2013), the XRF results for the first time enable continuous tracking and differentiation of climate-driven variations of in-lake processes as well as changes in the lake catchment over the past 3.6 Ma. Beyond several highlighted time slices in the record (e.g., Melles et al, 2012; Brigham-Grette et al, 2013; Vogel et al, 2013) the geochemical data presented here shed new light on the climate evolution in western Beringia from the Pliocene warmth to the glacial–interglacial cyclicity of the late Pleistocene in view of orbitally triggered regional and global climate changes

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