Abstract

The present study aims to investigate the palaeoenvironmental changes around Sattal Lake, Kumaun Lesser Himalaya spanning the last 1670 years. Based on multi proxy analysis (i.e., grain size, mineral magnetism, clay mineralogy, Total Organic Carbon (TOC) and carbon isotopes), supported by a robust radiocarbon chronology, three major environmental phases were identified. Warm, wet phases occurred between 1,150–650 cal yr BP and 260 cal yr BP to the present. These phases coincide closely with the Medieval Climatic Anomaly (MCA) and modern warming, respectively. These warm/wet events were due to elevated precipitation, resulting in high lake levels and an expansion of the lake margin, which were marked by lower δ13C values, comparatively higher sand concentration, TOC values and magnetic susceptibility (χlf). The inference of a modern warm phase is supported by high resolution instrumental data. The MCA, which is marked by elevated amounts of coarse grained (sand) detrital material, is inferred to be an interval of strengthened of monsoonal intensity, which correlates with available monsoon records from various continental paleoclimate archives. Following the MCA a cold and dry phase was observed to occur between 610 and 260 cal yr BP, corresponding to the Little Ice Age (LIA). The LIA, which was characterized by high silt and clay concentration, high δ13C, low TOC and reduced magnetic susceptibility (χlf), is inferred to represent an interval of low lake levels, likely reflecting an episode of weakened monsoonal intensity.

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