Abstract
Previous paleolimnological studies demonstrated that the sediments of Garba Guracha, situated at 3950 m asl in the afro-alpine zone of the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia, provide a complete Late Glacial and Holocene paleoclimate and environmental archive. We revisited Garba Guracha in order to retrieve new sediment cores and to apply new environmental proxies, e.g. charcoal, diatoms, biomarkers, and stable isotopes. Our chronology is established using 210Pb dating and radiocarbon dating of bulk sedimentary organic matter, bulk n-alkanes, and charcoal. Although bedrock was not reached during coring, basal ages confirm that sedimentation started at the earliest ~ 16 cal kyr BP. The absence of a systematic age offset for the n-alkanes suggests that “pre-aging” is not a prominent issue in this lake, which is characterised by a very small afro-alpine catchment. X-ray fluorescence scans and total organic carbon contents show a prominent transition from minerogenic to organic-rich sediments around 11 cal kyr BP coinciding with the Holocene onset. While an unambiguous terrestrial versus aquatic source identification seems challenging, the n-alkane-based Paq proxy, TOC/N ratios, δ13C values, and the sugar biomarker patterns suggest a predominantly autochthonous organic matter source. Supraregional climate events, such as the African Humid Period, the Younger Dryas (YD), a 6.5 cal kyr BP short drying event, and the 4.2 cal kyr BP transition to overall drier climate are recorded in our archive. The Garba Guracha record suggests that northern hemisphere forcings played a role in the Eastern African highland paleoclimate.
Highlights
Eastern Africa, and Ethiopia in particular, has received much attention from archeologists and paleoclimatologists (Viehberg et al 2018; Lamb et al 2018)
Fourteen tephra layers were identified in the \ 10 kyr Lake Tilo sequence by Martin-Jones et al (2017), who geochemically correlated two of these horizons (TT-2 and TT-13) to two tephra layers occurring within sediments from Lake Chamo, 170 km to the south
Tephra GGT-1 matches the composition of the Tilo tephra TT-2, which is dated at Lake Tilo to 1.3–1.5 cal kyrs BP
Summary
Eastern Africa, and Ethiopia in particular, has received much attention from archeologists and paleoclimatologists (Viehberg et al 2018; Lamb et al 2018). This may be attributed to Quaternary climatic changes being widely acknowledged to have played a role in the early history of modern humans in Africa. Climatic extremes may have caused human populations to take refuge in the Ethiopian highlands (Brandt et al 2012), including the Bale Mountains (Fig. 1). Ossendorf et al (2019) recently highlighted that Middle Stone Age. G. Gil-Romera Department of Geo-Environmental Processes and Global Change, CSIC, Pyrenean Institute of Ecology, Zaragoza, Spain. C. Martin-Jones Limnology Unit, Department of Biology, Ghent University, 9000 Gent, Belgium
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