Abstract

There is a sparsity of long, continuous palaeotemperature records for the last glacial period in central Europe, particularly for the interval corresponding to Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 4 and 3. Here we present a new, ca. 50-thousand year (ka)-long chironomid record from Füramoos, southern Germany, covering the interval from MIS 5a to MIS 3 that we use to examine lake development and then to quantitatively reconstruct mean July air temperatures. Chironomid assemblages with high abundances of taxa such as Polypedilum nubeculosum-type, Microtendipes pedellus-type, Cladopelma lateralis-type and Dicrotendipes nervosus-type imply a shallow-lake setting for the majority of the examined interval, which is corroborated by other aquatic remains such as oribatid mites, Sialidae and Ceratopogonidae. Assemblages from the interval ca. 99 to 80 ka (in the region corresponding to the Brörup Interstadial, Stadial B and early Odderade Interstadial) are dominated by taxa such as Tanytarsus glabrescens-type and Tanytarsus mendax-type and indicate relatively warm temperatures. Assemblages from the interval covering ca. 80 to 54 ka (corresponding to the late Odderade, Stadial C, Dürnten Interstadial and Stadial D) are dominated by taxa such as Sergentia coracina-type and Tanytarsus lugens-type and are typical for cooler conditions. Reconstructed July temperatures for the early Würmian (Brörup to early Odderade; ca. 99–80 ka) are 13–14 °C. Values decline to <10 °C during the late Odderade and Stadial C (ca. 80–77 ka) around the MIS 5a/4 transition. This decrease is coeval with a pronounced decrease in Northern Hemisphere summer insolation. Values stay in the range of 9–11 °C during the Dürnten and Stadial D (ca. 54–74.5 ka) and increase again to 12.5 °C during the Bellamont 1 interstadial (ca. 54–46 ka). Reconstructed July temperatures track changes in arboreal pollen percentages at Füramoos and agree with a summer-temperature decrease during the early to mid-Würmian as reported by other palaeotemperature records from Europe and the North Atlantic. Our chironomid record from Füramoos provides valuable new insights into Würmian climate dynamics in Central Europe, and corroborates other temperature reconstructions from the early to mid-Würmian glacial period.

Highlights

  • The Last Glacial Period is dated to ca. 115e11.7 ka ago (Imbrie et al, 1984; Shackleton et al, 2003; Lowe et al, 2008; Ivy-Ochs et al, 2008) beginning in Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5d andA

  • A subtle shift in chironomid assemblages is observed in this zone with types such as Tanytarsus glabrescens-type only occurring in the first part and disappearing while other types, such as Tanytarsus lugens-type and Sergentia coracina-type occur intermittently before increasing in abundance towards the end

  • We present the longest chironomid-based, quantitative temperature reconstruction from the Würmian glacial period to date, covering the interval from the Bro€rup (MIS 5c; ca. 99 ka) to the Bellamont 1 interstadials (MIS 3; ca. 49 ka) at centennial to millennial resolution

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Summary

Introduction

The Last Glacial Period (in southern Central Europe referred to as the Würmian Glaciation) is dated to ca. 115e11.7 ka ago (Imbrie et al, 1984; Shackleton et al, 2003; Lowe et al, 2008; Ivy-Ochs et al, 2008) beginning in Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5d andA. The Last Glacial Period (in southern Central Europe referred to as the Würmian Glaciation) is dated to ca. 115e11.7 ka ago (Imbrie et al, 1984; Shackleton et al, 2003; Lowe et al, 2008; Ivy-Ochs et al, 2008) beginning in Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5d and. Forested conditions of the last interglacial to tundra or steppe vegetation during the coldest phases of the last glaciation (Behre and Lade, 1986; Woillard, 1978; Müller et al, 2003; Fletcher et al, 2010). During the last glacial period, climate in the North Atlantic region was associated with a number of rapid, centennial-scale cooling and warming events (stadials and interstadials).

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