Abstract

Abstract A chronologically robust reconstruction of timing and dynamics of millennial time scale wet episodes encompassing the entire Atacama Desert during the last 15 ka has been constructed. To accomplish this, a new composite paleoclimatic record from Groundwater Discharge Deposits (GWD) in the Sierra de Varas (Domeyko Range, southern Atacama in Chile at 25°S) has been compiled and compared with other published paleohydrologic records from the Atacama region. In Sierra de Varas (SV), three millennial timescale wet climate phases have been characterized: around 14.5 ka cal BP, 12.2–9.8 ka cal BP, and 4.7 ka cal BP to the present day. These wet phases are interpreted from intervals of GWD facies formed during periods when the springs were active. GWD facies include: (1) black organic peat, rooted mudstones and sandstones formed in local wetland environments, and (2) gypsum-carbonate rich layers formed by interstitial growth. GWD intervals alternate with gravelly alluvial material deposited during arid phases. A trend towards less humid conditions during the Late Holocene wet episode characterizes GWD sedimentary series in Sierra the Varas, suggesting the onset of a dry episode over the last few centuries. Around 0.7 ka BP a very short wet episode is recorded in the central part of the desert suggesting this was the time of maximum humidity for the entire late Holocene wet period. A brief arid phase occurred between 1.5 and 2.0 ka BP indicated by the absence of GWD in the Domeyko Range. The paleoclimatic reconstruction encompassing the entire Atacama region shows that both the intensity and occurrence of wetter conditions were governed mainly by the distance to the source of moisture, and secondarily by the elevation of the sites. In the northern Atacama (16–20°S), four wet phases fed by N-NE summer monsoon precipitations have been proposed: Tauca phase (18–14 ka cal BP) and Coipasa phase (13–10 ka cal BP) during the Late Glacial, followed by Early Holocene and Late Holocene phases. In contrast, southern Atacama records (23–28°S) display only three pluvial periods which result from SE summer monsoon precipitation and outbreaks from the Westerlies during wintertime. The Early Holocene in the southern Atacama was a period of aridity, generating important landscape differences to those in the Northern Atacama where conditions were wetter. The core of Atacama (20–23°S) is the overall driest part of the desert because it is located in the distal limits of both N-NE and SE sources of moisture, the Amazon Basin and Gran Chaco areas, respectively.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe Atacama Desert has been one of the driest regions in the world over the last 15 Ma (Hartley and Chong, 2002)

  • The Atacama Desert has been one of the driest regions in the world over the last 15 Ma (Hartley and Chong, 2002). This aridity, which is most extreme between the western Andean slope and the coast between ca. 18°S and 26°S has been attributed to: (1) the barrier to Atlantic moisture fluxes provided by the Andes; (2) the inhibition of Pacific moisture by cold water transported by the Humboldt Current that modulates the strength of the subtropical anticyclone and creates a temperature inversion along the coast; and (3) its location beyond the northern limit of the Southern Westerlies circulation zone in Norte Chico (Garreaud et al, 2010)

  • We describe the facies of sequences involving Groundwater Discharge Deposits (GWD) deposits of the five studied sites, with special emphasis on the Aguada Alto de Varas (AV) site which is the most complete and has the best chronological model

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Summary

Introduction

The Atacama Desert has been one of the driest regions in the world over the last 15 Ma (Hartley and Chong, 2002). Studying deposits formed during these wet periods is a first step towards assessing water runoff and replenishment of groundwater reserves (Houston and Hart, 2004; Herrera and Custodio, 2014). These pluvial events were vital to human subsistence following the initial occupation of the region between 11.5 and 13 ka ago (Moreno et al, 2009; Santoro et al, 2011; Gayó et al, 2015) as well as the last two centuries when water needs for mining, agriculture and human consumption have greatly increased.

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