4.2 Article

Palaeoenvironmental implications of evaporative gaylussite crystals from Lonar Lake, central India

Journal

JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 349-359

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.2625

Keywords

evaporites; gaylussite; isotopes; Lonar Lake; monsoon

Funding

  1. Deutsche-forschungsgemeinschaft [FOR 1380]
  2. Deutsches GFZ Potsdam
  3. Indian Institute of Geomagnetism
  4. Universitat Potsdam

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We have undertaken petrographic, mineralogical, geochemical and isotopic investigations on carbonate minerals found within a 10-m-long core from Lonar Lake, central India, with the aim of evaluating their potential as palaeoenvironmental proxies. The core encompasses the entire Holocene and is the first well-dated high-resolution record from central India. While calcite and/or aragonite were found throughout the core, the mineral gaylussite was found only in two specific intervals (46303890 and 2040560 cal a BP). Hydrochemical and isotope data from inflowing streams and lake waters indicate that evaporitic processes play a dominant role in the precipitation of carbonates within this lake. Isotopic (18O and 13C) studies on the evaporative gaylussite crystals and residual bulk carbonates (calcite) from the long core show that evaporation is the major control on 18O enrichment in both the minerals. However, in case of 13C additional mechanisms, for example methanogenesis (gaylussite) and phytoplankton productivity (calcium carbonate), play an additional important role in some intervals. We also discuss the relevance of our investigation for palaeoclimate reconstruction and late Holocene monsoon variability. Copyright (c) 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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