4.7 Article

Rapid climate change from north Andean Lake Fuquene pollen records driven by obliquity: implications for a basin-wide biostratigraphic zonation for the last 284 ka

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 30, Issue 23-24, Pages 3321-3337

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2011.08.003

Keywords

Fuquene basin; Pollen records; Frequency analysis; Late Pleistocene; Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles; Rapid climate change; Lake level change; Biostratigraphic zonation

Funding

  1. NWO [ALW 854.00.007]
  2. WOTRO [WB 84-552]
  3. AlBan [E04D088907CO]
  4. NUFFIC
  5. University of Amsterdam

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This paper compares a new super-high resolution pollen record from a central location in Lake Fuquene (4 degrees N) with 3 pollen records from marginal sites from the same lake basin, located at 2540 m elevation in the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia. We harmonized the pollen sum of all records, and provided previously published records of climate change with an improved age model using a new approach for long continental pollen records. We dissociated from subjective curve matching and applied a more objective procedure including radiocarbon ages, cyclostratigraphy, and orbital tuning using the new 284 ka long Fuquene Basin Composite record (Fq-BC) as the backbone (Groot et al., 2011). We showed that a common similar to 9 m cycle in the arboreal pollen percentage (AP%) records reflects obliquity forcing and drives vegetational and climatic change. The AP% records were tuned to the 41 kyr component filtered from standard benthic delta O-18 LR04 record. Changes in sediment supply to the lake are reflected in concert by the four records making frequency analysis in the depth domain an adequate method to compare records from the same basin. We calibrated the original C-14 ages and used where necessary biostratigraphic correlation, i.e. for records shorter than one obliquity cycle. Pollen records from the periphery of the lake showed changes in the abundance of Alnus and Weinmannia forests more clearly while centrally located record Fq-9C shows a more integrated signal of regional vegetation change. The revised age models show that core Fq-2 reflects the last 44 ka and composite record Fq-7C the last 85.5 ka. Marginally located core Fq-3 has an age of 133 ka at 32 m core depth and the lowermost 11 m of sediments appear of older but unknown age. The longest record Fq-BC shows similar to 60 yr resolution over the period of 284-27 ka. All pollen records are in support of a common regional vegetation development leading to a robust reconstruction of long series of submillennial climate oscillations reflecting Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) cycles. Reconstructed climate variability in the tropical Andes since marine isotope stage (MIS) 8 compares well with NGRIP (delta O-18 based), Epica Dome C (delta D based) and the Mediterranean sea surface temperature record MD01-2443/44 (U(K')37 based) underpinning the global significance of the climate record from this tropical Andean lake. A basin-wide biostratigraphy is presented and we concluded although with varying robustness that each core is representative of regional vegetational and climatic change. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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