4.2 Article

Climate variability in the SE Alps of Italy over the past 17 000 years reconstructed from a stalagmite record

Journal

BOREAS
Volume 34, Issue 4, Pages 445-455

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1080/03009480500231336

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Stalagmite SV1 from Grotta Savi, located at the SE margin of the European Alps (Italy), is the first Alpine speleothem that continuously spans the past c. 17 kyr. Extension rate and 8180, record for the Lateglacial probably reflect a combination of temperature and rainfall, with rainfall exerting the dominant effect. Low speleothern calcite delta(18)O(c) values were recorded from c. 14.5 and 12.35 kyr, during GI-1 (Bolling-Allerod) interstadial, which, in our interpretation, was warm and wet. The GS-1 (Younger Dryas) was characterized by a shift to heavier delta(18)O(c), coinciding with delta(13)C(c) enrichment and extremely low extension rate (<8 mu m/year). These characteristics indicate that GS-1 climate was cool and dry in the SE Alps. Calibration using historical data revealed that there is a positive delta(18)O(c)/dT relationship. A 1 degrees C rise in mean annual temperature should correspond to c. 2.85 parts per thousand increase of SV-1 delta(18)O(c). We reconstructed a slow and steady temperature rise of c. 0.5 degrees C since 10 kyr BP, in broad agreement with reconstructions from pollen data for SE Europe. Stalagmite SV1 indicates that climate variability in the SE Alps has been influenced by the Mediterranean Sea for the past c. 17 kyr.

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