4.3 Article

Climatic variability in the northwestern Alps, France, as evidenced by 600 years of terrigenous sedimentation in Lake Le Bourget

Journal

HOLOCENE
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 177-185

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1191/0959683602hl520rp

Keywords

Alps; 'Little Ice Age'; North Atlantic Oscillation; terrigenous lacustrine sedimentation; spectral analysis; watershed palaeohydrology

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Core, recovered front periglacial Lake Le Bourget deep basin (northwestern Alps) were investigated to examine the influence of the 'Little Ice Age' (LIA) on terrigenous lacustrine sedimentation, Growing glaciers in the regional watershed induced catastrophic Rhone river floods and major underflow deposits in L deep basin during, the early fifteenth, the sixteenth and the mid-eighteenth centuries. The LIA is characterized by a decrease in deposition front interflows from AD similar to1550 to 1710 and an increase in deposition front underflows from AD 1550 to 1800, On one hand, spectral analyses of the laminations in interflow deposits reveal 4-5 bears cyclicities front AD 1440 to 1550. as well as 7-8 and 13-14 years cyclicities front AD similar to1740 to 1870 oil the other hand, spectral analyses of a clay mineral ratio reflecting underflow deposits highlight 45-50 years cyclicities from similar to1550 to 1800. These pluriannual decadal and pluridecadal periods are typical of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). A NAO-like period in our data would he a consequence of periodical variations in rainfall and snow accumulation during late autumn and winter over Lake Le Bourget's watershed.

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