4.7 Article

A lacustrine carbonate record of Holocene seasonality and climate

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 8, Pages 695-698

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G30056A.1

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation-Division of Atmospheric Sciences [NSF-ATM 9980380]
  2. U.S. Geological Survey

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Annually laminated (varved) Holocene sediments from Derby Lake, Michigan, display variations in endogenic calcite abundance reflecting a long-term (millennial-scale) decrease in burial punctuated with frequent short-term (decadal-scale) oscillations due to carbonate dissolution. Since 6000 cal yr B. P., sediment carbonate abundance has followed a decreasing trend while organic-carbon abundance has increased. The correlation between organic-carbon abundance and the sum of March-April-October-November insolation has an r(2) value of 0.58. We interpret these trends to represent a precession-driven lengthening of the Holocene growing season that has reduced calcite burial by enhancing net annual organic-matter production and associated calcite dissolution. Correlations with regional paleoclimate records suggest that changes in temperature and moisture balance have impacted the distribution of short-term oscillations in carbonate and organic-matter abundance superimposed on the precession-driven trends.

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