Artículos de revistas
Integrated reconstruction of Holocene millennial-scale environmental changes in Tierra del Fuego, southernmost South America
Fecha
2014-04Registro en:
Waldmann, Nicolás; Borromei, Ana Maria; Recasens, Cristina; Olivera, Daniela Elizabeth; Martinez, Marcelo Adrian; et al.; Integrated reconstruction of Holocene millennial-scale environmental changes in Tierra del Fuego, southernmost South America; Elsevier Science; Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology; 399; 4-2014; 294-309
0031-0182
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Waldmann, Nicolás
Borromei, Ana Maria
Recasens, Cristina
Olivera, Daniela Elizabeth
Martinez, Marcelo Adrian
Maidana, Nora Irene
Ariztegui, Daniel
Austin, James
Anselmetti, Flavio S.
Moy, Christopher M.
Resumen
This study presents new paleoenvironmental data obtained from sedimentary cores from Lago Fagnano, an elongated lake located at 54°S in southernmost South America. Data from palynomorphs (pollen, spores and algae) and associated palynofacies as well as from diatom taxa retrieved from these cores compared with other regional proxies contribute to evaluate the similarities and differences in the climate patterns based on different proxies from southernmost Patagonia. The pollen analysis reveals that a grass steppe environment existed during the early Holocene (11,300-~. 8000. cal. a. BP) followed by a major vegetation change characterized by development of forest-steppe ecotone communities between ~. 8000 and ~. 6500. cal. a. BP, under more humid conditions. Between ~. 6500 and ~. 4000. cal. a. BP, expansion and colonization by Nothofagus forests reflect an increase in effective moisture levels, while openness in the forest communities characterizes the region after ~. 1100. cal. a. BP. The palynological organic matter combined with the algal content reflects hydrological changes occurring in the lake and its nutrient status, probably in close relation with past climate oscillations. All these past ecological changes are closely related to oscillations in precipitation and temperature as a response to the variations in the latitudinal position and/or strength of the Southern Westerlies wind belt during the Holocene.