info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Hydrological variability in southeastern Patagonia and explosive volcanic activity in the southern Andean Cordillera during Oxygen Isotope Stage 3 and the Holocene inferred from lake sediments of Laguna Potrok Aike, Argentina
Fecha
2008-03Registro en:
Haberzettl, Torsten; Kück, Barbara; Wulf, Sabine; Anselmetti, Flavio; Ariztegui, Daniel; et al.; Hydrological variability in southeastern Patagonia and explosive volcanic activity in the southern Andean Cordillera during Oxygen Isotope Stage 3 and the Holocene inferred from lake sediments of Laguna Potrok Aike, Argentina; Elsevier Science; Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology; 259; 2-3; 3-2008; 213-229
0031-0182
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Haberzettl, Torsten
Kück, Barbara
Wulf, Sabine
Anselmetti, Flavio
Ariztegui, Daniel
Corbella, Jorge Hugo
Fey, Michael
Janssen, Stephanie
Lücke, Andreas
Mayr, Christoph
Ohlendorf, Christian
Schäbitz, Frank
Schleser, Gerhard H.
Wille, Michael
Zolitschka, Bernd
Resumen
Seismic reflection studies in the maar lake Laguna Potrok Aike (51°58′ S, 70°23′ W) revealed an erosional unconformity associated with a sub-aquatic lake-level terrace at a water depth of 30m. Radiocarbon-dated, multi-proxy sediment studies of a piston core from this location indicate that the sediment below this discontinuity has an age of 45kyr BP (Oxygen Isotope Stage 3), and was deposited during an interval of high lake level. In comparison to the Holocene section, geochemical indicators of this older part of the record either point towards a different sediment source or to a different transport mechanism for Oxygen Isotope Stage 3 sediments. Holocene sedimentation started again before 6790cal. yr BP, providing a sediment record of hydrological variability until the present. Geochemical and isotopic data indicate a fluctuating lake level until 5310cal. yr BP. During the late Holocene the lake level shows a receding tendency. Nevertheless, the lake level did not drop below the 30m terrace to create another unconformity. The geochemical characterization of volcanic ashes reveals evidence for previously unknown explosive activity of the Reclús and Mt. Burney volcanoes during Oxygen Isotope Stage 3.