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Sr and Nd isotopes as tracers of clastic sources in Lake Le Bourget sediment (NW Alps, France) during the Little Ice Age: Palaeohydrology implications
Authors:Marie Revel-Rolland  Fabien Arnaud  Marc Desmet  Chantal Alibert
Institution:a UMR 5025 LGCA, Observatoire des Sciences de l'Univers de Grenoble, Université J. Fourier, France
b UMR-6526 GEOSCIENCES AZUR, Université de Nice-Sofia Antipolis, Parc VALROSE, 06108 NICE Cedex 02, France
c UMR 5025 Laboratoire de Géodynamique des Chaînes Alpines, Université de Savoie, Le Bourget du Lac, France
d Geological Institute, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
e Institute of Geological Sciences, University of Berne, Baltzerstrasse 1-3, CH-3012 Berne, Switzerland
f RSES, ANU, Canberra, Australia
Abstract:Geochemical methods (major elements and Sr, Nd isotopes) have been used to (1) characterize Lake Le Bourget sediments in the French Alps, (2) identify the current sources of the clastic sediments and estimate the source variability over the last 600 years. Major element results indicate that Lake Le Bourget sediments consist of 45% clastic component and 55% endogenic calcite. In addition, several individual flood levels have been identified during the Little Ice Age (LIA) on the basis of their higher clastic content (> 70%).Potential sources of Lake Le Bourget clastic sediments have been investigated from Sr and Nd isotope compositions. The sediments from the Sierroz River and Leysse River which are mainly derived from the Mesozoic Calcareous Massifs are characterised by lower 87Sr/86Sr ratios and slightly lower ?Nd(0) ratios than the Arve River sediments which are derived from the Palaeozoic Mont-Blanc External Crystalline Massifs. The Rhône River appears to have been the main source of clastic sediments into the lake for the last 600 years, as evidenced by a similar Sr and Nd isotopic compositions analyzed in core B16 sediments (87Sr/86Sr = 0.719, ?Nd(0) = − 10) and in the sediments of the Rhône River (87Sr/86Sr = 0.719, ?Nd(0) = − 9.6).The isotopic signatures of flood events and background samples from core B16 in Lake Le Bourget are also similar. This indicates that prior to ∼ 1800, the inputs into the lake have remained relatively homogeneous with the proportion of clastic component mainly being a function of the palaeohydrology of the Rhone River. Early human modification (deforestation and agriculture) of the lake catchment before the 1800s appears to have had little influence on the source of clastic sediments.
Keywords:Lake Le Bourget sediments  Sr and Nd isotopes  Rhô  ne River floods  Palaeohydrology  Little Ice Age
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