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Late Holocene high resolution palaeoclimatic reconstruction inferred from Sebkha Mhabeul, southeast Tunisia
Authors:L Marquer  S Pomel  E Schulz  E Van Campo
Institution:a Département de Préhistoire, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, UMR-CNRS 5198, France
b Laboratoire Environnement Tropical, Equipe DYMSET, Université de Bordeaux 3, UMR-CNRS 5185, France
c Department of Geography, University of Tunis, Tunisia
d Geographisches Institüt Am Hubland, Würzburg Universiteit, Germany
e ECOLAB — Laboratoire d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle, Université de Toulouse, UMR-CNRS-UPS-INPT 5245, France
Abstract:Relations between climate change and landscape evolution during the last two millennia in southeastern coastal Tunisia have been documented using high-resolution reconstruction of flood history and fire activity in the Sebkha Mhabeul core. The age model, based on tephrochronology, indicates that the core extends from Roman to modern times and encompasses the well-defined climatic periods of the last two millennia. This record provides a first palaeoecological/palaeoclimatic high resolution reconstruction in North Africa using a cross-disciplinary approach with both physical (grey-scale intensity, quartz particles) and biological (charcoal and pollen) indicators. The flood history shows four wet/dry cycles (ca. AD 550-950, 950-1300, 1300-1570 and 1570-1870) of different duration. Major hydrological instabilities are concentrated during the Medieval Climate Anomalies and the early Little Ice Age, between AD 1000 and 1550. Direct correlation between climate and fire cannot be established suggesting that the fire history of the Sebkha environment is mainly influenced by human activity. This study demonstrates the great value of sebkhas as palaeoenvironmental archives.
Keywords:Fire  Climatic changes  Human impact  Late Holocene  Sebkha  Southeast Tunisia
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