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A millennial‐scale Late Pleistocene–Holocene palaeoclimatic record from the western Chihuahua Desert,Mexico
Authors:Priyadarsi D Roy  Muthuswamy P Jonathan  Ligia L Pérez‐Cruz  María M Sánchez‐Córdova  Jesús D Quiroz‐Jiménez  Francisco M Romero
Institution:1. Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, , 04510 México, DF, Mexico;2. Centro Interdisciplinario de Investigaciones y Estudios sobre Medio Ambiente y Desarrollo, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, , 07340 México, DF, Mexico;3. Instituto de Geofísica, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, , 04510 México, DF, Mexico
Abstract:We present elemental concentrations and magnetic susceptibility data from a new 270‐cm‐long sediment core collected from the western part of palaeolake Babicora and infer millennial‐scale hydrological variations over the last 27 cal. ka in the western Chihuahua Desert. Variations in the available water content at the sediment–air interface of the watershed, lake salinity and lake productivity are inferred from values of the chemical index of alteration (CIA), CaCO 3 and Corg, respectively. An abrupt increase in runoff at c. 24 cal. ka BP appears correlative with the Heinrich 2 (H2) event. Except for this event, diminished runoff between c. 27 and 19 cal. ka BP indicates lower annual precipitation (weak summer rainfall) during the Last Glacial Maximum. The deposition of chemically altered sediments between c. 25 and 22 cal. ka BP results from the higher sediment–water interaction in the watershed owing to lower evaporation, cooler conditions and higher precipitation during the H2 event. Since 19 cal. ka BP the runoff has been characterized by high‐amplitude fluctuations with intervals of reduced precipitation identified at c. 19, 18, 17.5, 13–14, 11.5, 10, 7.5 and 3 cal. ka BP.
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