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Late Saalian and Eemian palaeoenvironmental history of the Bol'shoy Lyakhovsky Island (Laptev Sea region, Arctic Siberia)
Authors:ANDREI A ANDREEV  GUIDO GROSSE  LUTZ SCHIRRMEISTER  SVETLANA A KUZMINA  ELENA YU NOVENKO  ANATOLY A BOBROV  PAVEL E TARASOV  BORIS P ILYASHUK  TATIANA V KUZNETSOVA  MATTHIAS KRBETSCHEK  HANNO MEYER  VIKTOR V KUNITSKY
Institution:  a Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research Research Unit Potsdam Telegrafenberg A43 D-14473 Potsdam Germany. b Paleontological Institute RAS Profsoyuznaya 123 117997 Moscow Russia. c Institute of Geography RAS Staromonetny 29 109017 Moscow Russia. d Faculty of Soil Science Moscow State University Vorobievy Gory 119992 Moscow Russia. e Institute of North Industrial Ecology Problems Kola Science Center Russian Academy of Sciences Fersman St. 14 184200 Apatity Russia. f Faculty of Geology Moscow State University Vorobievy Gory 119992 Moscow Russia. g Saxon Academy of Science Quaternary Geochronology Section Bernhard-von-Cotta-Str. 4 09596 Freiberg Germany. h Permafrost Institute Siberian Branch Russian Academy of Science Yakutsk Russia.
Abstract:Palaeoenvironmental records from permafrost sequences complemented by infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) and Formula: See Text]Th/U dates from Bol'shoy Lyakhovsky Island (73°20'N, 141°30'E) document the environmental history in the region for at least the past 200?ka. Pollen spectra and insect fauna indicate that relatively wet grass-sedge tundra habitats dominated during an interstadial c. 200-170?ka BP. Summers were rather warm and wet, while stable isotopes reflect severe winter conditions. The pollen spectra reflect sparser grass-sedge vegetation during a Taz (Late Saalian) stage, c. 170-130?ka BP, with environmental conditions much more severe compared with the previous interstadial. Open Poaceae and Artemisia plant associations dominated vegetation at the beginning of the Kazantsevo (Eemian) c. 130?ka BP. Some shrubs (Alnus fruticosa, Salix, Betula nana) grew in more protected and wetter places as well. The climate was relatively warm during this time, resulting in the melting of Saalian ice wedges. Later, during the interglacial optimum, shrub tundra with Alnus fruticosa and Betula nana s.l. dominated vegetation. Climate was relatively wet and warm. Quantitative pollen-based climate reconstruction suggests that mean July temperatures were 4-5°C higher than the present during the optimum of the Eemian, while late Eemian records indicate significant climate deterioration.
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