| PALEOLIMNOLOGY |
A 2000 year record of climate variations reconstructed from Haukadalsvatn, west Iceland.
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Geirsdottir, A.,Miller, G.H.,Thordarson, T.,Olafsdottir, K.B. 2008 A 2000 year record of climate variations reconstructed
from Haukadalsvatn, west Iceland. Journal of Paleolimnology
| Data Coverage |
North: 65.051 * South: 65.051 |
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West: -21.6305 * East: -21.6305 |
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Altitude: 32 m |
Start Year: -135 cal yr BP * End Year: 2003 cal yr BP
Data: Please Cite Data Contributors!
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Summary: The sediment fill of Haukadalsvatn, a lake in northwest Iceland,
preserves a record of environmental change since deglaciation,
13 ka ago. The rapid sedimentation rate over the past 2 ka
(ca. 4 m ka-1) provides a high-resolution archive of late Holocene
environmental change. Physical and chemical environmental proxies
extracted from cores from the Haukadalsvatn sediment fill provide
a reconstruction of sub-decadal-scale climate variability in Iceland
over the past 2 ka. Over this interval biogenic silica (BSi) reflects
warm April¿May temperatures, whereas total organic carbon (TOC) peaks
represent an increased flux of carbon to the lake from eolian-derived
soil erosion following periods of cold summers accompanied by dry,
windy winters. The proxy-based temperature reconstructions show a
broad interval of warmth through Medieval times, but this warmth
is punctuated by multi-decadal cold intervals. The transition into
the Little Ice Age occurred in two steps, with initial summer cooling
1250¿1300 AD, and a more severe drop in summer temperatures between
1450 and 1500 AD; both are periods of severe explosive volcanism.
Multi-decadal patterns of cold and warm conditions have some
characteristics of a North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)-like signal,
but instrumental records and proxy-based reconstructions of the NAO
index contain little power in the frequencies most strongly expressed
in our data set. Although severe soil erosion in Iceland is frequently
equated with settlement, our reconstructions indicate that soil erosion
began several centuries before settlement, whereas for several centuries
after settlement, when summer temperatures were relatively high,
there was little or no soil erosion. Only during the transition into
and during the Little Ice Age did soil erosion become a major feature
of the record. More Info on Paleolimnology |
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Complete XML Record: noaa-lake-6196
(Last Revised: 2009-02-11 )
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DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCDC (National Climatic Data Center, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce ) 325 Broadway, E/CC23 Boulder, CO 80305 USA
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| http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/ |
| E-mail: bruce.a.bauer@noaa.gov |
| E-mail: paleo@noaa.gov |
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