Co-evolution of the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem in the Holocene Baltic Sea
The Baltic Sea experienced changes in marine input throughout the Holocene as substantial regional ice retreat led to isostatic adjustment, eustatic sea level change, and periodic isolation from the North Sea. Here, we determine the distributions and isotopic signatures of organic compounds preserve...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Climate of the past 2022-02, Vol.18 (2), p.233-248 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Baltic Sea experienced changes in marine input throughout the Holocene as
substantial regional ice retreat led to isostatic adjustment, eustatic sea
level change, and periodic isolation from the North Sea. Here, we determine
the distributions and isotopic signatures of organic compounds preserved in a
sediment record spanning the last ∼11 kyr to reconstruct
environmental change under these dynamic conditions. Carbon and hydrogen
isotope ratios of short-, mid-, and long-chain n-alkanes, along with
long-chain diol and glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether abundances, were
analyzed in sediments sampled from the Arkona Basin in the southwestern Baltic
Sea. In the earlier part of the record (specifically 10–8.2 ka),
hydrogen isotope values of higher plant-derived n-alkanes revealed a change
in dominant water source from an ice-melt-derived to a precipitation-dominated
hydrological regime. Following this shift in water source, carbon isotope
values of n-alkanes suggest diversification of vegetation. Shifts in
hydrology and vegetation did not coincide with established phase boundaries
but instead occurred mid-phase or spanned phase transitions. For this reason,
we suggest describing the Ancylus Lake in two phases: a meltwater phase (10.6
to 9.2 ka) and a precipitation phase (9.2 to 7.7 ka). Our
results highlight the utility of using C and H isotope ratios in conjunction
with other compound abundance proxies to better understand the complex
environmental change recorded in paleoarchives. |
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ISSN: | 1814-9332 1814-9324 1814-9332 |
DOI: | 10.5194/cp-18-233-2022 |