Sedimentary evolution and lake level fluctuations of Urmia Lake (north‐west Iran) over the past 50000years; insights from Artemia faecal pellet records

A 25 m long sediment core from hypersaline Urmia Lake (north‐west Iran) was studied for the Late Quaternary depositional history and palaeoclimate variations using the abundance and compositional characteristics of Artemia faecal pellets. Sediment analysis is supported by scanning electron microscop...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sedimentology 2024-04, Vol.71 (3), p.887-911
Hauptverfasser: Sarı, Selma, Mohammadi, Ali, Schwamborn, Georg, Haghipour, Negar, Byung Yong Yu, Kürşad Kadir Eriş, Lak, Razyeh
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container_end_page 911
container_issue 3
container_start_page 887
container_title Sedimentology
container_volume 71
creator Sarı, Selma
Mohammadi, Ali
Schwamborn, Georg
Haghipour, Negar
Byung Yong Yu
Kürşad Kadir Eriş
Lak, Razyeh
description A 25 m long sediment core from hypersaline Urmia Lake (north‐west Iran) was studied for the Late Quaternary depositional history and palaeoclimate variations using the abundance and compositional characteristics of Artemia faecal pellets. Sediment analysis is supported by scanning electron microscopy – energy dispersive X‐ray spectroscopy, organic and inorganic carbon content measurements, and stable isotopes (δ13C and δ18O) from faecal pellet carbonates. The imprecise chronology of the core back to 50 kyr bp is supported by ten radiocarbon ages from faecal pellets and bulk sediments. The palaeoenvironmental record is subdivided into four periods: (i) During much of Marine Isotope Stage 3, a period of lake level lowering is characterized by a decreasing amount of faecal pellets, and an increasing amount of coated grains, sulphate minerals and reworked shell fragments. (ii) During late Marine Isotope Stage 3 and early Marine Isotope Stage 2 a lake level lowstand and a lake floor exposure is interpreted based on the relatively low abundance of pellets, which are multicoloured and appear together with volcanic lithics and rounded sulphate minerals. (iii) During late Marine Isotope Stage 2 the record is devoid of pellets but dominated by large sulphate crystals suggesting a prolonged low lake level. (iv) During Marine Isotope Stage 1 a relative lake level highstand is rapidly established with sediments that are highly abundant in fresh pellets. The modern lake level lowstand is represented by a salt crust. The δ13C and δ18O records measured from faecal pellet carbonates suggest a link with the precipitation versus evaporation balance in the lake over time. From bottom to top the linear trend towards more negative delta values illustrates the increasing amount of precipitation arriving at the lake from the Late Pleistocene to the Holocene. Two prominent isotope minima during the Late Pleistocene and one prominent minimum in the early Holocene mark relative high lake levels, which can also be linked to Lake Van in Turkey.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/sed.13159
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subjects Abundance
Analytical methods
Aquatic crustaceans
Artemia
Carbon 13
Carbon content
Carbon isotopes
Carbonates
Chemical precipitation
Crystals
Electron microscopy
Evaporation
Faecal pellets
Holocene
Inorganic carbon
Isotopes
Lakes
Minerals
Palaeoclimate
Paleoclimate
Pellets
Pleistocene
Precipitation
Quaternary
Radiocarbon dating
Records
Scanning electron microscopy
Sediment
Sediment analysis
Sediments
Spectroscopy
Stable isotopes
Sulfates
Sulphate minerals
Water levels
title Sedimentary evolution and lake level fluctuations of Urmia Lake (north‐west Iran) over the past 50000years; insights from Artemia faecal pellet records
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