Paleowetlands and regional climate change in the central Atacama Desert, northern chile

Widespread, organic-rich diatomaceous deposits are evidence for formerly wetter times along the margins of the central Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on Earth today. We mapped and dated these paleowetland deposits at three presently waterless locations near Salar de Punta Negra (24.5°S) on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Quaternary research 2008-05, Vol.69 (3), p.343-360
Hauptverfasser: Quade, Jay, Rech, Jason A., Betancourt, Julio L., Latorre, Claudio, Quade, Barbra, Rylander, Kate Aasen, Fisher, Timothy
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 343
container_title Quaternary research
container_volume 69
creator Quade, Jay
Rech, Jason A.
Betancourt, Julio L.
Latorre, Claudio
Quade, Barbra
Rylander, Kate Aasen
Fisher, Timothy
description Widespread, organic-rich diatomaceous deposits are evidence for formerly wetter times along the margins of the central Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on Earth today. We mapped and dated these paleowetland deposits at three presently waterless locations near Salar de Punta Negra (24.5°S) on the western slope of the Andes. Elevated groundwater levels supported phreatic discharge into wetlands during two periods: 15,900 to ~ 13,800 and 12,700 to ~ 9700 cal yr BP. Dense concentrations of lithic artifacts testify to the presence of paleoindians around the wetlands late in the second wet phase (11,000?–9700 cal yr BP). Water tables dropped below the surface before 15,900 and since 8100 cal yr BP, and briefly between ~ 13,800 and 12,700 cal yr BP. This temporal pattern is repeated, with some slight differences, in rodent middens from the study area, in both paleowetland and rodent midden deposits north and south of the study area, and in lake level fluctuations on the adjacent Bolivian Altiplano. The regional synchroneity of these changes points to a strengthening of the South American Monsoon — which we term the "Central Andean Pluvial Event" — in two distinct intervals (15,900–13,800 and 12,700–9700 cal yr BP), probably induced by steepened SST gradients across the tropical Pacific (i.e., La Niña-like conditions).
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source Cambridge Journals
subjects Atacama
Carbon-14
El Niño
ENSO
Freshwater
La Niña
Marine
Original Articles
Paleowetlands
title Paleowetlands and regional climate change in the central Atacama Desert, northern chile
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