Holocene climatic change and the development of the lake-effect snowbelt in Michigan, USA

被引:18
作者
Henne, Paul D. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Hu, Feng Sheng [3 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bern, Inst Plant Sci, CH-3013 Bern, Switzerland
[2] Univ Bern, Oeschger Ctr Climate Change Res, CH-3013 Bern, Switzerland
[3] Univ Illinois, Program Ecol Evolut & Conservat Biol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[4] Univ Illinois, Dept Plant Biol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[5] Univ Illinois, Dept Geol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
关键词
MIDWESTERN UNITED-STATES; GREAT-LAKES; ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION; UPPER PENINSULA; WINTER WEATHER; GROUNDWATER RECHARGE; EFFECT PRECIPITATION; EFFECT SNOWSTORMS; REGIONAL CLIMATE; HURON BASIN;
D O I
10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.12.014
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Lake-effect snow is an important constraint on ecological and socio-economic systems near the North American Great Lakes Little is known about the Holocene history of lake-effect snowbelts, and it is difficult to decipher how lake-effect snowfall abundance affected ecosystem development. We conducted oxygen-Isotope analysis of calcite in lake-sediment cores from northern Lower Michigan to infer Holocene climatic variation and assess snowbelt development The two lakes experience the same synoptic-scale climatic systems, but only one of them (Huffman Lake) receives a significant amount of lake-effect snow. A 177-cm difference in annual snowfall causes groundwater inflow at Huffman Lake to be O-18-depleted by 2 3 parts per thousand relative to O'Brien Lake. To assess when the lake-effect snowbelt became established, we compared calcite-delta O-18 profiles of the last 11,500 years from these two sites. The chronologies are based on accelerator-mass-spectrometry C-14 ages of 11 and 17 terrestrial-plant samples from Huffman and O'Brien lakes, respectively. The values of delta O-18 are low at both sites from 11,500 to 9500 cal yr BP when the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) exerted a dominant control over the regional climate and provided periodic pulses of meltwater to the Great Lakes basin Carbonate delta O-18 increases by 2.6 parts per thousand at O'Brien Lake and by 1 4 parts per thousand at Huffman Lake between 9500 and 7000 cal yr BP, suggesting a regional decline in the proportion of runoff derived from winter precipitation The Great Lakes snowbelt probably developed between 9500 and 5500 cal yr BP as Inferred from the progressive O-18-depletion at Huffman Lake relative to O'Brien Lake, with the largest increase of lake-effect snow around 7000 cal yr BR Lake-effect snow became possible at this time because of increasing contact between the Great Lakes and frigid arctic air. These changes resulted from enhanced westerly flow over the Great Lakes as the LIS collapsed, and from rapidly rising Great Lakes levels during the Nipissing Transgression. The delta O-18 difference between Huffman and O'Brien lakes declines after 5500 cal yr BP, probably because of a northward shift of the polar vortex that brought increasing winter precipitation to the entire region However, delta O-18 remains depleted at Huffman Lake relative to O'Brien Lake because of the continued production of lake-effect snow. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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页码:940 / 951
页数:12
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