Sources of Sediment in Lake Pepin on the Upper Mississippi River in Response to Holocene Climatic Changes

被引:0
|
作者
David W. Kelley
Stefanie A. Brachfeld
Edward A. Nater
Herbert E. Wright
机构
[1] University of St. Thomas,Department of Geography
[2] Montclair State University,Department of Earth and Environmental Studies
[3] University of Minnesota,Department of Soil, Water, and Climate
[4] University of Minnesota,Department of Geology, & Geophysics
来源
Journal of Paleolimnology | 2006年 / 35卷
关键词
Geochemical fingerprinting; Holocene; Lake Pepin; Lake sediments; Mass balance; Paleoclimatic reconstruction;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Sediments from Lake Pepin on the Mississippi River, southeastern Minnesota, are used as provenance tracers to assess variations in hydrology and sediment-transport during the middle Holocene. Three rivers contribute sediment to Lake Pepin, and each catchment is characterized by a distinctly different geologic terrain. The geochemical fingerprint for each drainage basin was determined from the elemental composition of heavy minerals in the silt-sized fraction of modern sediment samples. Down-core elemental abundances were compared with these fingerprints by use of a chemical-mass-balance model that apportions sediment to the source areas. We observed a decreased contribution from the Minnesota River during the interval ~6700–5500 14C yr BP, which we attribute to decreased discharge of the Minnesota River, likely controlled by a combination of precipitation, snow melt, and groundwater input to the river. This hydrologic condition coincides with the mid-Holocene prairie period recorded by fossil pollen data. The occurrence of this feature in a proxy record for hydrologic variations supports the hypothesis that the mid-Holocene prairie period reflects drier conditions than before or after in midwestern North America.
引用
收藏
页码:193 / 206
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条