Rapid lacustrine response to recent High Arctic warming: a diatom record from Sawtooth Lake, Ellesmere Island, Nunavut. Arctic Antarctic Alpine Res

Diatoms from Sawtooth Lake (798209N, 818519W) on the Fosheim Peninsula in Central Ellesmere Island, Canada were analyzed to assess the temporal extent and magnitude of climatic change in the High Arctic during the late Holocene. Diatom results from the sediment cores show an absence of diatoms throu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bianca B. Perren, Raymond S. Bradley, Pierre Francus, Current Address Bianca Perren
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.530.4787
http://www.geo.umass.edu/faculty/bradley/perren2003.pdf
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Summary:Diatoms from Sawtooth Lake (798209N, 818519W) on the Fosheim Peninsula in Central Ellesmere Island, Canada were analyzed to assess the temporal extent and magnitude of climatic change in the High Arctic during the late Holocene. Diatom results from the sediment cores show an absence of diatoms throughout the last;2.5 ka (4.6 m) until the 1920s. However, ca. 1926 (5.3-cm depth), a rapid colonization of diatoms in the lake occurred. Within the uppermost section of the core (;1920 to;1997), the diatom flora shift from a small Fragilaria-dominated assemblage to a more diverse assemblage that is dominated by large planktonic taxa (e.g., Cyclotella bodanica) and large raphid benthic species. The postglacial nature of this assemblage suggests a decrease in ice cover and a concomitant increase in light and nutrient availability for diatom growth over the last;75 yr. Of particular significance is this absence of diatoms prior to the;1920s, which indicates that environmental conditions of the last;75 yr are unlike any of the previous;2500 yr.