Climate and landscape during Heinrich Event 3 in south-western Europe: The small-vertebrate association from Galls Carboners cave (Mont-ral, Tarragona, north-eastern Iberia)

Heinrich Event 3 (H3) is well documented in the North Atlantic Ocean as a cooling event that occurred ca. 31 000 years ago. Deep-sea cores around the Iberian Peninsula coastline have been analysed to characterize the H3 event, but there are no data on the terrestrial response to this event. Here we...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Quaternary Science
Main Authors: López-García, Juan Manuel, Blain, H. A., Bennàsar, Maria, Alcover, Josep Antoni, Bañuls-Cardona, Sandra, Fernández-García, Mónica, Fontanals, Marta, Martín, Patricia, Morales, Juan I., Muñoz, Laura, Pedro, Mireia, Vergés, Josep Maria
Other Authors: Generalitat de Catalunya
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: John Wiley & Sons 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/123380
https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.2687
https://doi.org/10.13039/501100002809
Description
Summary:Heinrich Event 3 (H3) is well documented in the North Atlantic Ocean as a cooling event that occurred ca. 31 000 years ago. Deep-sea cores around the Iberian Peninsula coastline have been analysed to characterize the H3 event, but there are no data on the terrestrial response to this event. Here we present for the first time an analysis of terrestrial proxies for characterizing the H3 event, using the small-vertebrate assemblage (comprising small mammals, squamates and amphibians) from the Galls Carboners cave, an archaeo-palaeontological deposit located in the Prades mountain range in the north-eastern Iberian Peninsula. This assemblage shows the H3 event to be characterized in north-eastern Iberia by harsher and drier terrestrial conditions than today. Our results were compared with the small-vertebrate assemblage data recovered from present-day Strix aluco pellets available from this site, as well as with the general H3 event fluctuations and with other sites where the previous Heinrich events (H5 and H4) and subsequent Late Glacial Maximum have been detected in the Mediterranean and Atlantic regions of the Iberian Peninsula. Terrestrial proxies seem to follow the same climatic pattern as detected in the deep-sea cores at NorthGRIP and the Iberian margins. © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. J.M.L.-G. is a beneficiary of a Beatriu de Pinós postdoctoral fellowship (2011 BP-A00272) from the Generalitat de Catalunya, a grant cofunded by the European Union through the Marie Curie Actions of the 7th Framework Program for R + D. J.I.M. was supported by a predoctoral grant (FI) from AGAUR (Generalitat de Catalunya) cofunded by the European Social Fund. This paper is part of projects CGL2012-38358 and SGR2009-324 Peer Reviewed