Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau

The termination of the Last Ice Age after the Last Glacial maximum (LGM) represents a dynamic period in the history of the circum-north Atlantic region. So far, there are few reliably dated climatic reconstructions covering the Lateglacial period prior to 14,700 cal. BP in Central and Northern Europ...

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Main Authors: Bolland, Alexander, Rey, Fabian, Gobet, Erika, Tinner, Willy, Heiri, Oliver
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.145793
https://boris.unibe.ch/145793/
id ftdatacite:10.7892/boris.145793
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.7892/boris.145793 2023-05-15T16:22:00+02:00 Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau Bolland, Alexander Rey, Fabian Gobet, Erika Tinner, Willy Heiri, Oliver 2020 application/pdf https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.145793 https://boris.unibe.ch/145793/ en eng Elsevier info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess 580 Plants Botany Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.145793 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The termination of the Last Ice Age after the Last Glacial maximum (LGM) represents a dynamic period in the history of the circum-north Atlantic region. So far, there are few reliably dated climatic reconstructions covering the Lateglacial period prior to 14,700 cal. BP in Central and Northern Europe. We present a new chironomid record for the period 18,000–14,000 cal. BP, from Burgäschisee, Switzerland. Chironomid assemblages immediately following glacier retreat were dominated by taxa indicative of cold, oligotrophic conditions such as Sergentia coracina -type and Micropsectra radialis -type. A gradual transition to assemblages with moderate abundances of taxa indicative of warmer climatic conditions such as Dicrotendipes nevosus -type and Tanytarsus glabrescens -type started after ca. 16,100 cal. BP. This initial and gradual chironomid assemblage shift culminated in a more pronounced and rapid inferred temperature change at the Oldest Dryas/Bølling transition at ca. 14,700 cal. BP, where further types indicative of warm conditions such as Tanytarsus lactescens -type first occurred and replaced chironomids indicative of colder conditions such as Paracladius and Protanypus. We estimated past July air temperature changes from the chironomid assemblages by applying to the record a chironomid-temperature transfer function that is based on chironomid distribution data from 274 lakes in Switzerland and Norway. The resulting reconstruction, which features a sample-specific root mean square error of prediction of 1.36–1.46 °C, indicates temperatures around 9 °C at the beginning of the record. An initial gradual warming phase initiating at ca. 16,100 cal. BP is recorded reaching values around 10 °C for the period 16,100–15,500 cal. BP. Temperatures continue to increase reaching values around 12 °C for the period preceding the Bølling warming, when temperatures rose rapidly to values around 15 °C. The early temperature rise to values of 10–12 °C prior to the Bølling warming agrees with widespread vegetation changes recently reported for this region based on palaeobotanical analyses, which indicate a shift from herbaceous tundra to shrub tundra with low density tree birch stands with open canopies. Together, these results suggest an earlier Lateglacial temperature increase in southwest Central Europe than expected based on earlier palaeobotanical reconstructions, although with a less pronounced warming than has been reported for ca. 16,000 cal. BP from south of the Alps. This early Lateglacial warming agrees with glacier reconstructions which suggest several step-wise reductions of glacier extent in this period as well as with evidence from other palaeotemperature reconstructions and suggests that not only Southern Europe but significant parts of Europe north of the Alps may have been characterized by early Lateglacial warming well before the rapid warming at ca. 14,700 cal. BP. Text glacier North Atlantic Tundra DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic 580 Plants Botany
spellingShingle 580 Plants Botany
Bolland, Alexander
Rey, Fabian
Gobet, Erika
Tinner, Willy
Heiri, Oliver
Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau
topic_facet 580 Plants Botany
description The termination of the Last Ice Age after the Last Glacial maximum (LGM) represents a dynamic period in the history of the circum-north Atlantic region. So far, there are few reliably dated climatic reconstructions covering the Lateglacial period prior to 14,700 cal. BP in Central and Northern Europe. We present a new chironomid record for the period 18,000–14,000 cal. BP, from Burgäschisee, Switzerland. Chironomid assemblages immediately following glacier retreat were dominated by taxa indicative of cold, oligotrophic conditions such as Sergentia coracina -type and Micropsectra radialis -type. A gradual transition to assemblages with moderate abundances of taxa indicative of warmer climatic conditions such as Dicrotendipes nevosus -type and Tanytarsus glabrescens -type started after ca. 16,100 cal. BP. This initial and gradual chironomid assemblage shift culminated in a more pronounced and rapid inferred temperature change at the Oldest Dryas/Bølling transition at ca. 14,700 cal. BP, where further types indicative of warm conditions such as Tanytarsus lactescens -type first occurred and replaced chironomids indicative of colder conditions such as Paracladius and Protanypus. We estimated past July air temperature changes from the chironomid assemblages by applying to the record a chironomid-temperature transfer function that is based on chironomid distribution data from 274 lakes in Switzerland and Norway. The resulting reconstruction, which features a sample-specific root mean square error of prediction of 1.36–1.46 °C, indicates temperatures around 9 °C at the beginning of the record. An initial gradual warming phase initiating at ca. 16,100 cal. BP is recorded reaching values around 10 °C for the period 16,100–15,500 cal. BP. Temperatures continue to increase reaching values around 12 °C for the period preceding the Bølling warming, when temperatures rose rapidly to values around 15 °C. The early temperature rise to values of 10–12 °C prior to the Bølling warming agrees with widespread vegetation changes recently reported for this region based on palaeobotanical analyses, which indicate a shift from herbaceous tundra to shrub tundra with low density tree birch stands with open canopies. Together, these results suggest an earlier Lateglacial temperature increase in southwest Central Europe than expected based on earlier palaeobotanical reconstructions, although with a less pronounced warming than has been reported for ca. 16,000 cal. BP from south of the Alps. This early Lateglacial warming agrees with glacier reconstructions which suggest several step-wise reductions of glacier extent in this period as well as with evidence from other palaeotemperature reconstructions and suggests that not only Southern Europe but significant parts of Europe north of the Alps may have been characterized by early Lateglacial warming well before the rapid warming at ca. 14,700 cal. BP.
format Text
author Bolland, Alexander
Rey, Fabian
Gobet, Erika
Tinner, Willy
Heiri, Oliver
author_facet Bolland, Alexander
Rey, Fabian
Gobet, Erika
Tinner, Willy
Heiri, Oliver
author_sort Bolland, Alexander
title Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau
title_short Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau
title_full Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau
title_fullStr Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau
title_full_unstemmed Summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. BP recorded by a new chironomid record from Burgäschisee, Swiss Plateau
title_sort summer temperature development 18,000–14,000 cal. bp recorded by a new chironomid record from burgäschisee, swiss plateau
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.145793
https://boris.unibe.ch/145793/
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre glacier
North Atlantic
Tundra
genre_facet glacier
North Atlantic
Tundra
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.145793
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