Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe

The mid-latitude belt of Europe, broadly between 45º and 65º N, is probably the most intensively studied area of the PEPIII transect, but providing a synthesis of Holocene climatic change over this large and varied area is not easy. Ocean and ice core records provide a background scale of change to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barber, K.E., Zolitschka, B., Lauritzen, S-E., Tarasov, P., Lotter, A.
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: ECRC/CEREGE 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/15859/
http://atlas-conferences.com/cgi-bin/abstract/cahi-81
id ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:15859
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:15859 2024-06-09T07:46:44+00:00 Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe Barber, K.E. Zolitschka, B. Lauritzen, S-E. Tarasov, P. Lotter, A. 2001 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/15859/ http://atlas-conferences.com/cgi-bin/abstract/cahi-81 unknown ECRC/CEREGE Barber, K.E., Zolitschka, B., Lauritzen, S-E., Tarasov, P. and Lotter, A. (2001) Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe. In Abstracts, PAGES-PEPIII/ESF-HOLIVAR International Conference on Past Climate Variability through Europe and Africa. ECRC/CEREGE. pp. 38-39 . Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed 2001 ftsouthampton 2024-05-10T06:11:48Z The mid-latitude belt of Europe, broadly between 45º and 65º N, is probably the most intensively studied area of the PEPIII transect, but providing a synthesis of Holocene climatic change over this large and varied area is not easy. Ocean and ice core records provide a background scale of change to what was happening on the continent, but the tremendous events of the last glacial in these records have tended to obscure the importance of Holocene fluctuations. Temperature variations in the order of 1-2°C may appear as minor variations in an ice core record but such changes had effects on glaciers, lakes, treelines and bogs, and on people. The direct effects on humanity are moderated by the adaptability of societies, but there must have been some impact, especially on farming. In this paper we outline firstly the nature of the records, including such issues as their spatial and temporal resolution and the clarity of the climatic signal. We attempt to answer the key questions posed in this part of the PEPIII Science Plan by highlighting the evidence from key sites with high quality proxy records, rather than attempting to synthesize a Europe-wide picture, which would be premature, and needs further refinement of site chronologies. The stratigraphy of European peat bogs was one of the first proxy climate records, and was used in sub-dividing the Holocene. Recent development of more quantified analyses has revived the usefulness of the peat archive, and it seems that periods of wetter bog surfaces are most probably a reflection of secular summer temperature declines, and therefore evapotranspiration, rather than the irregular and rapid changes that characterise the precipitation record. Significant wet shifts occur in western European bogs at around 8200 - 7800, 4400 - 4000, 2800 - 2200, 1400 - 1300, and 1100 - 1000 cal. BP. Where the upper peat still exists the two phases of the Little Ice Age are often very marked, between AD 1300 - 1500 and especially AD 1650 - 1800. Periodicities of c. 1100, 600 and 200 years ... Conference Object ice core University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language unknown
description The mid-latitude belt of Europe, broadly between 45º and 65º N, is probably the most intensively studied area of the PEPIII transect, but providing a synthesis of Holocene climatic change over this large and varied area is not easy. Ocean and ice core records provide a background scale of change to what was happening on the continent, but the tremendous events of the last glacial in these records have tended to obscure the importance of Holocene fluctuations. Temperature variations in the order of 1-2°C may appear as minor variations in an ice core record but such changes had effects on glaciers, lakes, treelines and bogs, and on people. The direct effects on humanity are moderated by the adaptability of societies, but there must have been some impact, especially on farming. In this paper we outline firstly the nature of the records, including such issues as their spatial and temporal resolution and the clarity of the climatic signal. We attempt to answer the key questions posed in this part of the PEPIII Science Plan by highlighting the evidence from key sites with high quality proxy records, rather than attempting to synthesize a Europe-wide picture, which would be premature, and needs further refinement of site chronologies. The stratigraphy of European peat bogs was one of the first proxy climate records, and was used in sub-dividing the Holocene. Recent development of more quantified analyses has revived the usefulness of the peat archive, and it seems that periods of wetter bog surfaces are most probably a reflection of secular summer temperature declines, and therefore evapotranspiration, rather than the irregular and rapid changes that characterise the precipitation record. Significant wet shifts occur in western European bogs at around 8200 - 7800, 4400 - 4000, 2800 - 2200, 1400 - 1300, and 1100 - 1000 cal. BP. Where the upper peat still exists the two phases of the Little Ice Age are often very marked, between AD 1300 - 1500 and especially AD 1650 - 1800. Periodicities of c. 1100, 600 and 200 years ...
format Conference Object
author Barber, K.E.
Zolitschka, B.
Lauritzen, S-E.
Tarasov, P.
Lotter, A.
spellingShingle Barber, K.E.
Zolitschka, B.
Lauritzen, S-E.
Tarasov, P.
Lotter, A.
Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe
author_facet Barber, K.E.
Zolitschka, B.
Lauritzen, S-E.
Tarasov, P.
Lotter, A.
author_sort Barber, K.E.
title Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe
title_short Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe
title_full Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe
title_fullStr Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe
title_full_unstemmed Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe
title_sort atlantic to urals - the holocene climatic record of mid-latitude europe
publisher ECRC/CEREGE
publishDate 2001
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/15859/
http://atlas-conferences.com/cgi-bin/abstract/cahi-81
genre ice core
genre_facet ice core
op_relation Barber, K.E., Zolitschka, B., Lauritzen, S-E., Tarasov, P. and Lotter, A. (2001) Atlantic to Urals - the Holocene climatic record of Mid-Latitude Europe. In Abstracts, PAGES-PEPIII/ESF-HOLIVAR International Conference on Past Climate Variability through Europe and Africa. ECRC/CEREGE. pp. 38-39 .
_version_ 1801376702394269696