Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru)

The aim of this study is to constrain the timing of the deglaciation process since the Last Local Glacial Maximum in HualcaHualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano, located in the Andean Central Volcanic Zone. Nine 36Cl cosmogenic surface exposure dating of moraine boulders as well as polished and str...

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Published in:Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica
Main Author: J. Alcalá-Reygosa
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Spanish
Published: Universidad de La Rioja 2017
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18172/cig.3231
https://doaj.org/article/4370b5f491e54ff6a334535c386ba922
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:4370b5f491e54ff6a334535c386ba922 2023-05-15T13:47:17+02:00 Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru) J. Alcalá-Reygosa 2017-09-01 https://doi.org/10.18172/cig.3231 https://doaj.org/article/4370b5f491e54ff6a334535c386ba922 en es eng spa Universidad de La Rioja 0211-6820 1697-9540 doi:10.18172/cig.3231 https://doaj.org/article/4370b5f491e54ff6a334535c386ba922 undefined Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica, Vol 43, Iss 2, Pp 649-666 (2017) datación de superficies por exposición a la radiación cósmica glaciación en los trópicos último máximo glacial younger dryas antarctic cold reversal holoceno zona volcánica centroandina sur de perú geo envir Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2017 fttriple https://doi.org/10.18172/cig.3231 2023-01-22T19:28:50Z The aim of this study is to constrain the timing of the deglaciation process since the Last Local Glacial Maximum in HualcaHualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano, located in the Andean Central Volcanic Zone. Nine 36Cl cosmogenic surface exposure dating of moraine boulders as well as polished and striated bedrock surfaces are presented. The 36Cl cosmogenic exposure ages indicate that the glaciers reached their maximum extent at ~ 17 - 16 ka on the HualcaHualca volcano during the Heinrich 1 event and the Tauca paleolake cycle. Since then glaciers began to retreat until ~ 12 ka, when they went through a phase of readvance or stillstand. The deglaciation of HualcaHualca was constant since ~ 11.5 ka, coinciding with the disappearance of the ice cap from the Patapampa Altiplano. These glacial ages do not corroborate a Last Local Glacial Maximum prior to the global Last Glacial Maximum but they indicate a sensitive reaction of the glacier system to precipitation fluctuations. According to the analysis of cosmogenic exposure ages reported from HualcaHualca, Sajama and Tunupa volcanoes, the onset of deglaciation since Last Local Glacial Maximum occurred at the end of the Heinrich 1 event and the Tauca paleolake cycle in the Andean Central Volcanic Zone. However, the glacier retreat was not continuous because at least one significant readvance or stillstand phase has been reported in most of the volcanoes studied in this region although the ages cannot be clearly related to the Younger Dryas and/or the Antarctic Cold Reversal cold events. After this readvance or stillstand, the glaciers of the Central Volcanic Zone retreated, but at least three clear minor readvances evidence a not homogeneous warm and/or dry climate during the Holocene. Even though in situ cosmogenic exposure provides important glacial chronological data, it is difficult to establish a consistent regional glacial reconstruction and clear connections with the main Late Pleistocene cold episodes due to limitations associated with in situ cosmogenic ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Ice cap Unknown Antarctic The Antarctic Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica 43 2 649 666
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
Spanish
topic datación de superficies por exposición a la radiación cósmica
glaciación en los trópicos
último máximo glacial
younger dryas
antarctic cold reversal
holoceno
zona volcánica centroandina
sur de perú
geo
envir
spellingShingle datación de superficies por exposición a la radiación cósmica
glaciación en los trópicos
último máximo glacial
younger dryas
antarctic cold reversal
holoceno
zona volcánica centroandina
sur de perú
geo
envir
J. Alcalá-Reygosa
Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru)
topic_facet datación de superficies por exposición a la radiación cósmica
glaciación en los trópicos
último máximo glacial
younger dryas
antarctic cold reversal
holoceno
zona volcánica centroandina
sur de perú
geo
envir
description The aim of this study is to constrain the timing of the deglaciation process since the Last Local Glacial Maximum in HualcaHualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano, located in the Andean Central Volcanic Zone. Nine 36Cl cosmogenic surface exposure dating of moraine boulders as well as polished and striated bedrock surfaces are presented. The 36Cl cosmogenic exposure ages indicate that the glaciers reached their maximum extent at ~ 17 - 16 ka on the HualcaHualca volcano during the Heinrich 1 event and the Tauca paleolake cycle. Since then glaciers began to retreat until ~ 12 ka, when they went through a phase of readvance or stillstand. The deglaciation of HualcaHualca was constant since ~ 11.5 ka, coinciding with the disappearance of the ice cap from the Patapampa Altiplano. These glacial ages do not corroborate a Last Local Glacial Maximum prior to the global Last Glacial Maximum but they indicate a sensitive reaction of the glacier system to precipitation fluctuations. According to the analysis of cosmogenic exposure ages reported from HualcaHualca, Sajama and Tunupa volcanoes, the onset of deglaciation since Last Local Glacial Maximum occurred at the end of the Heinrich 1 event and the Tauca paleolake cycle in the Andean Central Volcanic Zone. However, the glacier retreat was not continuous because at least one significant readvance or stillstand phase has been reported in most of the volcanoes studied in this region although the ages cannot be clearly related to the Younger Dryas and/or the Antarctic Cold Reversal cold events. After this readvance or stillstand, the glaciers of the Central Volcanic Zone retreated, but at least three clear minor readvances evidence a not homogeneous warm and/or dry climate during the Holocene. Even though in situ cosmogenic exposure provides important glacial chronological data, it is difficult to establish a consistent regional glacial reconstruction and clear connections with the main Late Pleistocene cold episodes due to limitations associated with in situ cosmogenic ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author J. Alcalá-Reygosa
author_facet J. Alcalá-Reygosa
author_sort J. Alcalá-Reygosa
title Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru)
title_short Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru)
title_full Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru)
title_fullStr Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru)
title_full_unstemmed Last Local Glacial Maximum and deglaciation of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone: the case of Hualcahualca volcano and Patapampa Altiplano (Southern Peru)
title_sort last local glacial maximum and deglaciation of the andean central volcanic zone: the case of hualcahualca volcano and patapampa altiplano (southern peru)
publisher Universidad de La Rioja
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.18172/cig.3231
https://doaj.org/article/4370b5f491e54ff6a334535c386ba922
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice cap
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice cap
op_source Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica, Vol 43, Iss 2, Pp 649-666 (2017)
op_relation 0211-6820
1697-9540
doi:10.18172/cig.3231
https://doaj.org/article/4370b5f491e54ff6a334535c386ba922
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container_title Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica
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