Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain)

Palaeoclimate records from northern Iberia are becoming increasingly sought after as this region is one of the most southerly terrestrial locations in Europe to have its climate dictated principally by the North Atlantic. Terrestrial records therefore have the potential to offer insights into changi...

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Published in:International Journal of Speleology
Main Authors: Smith, Andrew, Wynn, Peter, Barker, Philip, Leng, Melanie, Noble, Steve, Stott, Andrew
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/1/Cave_monitoing_from_Cueva_de_Asiul_N.Spain_.pdf
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spelling ftulancaster:oai:eprints.lancs.ac.uk:76120 2024-05-19T07:44:58+00:00 Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain) Smith, Andrew Wynn, Peter Barker, Philip Leng, Melanie Noble, Steve Stott, Andrew 2016-01 application/pdf https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/ https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/1/Cave_monitoing_from_Cueva_de_Asiul_N.Spain_.pdf en eng https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/1/Cave_monitoing_from_Cueva_de_Asiul_N.Spain_.pdf Smith, Andrew and Wynn, Peter and Barker, Philip and Leng, Melanie and Noble, Steve and Stott, Andrew (2016) Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain). International Journal of Speleology, 45 (1). pp. 1-9. ISSN 0392-6672 creative_commons_attribution_noncommercial_4_0_international_license Journal Article PeerReviewed 2016 ftulancaster 2024-04-30T23:35:16Z Palaeoclimate records from northern Iberia are becoming increasingly sought after as this region is one of the most southerly terrestrial locations in Europe to have its climate dictated principally by the North Atlantic. Terrestrial records therefore have the potential to offer insights into changing oceanic and atmospheric circulation in the wider North Atlantic region. Cave speleothems offer one of the most promising archives from northern Iberia due to their wide geographic distribution and potential for accurately dated climate reconstruction. Cueva de Asiul, situated in Cantabria (N. Iberia; 43°19'0.63''N, 3°35'28.32''W; 285 m.a.s.l) within the Matienzo karst depression is one such site that offers the potential for palaeoclimate reconstructions. Here we present three years of climate and cave monitoring from Cueva de Asiul, giving detailed insight into local meteorology, hydrology and cave ventilation dynamics. In doing so, this paper presents a background to high resolution, Holocene duration speleothem records which have been extracted from this cave. Annual average cave temperatures are +13.7ºC, with a maximum range of 1ºC, reflecting the seasonality of external air temperature (average external temp +13.8°C). Cave ventilation is controlled by changes in external air temperature and variations in external air pressure during low pressure events. Local rainfall measurements show an average of 1400 mm/year with the majority of rainfall occurring during the winter, with periods of water excess between October and April. Speleothem drip rates are characterised by summer lows and a rapid transition to higher rates at the onset of the winter season. Stable isotope analysis (δ18O, δ2H) indicate that aquifer water is derived predominantly from the previous year’s rainfall and the rainfall feeding the karst system is controlled by a strong amount effect. Speleothems from this site are potentially suited to preserving extended records of rainfall amount in northern Spain and therefore have the potential to ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints International Journal of Speleology 45 1 1 9
institution Open Polar
collection Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints
op_collection_id ftulancaster
language English
description Palaeoclimate records from northern Iberia are becoming increasingly sought after as this region is one of the most southerly terrestrial locations in Europe to have its climate dictated principally by the North Atlantic. Terrestrial records therefore have the potential to offer insights into changing oceanic and atmospheric circulation in the wider North Atlantic region. Cave speleothems offer one of the most promising archives from northern Iberia due to their wide geographic distribution and potential for accurately dated climate reconstruction. Cueva de Asiul, situated in Cantabria (N. Iberia; 43°19'0.63''N, 3°35'28.32''W; 285 m.a.s.l) within the Matienzo karst depression is one such site that offers the potential for palaeoclimate reconstructions. Here we present three years of climate and cave monitoring from Cueva de Asiul, giving detailed insight into local meteorology, hydrology and cave ventilation dynamics. In doing so, this paper presents a background to high resolution, Holocene duration speleothem records which have been extracted from this cave. Annual average cave temperatures are +13.7ºC, with a maximum range of 1ºC, reflecting the seasonality of external air temperature (average external temp +13.8°C). Cave ventilation is controlled by changes in external air temperature and variations in external air pressure during low pressure events. Local rainfall measurements show an average of 1400 mm/year with the majority of rainfall occurring during the winter, with periods of water excess between October and April. Speleothem drip rates are characterised by summer lows and a rapid transition to higher rates at the onset of the winter season. Stable isotope analysis (δ18O, δ2H) indicate that aquifer water is derived predominantly from the previous year’s rainfall and the rainfall feeding the karst system is controlled by a strong amount effect. Speleothems from this site are potentially suited to preserving extended records of rainfall amount in northern Spain and therefore have the potential to ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Smith, Andrew
Wynn, Peter
Barker, Philip
Leng, Melanie
Noble, Steve
Stott, Andrew
spellingShingle Smith, Andrew
Wynn, Peter
Barker, Philip
Leng, Melanie
Noble, Steve
Stott, Andrew
Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain)
author_facet Smith, Andrew
Wynn, Peter
Barker, Philip
Leng, Melanie
Noble, Steve
Stott, Andrew
author_sort Smith, Andrew
title Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain)
title_short Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain)
title_full Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain)
title_fullStr Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain)
title_full_unstemmed Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain)
title_sort cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from cueva de asiul, cantabria (n. spain)
publishDate 2016
url https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/1/Cave_monitoing_from_Cueva_de_Asiul_N.Spain_.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/76120/1/Cave_monitoing_from_Cueva_de_Asiul_N.Spain_.pdf
Smith, Andrew and Wynn, Peter and Barker, Philip and Leng, Melanie and Noble, Steve and Stott, Andrew (2016) Cave monitoring and the potential for palaeoclimate reconstruction from Cueva de Asiul, Cantabria (N. Spain). International Journal of Speleology, 45 (1). pp. 1-9. ISSN 0392-6672
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container_title International Journal of Speleology
container_volume 45
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
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