(super 14) C dating of peat and delta (super 18) O-delta D in ground ice from Northwest Siberia.

We present new radiocarbon dates from a number of Holocene peat deposits along a north-south transect across the Yamal Peninsula. The samples were collected from frozen peat deposits with large ice wedges in: the northern tundra near Seyaha Settlement, in the Central Yamal Peninsula, the southern tu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vasil, chuk K, Jungner, Hoegne, Vasil, chuk C
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Radiocarbon 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3884
Description
Summary:We present new radiocarbon dates from a number of Holocene peat deposits along a north-south transect across the Yamal Peninsula. The samples were collected from frozen peat deposits with large ice wedges in: the northern tundra near Seyaha Settlement, in the Central Yamal Peninsula, the southern tundra in Shchuch'ya River valley at the Edem'yaha mouth, the southern part of the Yamal Peninsula, and the southern forest tundra near Labytnangi Town. (super 14) C dates of wood remains from the tundra in the Yamal Peninsula could be used to reconstruct a northern limit of forest during the Holocene Optimum. The wood layers at the bottom of the peat give evidence for immigration of trees further north beyond the present boundary. The first forest appearance in the Seyaha River valley area is dated about 9 ka BP according to the oldest peat date in the Seyaha cross section. This suggests that summer temperatures were higher than at present. Very fast accumulation of peat (around 5 m/ka: about 9-8 ka BP at Seyaha and about 7-6 ka BP at Shchuch'ya) also supports this observation. In contrast, oxygen isotope composition of Holocene syngenetic ice wedges from the area (delta (super 18) O = -19.1 to -20.3 per mil in the Seyaha cross-section and -17.3 to -20.3 per mil in the Shchuch'ya River) show that winter temperatures were significantly lower than presently, i.e. the climate during the Holocene Optimum was slightly more continental. The frozen peat near Labytnangi has thawed during the last 20 years, indicating global warming.