Back to Search Start Over

Early-Holocene temperature variability inferred from chironomid assemblages at Hawes Water, northwest England

Authors :
Alan Bedford
Jim D. Marshall
Stephen J. Brooks
N. Richardson
Barbara Lang
H. John B. Birks
Richard T. Jones
Source :
The Holocene. 20:943-954
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2010.

Abstract

This paper presents the first high-resolution chironomid-inferred mean July air temperature (C-IT) reconstruction for the early Holocene from England. The reconstruction is based on a core recovered from a terrestrialised carbonate bench at Hawes Water, a small hard-water lake in northwest England. The record shows that temperatures rose rapidly after the Younger Dryas with temperatures reaching 14.0°C at the beginning of the Holocene. Over millennial timescales, the temperature record points to a slight rise in temperatures towards the top of the sequence at around 8000 years before the year 2000 (b2k). The trend is punctuated by a series of cool oscillations (at 11 200, 11 400, 10 700, 10 400, 9300 and 8300 b2k) and by a short period (11 300 to 10 250 b2k) when temperatures were considerably warmer (up to 14.9°C). The five cool oscillations coincide with temperature reversals found elsewhere in the North Atlantic region and in the Greenland ice core records. These cool events correlate well with both meltwater fluxes from the Laurentide and Scandinavian ice sheets and periods of low solar activity. Two of these oscillations (at 9300 and 8300 b2k) vary significantly from the early-Holocene mean. C-IT shift rapidly during both these events and temperatures fall ~1.6°C below the early-Holocene mean trend for ~ 50—60 years. The results presented here provide an insight into the instability of the early-Holocene climate in the British Isles and demonstrate the sensitivity of chironomids to rapid climatic events during the early Holocene.

Details

ISSN :
14770911 and 09596836
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Holocene
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a0eb7c54a1751c91e2c7659ce387416d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683610366157