Abstract
Abstract. Paleotemperature reconstructions are essential for distinguishing
anthropogenic climate change from natural variability. An emerging method in
paleolimnology is the use of branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers
(brGDGTs) in sediments to reconstruct temperature, but their application is
hindered by a limited understanding of their sources, seasonal production,
and transport. Here, we report seasonally resolved measurements of brGDGT
production in the water column, in catchment soils, and in a sediment core
from Basin Pond, a small, deep inland lake in Maine, USA. We find similar
brGDGT distributions in both water column and lake sediment samples but the
catchment soils have distinct brGDGT distributions suggesting that
(1) brGDGTs are produced within the lake and (2) this in situ production
dominates the down-core sedimentary signal. Seasonally, depth-resolved
measurements indicate that most brGDGT production occurs in late fall, and at
intermediate depths (18–30 m) in the water column. We utilize these
observations to help interpret a Basin Pond brGDGT-based temperature
reconstruction spanning the past 900 years. This record exhibits trends similar
to a pollen record from the same site and also to regional and global
syntheses of terrestrial temperatures over the last millennium. However, the
Basin Pond temperature record shows higher-frequency variability than has
previously been captured by such an archive in the northeastern United
States, potentially attributed to the North Atlantic Oscillation and volcanic
or solar activity. This first brGDGT-based multi-centennial
paleoreconstruction from this region contributes to our understanding of the
production and fate of brGDGTs in lacustrine systems.
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
Cited by
37 articles.
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