Affiliation:
1. ( U. S. Geological Survey, MS 919, Box 25046, Federal Center, Denver, Colorado 80225, USA
Abstract
Sedimentary charcoal, diatom and phytolith records of the past 1500 years at Elk Lake, Minnesota, in combination with sediment trap studies and a transect of surface sediment samples, document the mechanisms by which previously deposited charcoal is redeposited and finally buried in this lake. The frequent correspon dence of high diatom concentrations and peaks of phytolith and charcoal fragments suggests that currents and turbulence related to lake circulation are responsible for winnowing charcoal and phytoliths from shallow water depositional sites to deeper areas of the lake. High diatom concentrations in the record relate to increased nutrient fluxes also supplied by circulation. Despite the fact that the watershed and area around Elk Lake has not been burned since AD 1922, charcoal continues to reach the profundal zone from littoral source areas in Elk Lake. The variable redeposition of within-lake charcoal requires evaluation before fire-history records can be related to global, regional or even local fire events.
Subject
Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archeology,Global and Planetary Change
Reference13 articles.
1. — 1993: The varve chronometer in Elk Lake: record of climatic variability and evidence for solar/geomagnetic-14C-climate connection. In Bradbury, J.P. and Dean, W.E., editors, Elk Lake, Minnesota: evidence for rapid climate change in the north-central United States, Boulder, Colorado: Geological Society of America Special Paper 276, 1-6.
2. Elk Lake in perspective
3. Holocene diatom paleolimnology of Elk Lake, Minnesota
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