Environmental conditions of the Laptev Sea region in the late postglacial time
- Authors: Naidina O.D.1
-
Affiliations:
- Geological Institute
- Issue: Vol 24, No 1 (2016)
- Pages: 92-103
- Section: Article
- URL: https://ogarev-online.ru/0869-5938/article/view/177617
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0869593815060064
- ID: 177617
Cite item
Abstract
The comparison between the first results of comprehensive micropaleontological analysis (pollen, spores, foraminifera, and ostracods) and those of radiocarbon dating (AMS14C) for the sediments of the eastern inner shelf of the Laptev Sea (the core collected from depth of 37 m) indicates that considerable changes in natural conditions in the sea and on land coincide in time and refer to the time period of 1500–1700 years B.P. This period is characterized by changes in microfossils: appearance of thermophilic pollen and planktonic foraminifera and increase in total number of benthic foraminifera and ostracods. Intense warming and humidification of the climate reconstructed for this 200-year period promoted the expansion of large-shrub tundra. Summer air temperatures were lower than that in the peak mid-Holocene climatic optimum by 2°–3°C, but 1°C higher than the present-day temperature. An estuary freshwater basin developed: it was strongly affected by river discharge, but North Atlantic waters also intensely penetrated here in short-term intervals. In general, the studied microfossil complex reflects the relatively stable environmental conditions and decrease in seawater salinity in the eastern part of the Laptev Sea shelf during the last 2300 years.
About the authors
O. D. Naidina
Geological Institute
Author for correspondence.
Email: naidina@ilran.ru
Russian Federation, Pyzhevskii per. 7, Moscow, 119017
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