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A High-Resolution 11,400-Yr Diatom Record from Lake Victoria, East Africa
180
Citations
47
References
1997
Year
EngineeringEast AfricaLake VictoriaOceanographyEarth ScienceSocial SciencesPaleoenvironmental ReconstructionPaleoenvironmental ChangeBiogeographyGeochronologyPalaeo-environmental ReconstructionGeographyPaleoclimatologyEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologyDamba ChannelSpectral AnalysisPaleoecology
Abstract Fine-interval (∼30–45 yr) sampling of a core from Lake Victoria's Damba Channel shows that numerous abrupt changes in the lake's diatom assemblages have occurred in response to climatic fluctuations over the past 11,400 14 C yr. Four distinct climatic phases bounded by sudden transitions are inferred: (1) variably dry ∼11,400–10,000 yr B.P., (2) humid ∼10,000–7200 yr B.P., (3) more seasonal ∼7200–2200 yr B.P., and (4) more arid ∼2200–0 yr B.P., with a dry “Little Ice Age” event ∼600–200 yr B.P. The diatom-inferred paleoclimatic history for northern Lake Victoria closely resembles that inferred from a well-dated pollen record from Pilkington Bay. Spectral analysis of the diatom record reveals strong periodicities including globally distributed ∼2360–2550, ∼1400, ∼1030–1130, and ∼500 cal-yr cycles. Repeated, rapid shifts between Aulacoseira - and Nitzschia -dominated diatom assemblages suggest that post-1960 changes in the lake's phytoplankton communities have had earlier, climate-driven analogs.
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