Publication | Open Access
Pronounced climatic variations in Alaska during the last two millennia
157
Citations
27
References
2001
Year
EngineeringGlacial ProcessEarth ScienceSocial SciencesRegional Climate ResponsePaleoenvironmental ChangeAlaska RangePronounced Climatic VariationsPleistoceneLake SedimentsClimate ChangeGeographyCryospherePaleoclimatologyTemperature RecordClimate DynamicsClimatologyPaleoecologyQuaternary Period
Paired oxygen-isotopic analyses of abiotic carbonate and benthic-ostracode shells from lake sediments provide a continuous quantitative record of growing-season temperature for the past 2000 years in the northwestern foothills of the Alaska Range. This record reveals three time intervals of comparable warmth: anno Domini (A.D.) 0-300, 850-1200, and post-1800, the latter two of which correspond to the Medieval Climatic Anomaly and climatic amelioration after the end of the Little Ice Age. The Little Ice Age culminated at A.D. 1700, when the climate was approximately 1.7 degrees C colder than at present. A marked climatic cooling also occurred around A.D. 600, coinciding with extensive glacial advances in Alaska. Comparisons of this temperature record with ostracode trace-element ratios (Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca) further suggest that colder periods were wetter and vice versa during the past 2000 years.
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