TY - JOUR
T1 - Lake isotope records of the 8200-year cooling event in western Ireland: Comparison with model simulations
AU - Holmes, Jonathan A.
AU - Tindall, Julia
AU - Roberts, Neil
AU - Marshall, W
AU - Marshall, JD
AU - Bingham, Ann
AU - Feeser, Ingo
AU - O'Connell, Michael
AU - Atkinson, Tim
AU - Jourdan, Anne Lise
AU - March, Anna
AU - Fisher, Elizabeth H.
PY - 2016/1/1
Y1 - 2016/1/1
N2 - The early Holocene cooling, which occurred around 8200 calendar years before present, was a prominent abrupt event around the north Atlantic region. Here, we investigate the timing, duration, magnitude and regional coherence of the event as expressed in carbonate oxygen-isotope records from three lakes on northwest Europe's Atlantic margin in western Ireland, namely Loch Avolla, Loch Gealáin and Lough Corrib. An abrupt negative oxygen-isotope excursion lasted about 200 years. Comparison of records from three sites suggests that the excursion was primarily the result of a reduction of the oxygen-isotope values of precipitation, which was likely caused by lowered air temperatures, possibly coupled with a change in atmospheric circulation. Comparison of records from two of the lakes (Loch Avolla and Loch Gealáin), which have differing bathymetries, further suggests a reduction in evaporative loss of lake water during the cooling episode. Comparison of climate model experiments with lake-sediment isotope data indicates that effective moisture may have increased along this part of the northeast Atlantic seaboard during the 8200-year climatic event, as lower evaporation compensated for reduced precipitation.
AB - The early Holocene cooling, which occurred around 8200 calendar years before present, was a prominent abrupt event around the north Atlantic region. Here, we investigate the timing, duration, magnitude and regional coherence of the event as expressed in carbonate oxygen-isotope records from three lakes on northwest Europe's Atlantic margin in western Ireland, namely Loch Avolla, Loch Gealáin and Lough Corrib. An abrupt negative oxygen-isotope excursion lasted about 200 years. Comparison of records from three sites suggests that the excursion was primarily the result of a reduction of the oxygen-isotope values of precipitation, which was likely caused by lowered air temperatures, possibly coupled with a change in atmospheric circulation. Comparison of records from two of the lakes (Loch Avolla and Loch Gealáin), which have differing bathymetries, further suggests a reduction in evaporative loss of lake water during the cooling episode. Comparison of climate model experiments with lake-sediment isotope data indicates that effective moisture may have increased along this part of the northeast Atlantic seaboard during the 8200-year climatic event, as lower evaporation compensated for reduced precipitation.
KW - 8200-year event
KW - Early Holocene
KW - Ireland
KW - Isotope-enabled GCM
KW - Oxygen-isotopes
UR - https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/context/more-fose-research/article/1003/viewcontent/Holmes_20et_20al_8.2_20ka_20event_20in_20W_20Ireland_QSR_2016.pdf
U2 - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.06.027
DO - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.06.027
M3 - Article
SN - 0277-3791
VL - 131
SP - 341
EP - 349
JO - Quaternary Science Reviews
JF - Quaternary Science Reviews
IS - 0
ER -