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Lateglacial and Holocene hydroclimate inferred from a groundwater flow-through lake, Northern Rocky Mountains, USALimnological Research Center, Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, 310 Pillsbury Drive SE, Minneapolis MN 55455, USA, shap0029{at}umn.edu
Limnological Research Center, Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, 310 Pillsbury Drive SE, Minneapolis MN 55455, USA
Department of Geology and Geography, West Virginia University, 330 Brooks Hall, Morgantown WV 26506, USA
Climate-driven variations in lake-groundwater exchange are recorded by sediments in groundwater-dominated lakes. A groundwater flow-through lake in west-central Montana (USA) registers latest Pleistocene and Holocene hydroclimatic variation in fluid and solute balance, as controlled by rates and timing of groundwater recharge. Early Holocene warming occurred under conditions of relative aridity and low groundwater throughflow, punctuated by a c. 450-yr episode of lake dilution centered on 11 000 cal. yr BP. Maximum evaporative concentration of lake waters, registered in both
Key Words: Endogenic carbonate mineralogy aragonite oxygen isotopes lakes and groundwater western North American paleoclimate.
The Holocene, Vol. 19, No. 4,
523-535 (2009) |
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18O values and mineralogy of endogenic carbonates, coincided with the early-Holocene peak in insolation seasonality at about 9750 cal. yr BP. Subsequently, progressively decreasing lake residence time drove a sustained long-term decline in salinity while having a very subdued effect on mean