DOI

  • Matthias Lenz
  • Marlene M. Lenz
  • Andrei Andreev
  • Stephanie Scheidt
  • Raphael Gromig
  • Elodie Lebas
  • Grigory Fedorov
  • Sebastian Krastel
  • Martin Melles
  • Bernd Wagner

The 45.95 m-long sediment succession shown in core Co1401 from Lake Levinson-Lessing allows the reconstruction of the largely unexplored environmental and climatic history of the Taymyr Peninsula of the past 62 kyr. The core was analysed with a multidisciplinary approach including lithological, granulometric, geochemical and pollen analyses. The proxy data indicate a relatively stable, herb-dominated environment with only subtle changes between a cold/wet late Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 4 and early MIS 3, mild/dry middle and late MIS 3 and a cold/dry MIS 2. The absence of pronounced climate fluctuations demonstrates that the Lake Levinson-Lessing catchment was not covered by an ice sheet during this period. Changes in precipitation were likely caused by waxing and waning of the large Eurasian ice sheets outside of the Taymyr Peninsula, which changed the eastward moisture transport and atmospheric circulation patterns. MIS 1 at Lake Levinson-Lessing was associated with overall warmer and wetter conditions and short-term climate fluctuations during the Bølling–Allerød warming, Younger Dryas cooling and Preboreal transition, which indicates the influence of North Atlantic air masses.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Quaternary Science
DOIs
StateE-pub ahead of print - 18 Oct 2021

    Scopus subject areas

  • Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
  • Paleontology
  • Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)

    Research areas

  • Arctic Russia, Lake Levinson-Lessing, multiproxy analyses, sediment record, Taymyr Peninsula, GLACIAL MAXIMUM, VEGETATION HISTORY, ICE-MARGINAL ZONE, ARCTIC RUSSIA, PALEOENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY, POLLEN RECORD, POLAR URAL MOUNTAINS, LEVEL FLUCTUATIONS, SEVERNAYA ZEMLYA, LATE PLEISTOCENE

ID: 87891622