A 106 ka paleoclimate record from drill core of the Salar de Atacama, northern Chile

被引:165
|
作者
Bobst, AL
Lowenstein, TK
Jordan, TE
Godfrey, LV
Ku, TL
Luo, SD
机构
[1] SUNY Binghamton, Dept Geol Sci, Binghamton, NY 13902 USA
[2] Cornell Univ, Dept Geol Sci, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
[3] Cornell Univ, Inst Study Continents, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
[4] Univ So Calif, Dept Earth Sci, Los Angeles, CA USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Atacama; quaternary paleoclimate; south America; halite; evaporites;
D O I
10.1016/S0031-0182(01)00308-X
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
A 100 m long salt core (SQM #2005) from the Salar de Atacama, northern Chile (23 degreesS, 68 degreesW), a dry lake bed, contains a 106 kyr paleoclimate record of hydrologic balances on the western slopes of the central Andes of South America. Six U-series disequilibrium dates range sequentially from 106.1 +/- 6.4 to 5.4 +/- 2.7 ka. Based on sedimentary structures and petrographic textures of salts and associated siliciclastic sediments, interpretations of paleoenvironments and net hydrologic balance suggest that relatively wet periods (saline lakes and expanded mudflats) existed in the Salar de Atacama from 75.7 to 60.7 ka and from 53.4 to 15.3 ka, with the wettest perennial lake interval from 26.7 to 16.5 ka. Short relatively wet periods also occurred in the Holocene from 11.4 to 10.2 ka and from 6.2 to 3.5 ka. These wet periods at Salar de Atacama correspond well with other late Pleistocene climate records from the central Andes that are a function of the net hydrologic budget. The Minchin-Tauca lake sequence from Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia, is synchronous with the 53.4-15.3 ka. saline lake wet period at Salar de Atacama. The Tauca phase coincided with the wettest perennial lake interval at Salar de Atacama from 26.7 to 16.5 ka. The Coipasa take phase from Uyuni was probably contemporaneous with the early Holocene wet period at Salar de Atacama from 11.4 to 10.2 ka. The early Holocene wet interval at Salar de Atacama was also synchronous with the maximum Holocene lake levels of the Chilean Altiplano lakes to the east and with grass-rich rodent middens between 11.8 and 10.5 ka in age from the Atacama basin. The take period at Salar de Atacama between 26.7 and 15.3 ka compares closely with low delta O-18 values, low anion concentrations and high accumulation rates from the Sajama glacial ice core, southwestern Bolivia between 25 and 15.5 ka. It is concluded that wet and dry phases were synchronous in the central Andean plateau of southwestern Bolivia and along the western flank of the Andes of northern Chile over the past 50 kyr. This region, which today receives its moisture from the Amazon Basin to the east, probably also did so in the past. The wet periods at Salar de Atacama are in phase with January insolation maxima at 15 degreesS at 70, 45, and 20 ka, which suggests that past changes in summer insolation influenced precipitation patterns in the central Andes. However, there are no major wet periods linked to the January insolation maximum at 93 ka and the present-day extremely dry climate in the Atacama Desert is associated with a peak in summer insolation. Therefore there must be other important influences over precipitation in the central Andes which modify the first order insolation controls. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:21 / 42
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Lithium extractivism and water injustices in the Salar de Atacama, Chile: The colonial shadow of green electromobility
    Jerez, Barbara
    Garces, Ingrid
    Torres, Robinson
    POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2021, 87
  • [42] Hydrochemical and Mineralogical Evolution through Evaporitic Processes in Salar de Llamara Brines (Atacama, Chile)
    Otalora, Fermin
    Criado-Reyes, Joaquin
    Baselga, Magi
    Canals, Angels
    Verdugo-Escamilla, Cristobal
    Garcia Ruiz, Juan Manuel
    ACS EARTH AND SPACE CHEMISTRY, 2020, 4 (06): : 882 - 896
  • [43] Late Pleistocene human occupation of the hyperarid core in the Atacama Desert, northern Chile
    Latorre, Claudio
    Santoro, Calogero M.
    Ugalde, Paula C.
    Gayo, Eugenia M.
    Osorio, Daniela
    Salas-Egana, Carolina
    De Pol-Holz, Ricardo
    Joly, Delphine
    Rech, Jason A.
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2013, 77 : 19 - 30
  • [44] VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE AND TECHNOLOGY: FROM STONE TO POINT CLOUDS, THE NEW SAN ROQUE DE PEINE CHURCH, SALAR DE ATACAMA, CHILE
    Alfaro Malatesta, Sergio
    Perez Lancellotti, Gino
    Garcia Gallardo, Benjamn
    Serrano Velasquez, Monica
    ARQUITECTURAS DEL SUR, 2015, 33 (47) : 16 - 25
  • [45] Tsunami record on arid coasts: 100 years of the 1922 Atacama tsunami in northern Chile
    Abad, Manuel
    Izquierdo, Tatiana
    Forch, Maximiliano
    Cortes, Perla
    Easton, Gabriel
    Gonzalez-Alfaro, Jose
    Alvarado-Justo, Ana
    Ruiz, Francisco
    GEOGACETA, 2023, 74 : 47 - 50
  • [46] NUMERICAL TAXONOMY OF MODERATELY HALOPHILIC GRAM-NEGATIVE RODS ISOLATED FROM THE SALAR-DE-ATACAMA, CHILE
    PRADO, B
    DELMORAL, A
    QUESADA, E
    RIOS, R
    MONTEOLIVASANCHEZ, M
    CAMPOS, V
    RAMOSCORMENZANA, A
    SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, 1991, 14 (03) : 275 - 281
  • [47] Structure of the Cordillera de la Sal: A key tectonic element for the Oligocene-Neogene evolution of the Salar de Atacama basin, Central Andes, northern Chile
    Rubilar, Juan
    Martinez, Fernando
    Arriagada, Cesar
    Becerra, Juan
    Bascunan, Sebastian
    JOURNAL OF SOUTH AMERICAN EARTH SCIENCES, 2018, 87 : 200 - 210
  • [48] Carbon fixation and rhodopsin systems in microbial mats from hypersaline lakes Brava and Tebenquiche, Salar de Atacama, Chile
    Kurth, Daniel
    Elias, Dario
    Rasuk, Maria Cecilia
    Contreras, Manuel
    Farias, Maria Eugenia
    PLOS ONE, 2021, 16 (02):
  • [49] NONSPECIFIC INFECTIOUS DISEASES IN PREHISTORIC SAN PEDRO DE ATACAMA, NORTHERN CHILE
    Totora Do-Gloria, Pedro Jose
    Neves, Walter Alves
    Costa Junqueira, Maria Antonietta
    Bartolomucci, Rafael
    CHUNGARA-REVISTA DE ANTROPOLOGIA CHILENA, 2011, 43 (01): : 135 - 146
  • [50] Oral health in prehistoric San Pedro de Atacama oases, Northern Chile
    Oliveira, R. E.
    Neves, W. A.
    HOMO-JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE HUMAN BIOLOGY, 2015, 66 (06) : 492 - 507