Radiocarbon record of solar variability and Holocene climatic change in coastal southern California
Data(s) |
1992
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Resumo |
EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): Pollen analysis and 5 radiocarbon dates for a 687-cm core provide a detailed chronology of environmental change for San Joaquin Marsh at the head of Newport Bay, Orange County, California. Sediment deposition kept pace with sea level rise during the mid-Holocene, but after 4500 years BP, sea water regularly reached the coring site, and salt marsh was the local vegetation. Brief periods of dominance by fresh-water vegetation 3800, 2800, 2300 and after 560 years BP correlate global cooling events and (except the 3800-year BP event) with carbon-14 production anomalies. The coincidence of climate change and carbon-14 anomalies support a causal connection with solar variability, but regardless of the causal mechanism(s) the delta-carbon-14 curves provide a chronology for global, high-frequency climatic change comparable to that of Milankovitch cyclicity for longer time scales. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://aquaticcommons.org/15628/1/Owen%20K.%20Davis.pdf Davis, Owen K. and Jirikowic, John and Kalin, Robert M. (1992) Radiocarbon record of solar variability and Holocene climatic change in coastal southern California. In: Eighth Annual Pacific Climate (PACLIM) Workshop , 10-13 March 1991 ,Asilomar Conference Center, Pacific Grove, CA, pp. 19-33. |
Idioma(s) |
en |
Relação |
http://aquaticcommons.org/15628/ |
Palavras-Chave | #Atmospheric Sciences #Earth Sciences #Ecology |
Tipo |
Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed |