7 resultados para Balkan

em Publishing Network for Geoscientific


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Lakes Prespa and Ohrid, in the Balkan region, are considered to be amongst the oldest lakes in Europe. Both lakes are hydraulically connected via karst aquifers. From Lake Ohrid, several sediment cores up to 15 m long have been studied over the last few years. Here, we document the first long sediment record from nearby Lake Prespa to clarify the influence of Lake Prespa on Lake Ohrid and the environmental history of the region. Radiocarbon dating and dated tephra layers provide robust age control and indicate that the 10.5 m long sediment record from Lake Prespa reaches back to 48 ka. Glacial sedimentation is characterized by low organic matter content and absence of carbonates in the sediments, which indicate oligotrophic conditions in both lakes. Holocene sedimentation is characterized by particularly high carbonate content in Lake Ohrid and by particularly high organic matter content in Lake Prespa, which indicates a shift towards more mesotrophic conditions in the latter. Long-term environmental change and short-term events, such as related to the Heinrich events during the Pleistocene or the 8.2 ka cooling event during the Holocene, are well recorded in both lakes, but are only evident in certain proxies. The comparison of the sediment cores from both lakes indicates that environmental change affects particularly the trophic state of Lake Prespa due to its lower volume and water depth.

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Ancient Lake Ohrid, located in the southern Balkan Peninsula in Macedonia and Albania is characterized by a high degree of endemism and it is considered to be the oldest lake in Europe. But its exact age (between one and ten million years) and also its origin are so far not known. To unravel these uncertainties an ICDP (International Continental Scientific Drilling Program) drilling project (Scientific Collaboration On Past Speciation Conditions in Ohrid (SCOPSCO)), started in April 2013. In addition to the investigations about the age and origin, other paleolimnological studies, e.g., the reconstruction of past climate and of past lake level changes, should be performed with the drilled cores. Used proxies in such paleolimnological studies are, e.g., ostracodes because they respond sensitively to environmental changes but an accurate knowledge of their preferences and tolerances to specific environmental conditions is necessary for this purpose. So far, this knowledge about the, mostly endemic, Ohrid ostracodes was limited. Thus, within the framework of this thesis, ostracodes and a multiplicity of environmental data were collected in Lake Ohrid and its adjacent waters during four field campaigns. In a total of 47 ostracode species could be detected in the entire study area and 32 of them were found alive in Lake Ohrid. Multivariate statistic identified that water depth, salinity, conductivity, pH, and dissolved oxygen were the main determining factors for ostracode distribution in the entire study area. In Lake Ohrid, the distribution was mainly controlled by water depth, water temperature, and pH. Some ostracodes were identified as strong indicator species for important environmental variables, e.g., water temperature and water depth. A distinctive feature of Lake Ohrid was the finding of the ostracode genus Amnicythere whose species normally inhabit oligo-(meso-)haline waters and this could point to a marine origin of the lake. So far, the specialized endemic ostracodes show the highest abundances and the greatest spatial distribution in Lake Ohrid but during the sampling eight widespread species were found for the first time in the lake. They inhabited mainly the northern part of the lake, where two cities are located and industry and agriculture play a major role, and they were limited to water depths above 50 m and this could be an evidence for an increasing anthropogenic pressure because widespread ostracode species often replace endemic species. To unravel the human impact on Lake Ohrid during the last decades short sediment cores were taken and the multi-proxy study indicated that the lake productivity between the early 1920s and the late 1980s was relatively low. Diatom assemblages indicate a rising productivity in the southern part of Lake Ohrid since the mid 1970s and geochemical proxies and ostracodes point to an increasing productivity since the late 1980s in the southern and in the northern part. A slight increase in the productivity continued until 2009. Noticeable is the fact that since the early 1990s, the increasing productivity and the increasing concentrations of heavy metals correspond to a decreasing number of ostracodes in the northern part of Lake Ohrid. Perhaps, this indicates that living conditions in this lake part became less favorable for the mostly endemic ostracode species. Furthermore, the sediment samples from the cores show relatively high concentrations of arsenic, iron, and nickel. Fluctuations in ostracode assemblages from three longer sediment cores, the longest spans approximately 136 ka, taken in Lake Ohrid, correspond to fluctuations in the productivity, in the carbonate content, of the lake level, and of climate changes. Between the marine isotope stage (MIS) 6 and MIS 2 the number of ostracode valves is very low or the valves were completely absent. This corresponds to a low lake productivity, a low carbonate content, and a low lake level. At the onset of the Holocene, the number of valves increased markedly and this correlates with an increased productivity and carbonate content and a warmer climate. But during the Little Ice Age (LIA), the number of valves dropped again and species which prefer warmer waters disappeared completely. This drop corresponds also to a low productivity. After the LIA, the number of species increased again but since 1895 AD a strong and abrupt decrease is visible. A reason for this could be an increase in the heavy metal concentrations.

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A Late Glacial to Holocene sediment sequence (Co1260, 717 cm) from Lake Dojran, located at the boarder of the F.Y.R. of Macedonia and Greece, has been investigated to provide information on climate variability in the Balkan region. A robust age-model was established from 13 radiocarbon ages, and indicates that the base of the sequence was deposited at ca. 12 500 cal yr BP, when the lake-level was low. Variations in sedimentological (H2O, TOC, CaCO3, TS, TOC/TN, TOC/TS, grain-size, XRF, d18Ocarb, d13Ccarb, d13Corg) data were linked to hydro-acoustic data and indicate that warmer and more humid climate conditions characterised the remaining period of the Younger Dryas until the beginning of the Holocene. The Holocene exhibits significant environmental variations, including the 8.2 and 4.2 ka cooling events, the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice Age. Human induced erosion processes in the catchment of Lake Dojran intensified after 2800 cal yr BP.