Abstract
Geochemical, stable-isotope, pollen, charcoal, and diatom records were analyzed at high-resolution in cores obtained from Crevice Lake, a varved-sediment lake in northern Yellowstone National Park. The objective was to reconstruct the ecohydrologic, vegetation, and fire history of the watershed for the last 2650 years to better understand past climate variations at the forest-steppe transition. The data suggest a period of limited bottom-water anoxia, relatively wet winters, and cool springs and summers from 2650 to 2100 cal yr BP (700-150 BC). Dry warm conditions occurred between 2100 and 850-800 cal yr BP (150 BC and AD 1100-1150), when the lake was anoxic, winter precipitation was low, and summer stratification was protracted. The data are consistent with overall warmer/drier conditions during the Medieval Climate Anomaly, although they suggest a shift towards wetter winters within that period. The period from 850 to 800 cal yr BP (AD 1100-1150) to 250 cal yr BP (AD 1700) was characterized by greater water-column mixing and cooler spring/summer conditions than before. In addition, fire activity shifted towards infrequent large events and pollen production was low. From 250 to 150 cal yr BP (AD 1700-1800), winter precipitation was moderate compared to previous conditions, and the lake was again stratified, suggesting warm summers. Between 150 and 42 cal yr BP (AD 1800-1908), winter precipitation increased and spring and summer conditions became moderate. Metal pollution, probably from regional mining operations, is evident in the 1870s. Large fires occurred between ca. 1800-1880, but in general the forests were more closed than before. The Crevice Lake record suggests that the last 150 years of Yellowstone's environmental history were characterized by intermediate conditions when compared with the previous 2500 years.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 126-138 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Quaternary International |
Volume | 188 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Sep 2008 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:We gratefully acknowledge the support of John Varley and Tom Olliff (Yellowstone Center for Resources, Yellowstone National Park) in providing funding and continued logistical support. Ken Pierce assisted with geological interpretation. Field and laboratory assistance was provided by the YNP Fire Cache staff, K. Pierce, J. Stone, L. Doner, J. Honke, G. Skipp, and J. Yale (student intern, NASA award GRNASM99G000001). Comments from two anonymous reviews improved the paper. K. Pierce has also helped with the geologic interpretation of the site. Funds from the Earth Surface Dynamics Program of the US Geological Survey, the Canon Foundation, and National Science Foundation (EAR-9906100 to Whitlock; EAR-9905262 to Stevens and Fritz) supported this project.
Continental Scientific Drilling Facility tags
- CV01