1. Paleoclimate change in Ethiopia around the last interglacial derived from annually-resolved stalagmite evidence
- Author
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Baker, A, Asrat, A, Leng, M, Hellstrom, J, Duan, W, Mariethoz, G, Boomer, I, Yu, D, Jex, C, Gunn, J, Baker, A, Asrat, A, Leng, M, Hellstrom, J, Duan, W, Mariethoz, G, Boomer, I, Yu, D, Jex, C, and Gunn, J
- Abstract
Oxygen and carbon (d18O/d13C) isotope, growth rate and trace element data are reported for a U-Th dated, annually-laminated stalagmite, GM1 from Goda Mea Cave, Ethiopia. The stalagmite grew intermittently around the last interglacial. Speleothem deposition is of short-duration occurring at ~129 ka, ~120 ka, in an undated growth phase, and at ~108 ka; probably due to tectonic activity. d18O composition is very stable within growth phases (1s variability < 0.76‰), as are Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Ba/Ca, all indicative of well-mixed source-waters. A shift to positive d18O values and increased variability in Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Ba/Ca prior to growth hiatuses is observed, indicating a loss of the well-mixed water source prior to growth cessation. Mean d18O composition (–3.82 to –7.77‰) is lower than published modern and Holocene stalagmites from the region. Geochemical data, statistical analyses, and a conceptual model of stalagmite growth, demonstrate that climatic conditions recorded by GM1 were wetter than the Holocene. The proxy records are used to develop a conceptual growth model of the stalagmite and to assess its potential for revealing a climate signal in this climatically sensitive northeastern African region during an important period in the evolution of Homo sapiens and dispersal of Anatomically Modern Humans out of Africa.The GM1 record, the oldest high-resolution continental climate record from Ethiopia so far published, presents evidence that any early human migrations which occurred during MIS 5 are likely to have occurred during a wet event in northeast Africa.We are finalising analyses from a further six stalagmites, deposited episodically over the last 130ka, which will complete our record from the region.
- Published
- 2018