19 results on '"Hoek, Wim Z."'
Search Results
2. Early Holocene environmental change in the Kreekrak area (Zeeland, SW-Netherlands): A multi-proxy analysis
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Bos, Johanna A.A., Huisman, D. Johannes, Kiden, Patrick, Hoek, Wim Z., and van Geel, Bas
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- 2005
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3. Vegetation response to the ∼14.7 and ∼11.5 ka cal. BP climate transitions: is vegetation lagging climate?
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Hoek, Wim Z
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- 2001
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4. The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis: a critical review.
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van Hoesel, Annelies, Hoek, Wim Z., Pennock, Gillian M., and Drury, Martyn R.
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YOUNGER Dryas , *ASTROGEOLOGY , *MAGNETIC fields , *NANODIAMONDS , *GLOBAL environmental change - Abstract
Abstract: The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis suggests that multiple extraterrestrial airbursts or impacts resulted in the Younger Dryas cooling, extensive wildfires, megafaunal extinctions and changes in human population. After the hypothesis was first published in 2007, it gained much criticism, as the evidence presented was either not indicative of an extraterrestrial impact or not reproducible by other groups. Only three years after the hypothesis had been presented, a requiem paper was published. Despite this, the controversy continues. New evidence, both in favour and against the hypothesis, continues to be published. In this review we briefly summarize the earlier debate and critically analyse the most recent reported evidence, including magnetic microspherules, nanodiamonds, and iridium, shocked quartz, scoria-like objects and lechatelierite. The subsequent events proposed to be triggered by the impact event, as well as the nature of the event itself, are also briefly discussed. In addition we address the timing of the Younger Dryas impact, a topic which, despite its importance, has not gained much attention thus far. We show that there are three challenges related to the timing of the event: accurate age control for some of the sites that are reported to provide evidence for the impact, linking these sites to the onset of the Younger Dryas and, most importantly, an apparent age discrepancy of up to two centuries between different sites associated with the proposed impact event. We would like to stress that if the markers at different locations have been deposited at different points in time, they cannot be related to the same event. Although convincing evidence for the hypothesis that multiple synchronous impacts resulted in massive environmental changes at ∼12,900 yrs ago remains debatable, we conclude that some evidence used to support the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis cannot fully be explained at this point in time. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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5. Early Holocene climate oscillations—causes and consequences
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Hoek, Wim Z. and Bos, Johanna A.A.
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- 2007
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6. Climate impact on ecosystem changes and human responses during the Last Glacial and Early Holocene: A contribution to the INTIMATE (INTegration of Ice-core, MArine and TErrestrial records) COST Action ES0907.
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Hoek, Wim Z., Robinson, Erick, and Gelorini, Vanessa
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CLIMATE change , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *ICE cores , *MARINE ecology - Published
- 2015
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7. Late Holocene lowland fluvial archives and geoarchaeology: Utrecht's case study of Rhine river abandonment under Roman and Medieval settlement.
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van Dinter, Marieke, Cohen, Kim M., Hoek, Wim Z., Stouthamer, Esther, Jansma, Esther, and Middelkoop, Hans
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *ALLUVIUM , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *MIDDLE Ages - Abstract
Fluvial lowlands have become attractive human settling areas all around the world over the last few millennia. Because rivers kept changing their course and networks due to avulsion, the sedimentary sequences in these areas are archives of both fluvial geomorphological and archaeological development. We integrated geological and archaeological datasets to demonstrate the concurrence of the gradual abandonment of a major Rhine channel (Utrecht, The Netherlands), the development of human habitation in the area, and the interactions between them. The Utrecht case study highlights the stage-wise abandonment of a natural river channel, due to avulsion, coincident with intensifying human occupation in Roman and Early Medieval times (1st millennium AD). The analyses make maximum use of very rich data sets available for the study area and the tight age control that the geo-archaeological dataset facilitates, offering extra means of time-control to document the pacing of the abandonment process. This allows us to quantify change in river dimensions and meander style and to provide discharge estimates for successive stages of the abandonment phase over a 1000-year period of abandonment succession, from mature river to eventual Late Medieval overbuilt canal when the Rhine branch had lost even more discharge. Continued geomorphic development during this period - which includes the 'Dark Ages' (450-1000 AD) - appears to have been crucial in the development of Utrecht from Roman army fortress to Medieval ecclesial centre. The settlement dynamics in and around the city of Utrecht changed during the various phases of abandonment. In the bifurcating network of river branches forming the Rhine-Meuse delta, the main Rhine branch hosted the Roman limes military border and transport route. The Rhine- Vecht bifurcation at Utrecht provided an excellent location to raise a Roman fort. Continued geomorphic activity during abandonment in Early Medieval times was characterised by enhanced overbank sedimentation and shifts in the position of bifurcations. River flooding became more incidental in this stage, and alluvial-ridge occupancy became sensitive to flooding events for several centuries. We conclude by demonstrating that similar human-river interactions during Roman times occurred in several other deltas within the former Roman empire, with differences depending on the position of a settlement within the delta, the overall hydrological situation, and the ability of societies to control the changing environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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8. Holocene vegetation succession and forest history in the upper Monts du Forez, Massif Central, France.
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van der Knaap, Willem O., Kalis, Arie J., van Leeuwen, Jacqueline F.N., Bos, Johanna A.A., Camping, Jeroen R., Hoek, Wim Z., Marbus, Marlies, Schorn, Erik A., Swertz, Charlotte A., and Janssen, C. Roel
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FOREST succession , *EUROPEAN beech , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *SILVER fir , *FOREST plants , *TREE-rings - Abstract
On the basis of seven palynological records, we reconstruct the forest-limit composition and dynamics during the second part of the Holocene, in the upper montane and subalpine zones of the Monts du Forez in the north-eastern Massif Central, using a 2 km long, elevational transect of sites at 1335–1590 m elevation. All sites are mires today, varying in size from 2 to <0.1 ha. The chronology of the pollen diagrams is based on calibrated radiocarbon dating combined with pollen-stratigraphic correlation among the diagrams using the regional pollen component. Corylus avellana forest with Ulmus developed in the study region soon after the start of the Holocene. Soon after Fagus sylvatica arrived in the study area and expanded after ca. 3500 BC (5450 cal yr BP) to full abundance within a few centuries at the cost of Corylus. Abies alba expanded slowly within the Fagus forest after ca. 3300 BC (5250 cal yr BP), taking two millennia to reach its final abundance. During ca. 800–650 BC (2750–2600 cal yr BP) Fagus and Abies had reached similar overall abundances and formed forests only minimally affected by prehistoric human impact, which could serve as a natural baseline condition for extant forest management. We hypothesise that during this period dense Abies – Fagus krummholz had an upper limit of 1570 m, with scattered Abies trees above this and open woodland of Sorbus , Betula and Acer up to the summit (1634 m a.s.l.). A varied cultural landscape was in place in medieval times, with cereal cultivation and grasslands in a predominantly forested landscape. A baseline condition of this kind of cultural landscape could be found in late medieval times. During the last several centuries major deforestations took place and planted Pinus sylvestris replaced much of the originally natural Abies – Fagus forest. Crop cultivation increased in the cultural landscape. All diagrams have hiatuses (missing peat layers), which in most cases could be attributed to domesticated animals damaging the mire surface. For mire protection we therefore recommend a limited grazing pressure by cattle. The major phases in settlement history from the Neolithic to medieval times can be recognized in the pollen diagrams. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Closing and exposing the gaps in knowledge: INTIMATE workshop on terrestrial records from central Eastern Europe for the Last Glacial–Interglacial transition.
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Perşoiu, Aurel, Feurdean, Angelica, and Hoek, Wim Z.
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LAST Glacial Maximum , *PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *CLIMATE change , *ATMOSPHERIC models - Published
- 2015
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10. Multiple oscillations during the Lateglacial as recorded in a multi-proxy, high-resolution record of the Moervaart palaeolake (NW Belgium).
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Bos, Johanna A.A., De Smedt, Philippe, Demiddele, Hendrik, Hoek, Wim Z., Langohr, Roger, Marcelino, Vera, Van Asch, Nelleke, Van Damme, Dirk, Van der Meeren, Thijs, Verniers, Jacques, Boeckx, Pascal, Boudin, Mathieu, Court-Picon, Mona, Finke, Peter, Gelorini, Vanessa, Gobert, Stefan, Heiri, Oliver, Martens, Koen, Mostaert, Frank, and Serbruyns, Lynn
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CLIMATE reconstruction (Research) , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *RADIOCARBON dating , *OSCILLATIONS - Abstract
This paper presents the results of multi-disciplinary research carried out on the deposits of Moervaart depression, NW Belgium, one of the largest palaeolakes (∼25 km 2 ) that existed during the Lateglacial interstadial in NW Europe. The multi-proxy study, including physical (organic matter and calcium carbonate, magnetic susceptibility, micromorphological), botanical (pollen, macrofossils, diatoms), zoological (ostracods, molluscs, chironomids) and chemical analyses (stable carbon and oxygen isotopes) has resulted in a detailed reconstruction of the Lateglacial landscape as well of the local conditions that prevailed in the lake itself. A chronology of the record was provided by radiocarbon dating and comparison with radiocarbon dates of the nearby Rieme site. These yielded a good match with the regional biostratigraphy. During the Lateglacial, vegetation and geomorphology of the landscape in general changed from a tundra landscape to a boreal forest. The vegetation development, however, was interrupted by a number of cold reversals. Three centennial-scale cold oscillations are present in the record: 1) the so-called Older Dryas corresponding to GI-1d in the Greenland ice-cores, 2) a short and pronounced cold event during the early Allerød, which could be correlated to GI-1c2 and 3) a cooling event during the late Allerød probably corresponding to the Intra Allerød Cold Period (IACP) or GI-1b. The latter most likely was responsible for the disappearance of the Moervaart palaeolake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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11. The effects of the 8.2 ka event on the natural environment of Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria: Implications for ecosystem resilience studies.
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van der Horn, Sarah A., van Kolfschoten, Thijs, van der Plicht, Johannes, and Hoek, Wim Z.
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ECOLOGICAL resilience , *CLIMATE change , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *ANTHROPOGEOMORPHOLOGY - Abstract
Research on ecosystem resilience and climate–ecosystem interactions is extremely complex due to the large variety of factors that play a role in ecosystem functioning. This study aimes at determining which factors are involved in ecosystem resilience, which methods are needed to investigate this, and how archaeology can contribute to such research. The influence of the 8.2 ka climate event on the natural environment of Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria, serves as a case study for larger-scale ecosystem resilience studies. This study presents some critical notes to the assumption that the changes which took place in Tell Sabi Abyad at the timing of the 8.2 ka event were a direct result of climate change triggered by the event. Though a number of changes in culture and farming methods date back to the timing of the 8.2 ka event, as yet no evidence has been found for wild flora and fauna shifts which could indicate climate deterioration. Other factors that could have influenced the changes observed in the archaeological record, like anthropogenic influences or cultural development, should not be ruled out as determining factors for the changes that took place at Tell Sabi Abyad at the timing of the 8.2 ka event. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. Impacts of palaeoclimate change 60 000–8000 years ago on humans and their environments in Europe: Integrating palaeoenvironmental and archaeological data.
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Birks, Hilary H., Gelorini, Vanessa, Robinson, Erick, and Hoek, Wim Z.
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PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *CLIMATE change , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS - Abstract
Humans respond in a variety of ways to climate and environmental change. They may adapt, migrate, evolve new technologies, or experience breakdowns in their socio-cultural and economic systems. Working group 4 of the INTIMATE COST action ES0907 aims to summarise and synthesise the effects of climate changes from 60 000–8000 years ago on ecosystems, including animals and humans. The study of ecosystem and human responses and their causes requires close collaboration between archaeologists, zoologists, palaeoecologists, and geomorphologists. An INTIMATE workshop in Ghent, Belgium (November 6–7, 2012) focused on stimulating the integration of archaeological and palaeoecological approaches and methodology to improve reconstructions of ecosystem and human responses to climate changes in the full- and late-glacial and early-Holocene periods in Europe. Six main topics were delimited. High quality chronological control and accurate correlation is crucial for precisely relating ecosystem responses to climate changes and the ensuing human responses. The palaeoecological tool-box should contain both biotic proxies and physical proxies that can be applied flexibly to data collection during this period. Geomorphological and palynological studies reveal direct or indirect climate impacts and environmental changes at regional-scales. The geographical scale of human response will depend on the questions being asked. Humans depend almost exclusively on their local environment, so the impacts of climate changes on both terrestrial and wetland habitats need to be reconstructed at local ecosystem scales in relation to habitation sites. An array of high quality local data-sets across Europe that integrate palaeoenvironmental and archaeological records can be synthesised and examined for causal relationships in time and space. Emerging geographical patterns of climate and environmental change will give an overview of patterns of resilience and vulnerability of human societies to these changes. Gaps in knowledge will become apparent. Humans are a top predator and thus changes affecting the food chain, particularly in keystone prey composition, will be important to their survival. Integrative studies carried out at a variety of spatial and temporal scales encourage a development towards a better understanding of the varying resilience and sensitivity of ecosystems and human societies to palaeoclimate changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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13. A stratigraphic framework for abrupt climatic changes during the Last Glacial period based on three synchronized Greenland ice-core records: refining and extending the INTIMATE event stratigraphy.
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Rasmussen, Sune O., Bigler, Matthias, Blockley, Simon P., Blunier, Thomas, Buchardt, Susanne L., Clausen, Henrik B., Cvijanovic, Ivana, Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe, Johnsen, Sigfus J., Fischer, Hubertus, Gkinis, Vasileios, Guillevic, Myriam, Hoek, Wim Z., Lowe, J. John, Pedro, Joel B., Popp, Trevor, Seierstad, Inger K., Steffensen, Jørgen Peder, Svensson, Anders M., and Vallelonga, Paul
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CLIMATE change , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *ICE cores , *EVENT stratigraphy , *OXYGEN isotopes - Abstract
Due to their outstanding resolution and well-constrained chronologies, Greenland ice-core records provide a master record of past climatic changes throughout the Last Interglacial–Glacial cycle in the North Atlantic region. As part of the INTIMATE (INTegration of Ice-core, MArine and TErrestrial records) project, protocols have been proposed to ensure consistent and robust correlation between different records of past climate. A key element of these protocols has been the formal definition and ordinal numbering of the sequence of Greenland Stadials (GS) and Greenland Interstadials (GI) within the most recent glacial period. The GS and GI periods are the Greenland expressions of the characteristic Dansgaard–Oeschger events that represent cold and warm phases of the North Atlantic region, respectively. We present here a more detailed and extended GS/GI template for the whole of the Last Glacial period. It is based on a synchronization of the NGRIP, GRIP, and GISP2 ice-core records that allows the parallel analysis of all three records on a common time scale. The boundaries of the GS and GI periods are defined based on a combination of stable-oxygen isotope ratios of the ice (δ 18 O, reflecting mainly local temperature) and calcium ion concentrations (reflecting mainly atmospheric dust loading) measured in the ice. The data not only resolve the well-known sequence of Dansgaard–Oeschger events that were first defined and numbered in the ice-core records more than two decades ago, but also better resolve a number of short-lived climatic oscillations, some defined here for the first time. Using this revised scheme, we propose a consistent approach for discriminating and naming all the significant abrupt climatic events of the Last Glacial period that are represented in the Greenland ice records. The final product constitutes an extended and better resolved Greenland stratotype sequence, against which other proxy records can be compared and correlated. It also provides a more secure basis for investigating the dynamics and fundamental causes of these climatic perturbations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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14. Dating, synthesis, and interpretation of palaeoclimatic records of the Last Glacial cycle and model-data integration: advances by the INTIMATE (INTegration of Ice-core, MArine and TErrestrial records) COST Action ES0907.
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Rasmussen, Sune O., Birks, Hilary H., Blockley, Simon P.E., Brauer, Achim, Hajdas, Irka, Hoek, Wim Z., Lowe, J. John, Moreno, Ana, Renssen, Hans, Roche, Didier M., Svensson, Anders M., Valdes, Paul, and Walker, Mike J.C.
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PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *DATA modeling , *ICE cores , *DATA integration , *CLIMATE change dating - Abstract
Since 2010, the INTIMATE (INTegration of Ice-core, MArine and TErrestrial records) network has been operating as a COST Action (designated ES0907). This paper outlines the accomplishments of the INTIMATE COST Action in the context of how the INTIMATE ideas have evolved during the network's twenty-year life span, and highlights a number of challenges that can guide further work. In the second part of the paper, the contributions that comprise this INTIMATE special issue are introduced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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15. Geochronology of Betula extensions in pollen diagrams of Alpine Late-glacial lake deposits: A case study of the Late-glacial deposits of the Gasserplatz soil archives (Vorarlberg, Austria).
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van Mourik, Jan M., Slotboom, Ruud T., van der Plicht, Johannes, Streurman, Harm Jan, Kuijper, Wim J., Hoek, Wim Z., and de Graaff, Leo W.S.
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POLLEN , *MOUNTAIN ecology , *GLACIAL lakes , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *RADIOCARBON dating - Abstract
Abstract: Pollen diagrams of Alpine Late-glacial calcareous lake deposits show several extensions of Betula. The geochronology of these extensions cannot be based on radiocarbon dating due to reservoir effects of such lakes on the radiocarbon ages. A robust geochronology can be based on the oxygen isotope stratigraphy. Additionally, recognition of 12,920 calBP LST in the sediment cores provides a secure time marker. The combined results of pollen, macro-remains and stable isotope analyses of the Gasserplatz cores point to a correlation of the Betula extensions with the oscillations in the oxygen isotope curve and are related to global climatic oscillations. This is sustained by the correlation of the Gasserplatz isotope oscillations with the oscillations as registered in the Greenland ice cores. Comparison of the results of the Gasserplatz cores with the results of similar Alpine lake deposits makes clear that the fluctuations in the Betula curve are not a local but a regional phenomenon. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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16. Rapid climate change during the Weichselian Lateglacial in Ireland: Chironomid-inferred summer temperatures from Fiddaun, Co. Galway
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van Asch, Nelleke, Lutz, Arthur F., Duijkers, Miriam C.H., Heiri, Oliver, Brooks, Stephen J., and Hoek, Wim Z.
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CHIRONOMIDAE , *SEASONAL physiological variations , *CLIMATE change , *OCEAN circulation , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *SUMMER , *INSECTS - Abstract
Abstract: A lacustrine sediment core from Fiddaun, western Ireland was studied to reconstruct summer temperature changes during the Weichselian Lateglacial. This site is located close to the Atlantic Ocean; and so is potentially sensitive to climatic changes associated with changes in ocean circulation. The record, comprising the end of the Weichselian Pleniglacial to the early Holocene, was analysed for fossil chironomids, lithology, and oxygen and carbon isotopes in the sedimentary carbonates. These proxies clearly show rapid warming at the onset of the Lateglacial Interstadial, relatively high summer temperatures during the Interstadial, pronounced cooling during the Younger Dryas, and subsequent warming at the transition to the Holocene. Chironomid-inferred mean July air temperatures for the Interstadial are ~12.5–14.5°C, ~7.5°C for the Younger Dryas, and ~15.0°C for the early Holocene. Furthermore, this research provides evidence for at least two cold events during the Interstadial. These more moderate temperature oscillations can be correlated to Greenland Interstadial events 1b and 1d, on the basis of the age-depth model for the Fiddaun sequence. Based on multiple proxies, the first cold oscillation (GI-1d) was the more severe of the two in Ireland. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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17. Fluvial terrace formation in the northern Upper Rhine Graben during the last 20000 years as a result of allogenic controls and autogenic evolution
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Erkens, Gilles, Dambeck, Rainer, Volleberg, Koen P., Bouman, Marjolein T.I.J., Bos, Johanna A.A., Cohen, Kim M., Wallinga, Jakob, and Hoek, Wim Z.
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FLUVIAL geomorphology , *TERRACES (Geology) , *GRABENS (Geology) , *HOLOCENE stratigraphic geology , *GLACIAL climates , *SEDIMENTS , *HOLOCENE paleogeography - Abstract
Abstract: The northern Upper Rhine Graben hosts a well-preserved Late Weichselian and Holocene fluvial terrace sequence. Terraces differ in elevation, morphology, and overbank sediment characteristics. The purpose of this study was to determine the relative importance of allogenic controlling factors versus autogenic evolution on the successive formation of these terraces. For a representative valley segment (the Gernsheim region), results from previous research were integrated with newly obtained borehole data and digitized elevation maps to construct palaeogeographic maps and cross sections. Coarse-grained channel deposits below terrace surfaces were dated using Optically Stimulated Luminescence, and fine-grained abandoned channel fill deposits were dated using pollen stratigraphy and radiocarbon analysis. Initiation of terrace formation was caused by climatic change in the Late Pleniglacial (after ~20 ka), but fluvial response was complex and slow and continued locally until the middle Boreal (~9 ka). Early to Middle Holocene (~6 ka) changes in fluvial style and associated overbank lithofacies are not necessarily controlled by climatic change as was previously proposed. Instead, autogenic processes combined with river reach-specific factors explain the observed terrace development. Continuous incision, autogenic evolution, and high preservation potential provide an alternative explanation for the presence of a terrace sequence in this subsiding area. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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18. Lateglacial summer temperatures in the Northwest European lowlands: a chironomid record from Hijkermeer, the Netherlands
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Heiri, Oliver, Cremer, Holger, Engels, Stefan, Hoek, Wim Z., Peeters, Willem, and Lotter, André F.
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GLACIERS , *CHIRONOMIDAE , *DIATOMS , *POLLEN - Abstract
Abstract: Lateglacial environments at Hijkermeer, northwest Netherlands, were reconstructed by means of chironomid, diatom and pollen analyses. Diatom assemblages indicate that Hijkermeer was a shallow, oligo- to mesotrophic lake during this period. Pollen assemblages reflect the typical northwest European Lateglacial vegetation development and provide an age assessment for the record from the beginning of the Older Dryas (ca 14000 calibrated 14C yr BP) into the early Holocene (to ca 10700 calibrated 14C yr BP). The chironomid record is characterized by several abrupt shifts between assemblages typically found in mid-latitude subalpine to alpine lakes and assemblages typical for lowland environments. Based on the chironomid record, July air temperatures were reconstructed using a chironomid-temperature transfer-function from central Europe. Mean July air temperatures of ca 14.0–16.0°C are inferred before the Older Dryas, of ca 16.0–16.5°C during most of the Allerød, of ca 13.5–14.0°C during the Younger Dryas, and of ca 15.5–16.0°C during the early Holocene. Two centennial-scale decreases in July air temperature were reconstructed during the Lateglacial interstadial which are correlated with Greenland Interstadial events (GI)-1d and -1b. The results suggest that vegetation changes in the Netherlands may have been promoted by the cooler climate during GI-1d, immediately preceding the Older Dryas biozone, and GI-1b. The Hijkermeer chironomid-inferred temperature record shows a similar temperature development as the Greenland ice core oxygen isotope records for most of the Lateglacial and a good agreement with other temperature reconstructions available from the Netherlands. This suggests that chironomid-based temperature reconstruction can be successfully implemented in the Northwest European lowlands and that chironomids may provide a useful alternative to oxygen isotopes for correlating European lake sediment records during the Lateglacial. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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19. Environmental changes in the late Allerød and early Younger Dryas in the Netherlands: a multiproxy high-resolution record from a site with two Pinus sylvestris populations.
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Bazelmans, Jos, van Balen, Ronald, Bos, Johanna, Brinkkemper, Otto, Colenberg, Jesper, Doeve, Petra, van Geel, Bas, Hakbijl, Tom, van Hateren, Hans, Hoek, Wim Z., Huisman, Hans, Jansma, Esther, Kasse, Cornelis, van Os, Bertil, van der Plicht, Hans, Schokker, Jeroen, Van der Putten, Nathalie, and van der Woude, John
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SCOTS pine , *YOUNGER Dryas , *TREE-rings , *CLIMATE sensitivity , *CLIMATE change , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
In the Netherlands, several proxies of climate change during the Last Glacial-Interglacial Transition (LGIT) (c. 14,700 to 11,700 b2k) have been investigated in detail over the last few decades. The present paper presents two tree-ring chronologies LETR-A (n = 16, timespan 106 rings) and LETR-B (n = 24, timespan 201 rings) from in situ subfossil pine remains (Pinus sylvestris) discovered at Leusden-Den Treek in the Netherlands that date from the Bølling-Allerød interstadial (GI-1). Using a multiproxy approach (both abiotic and biotic), it was possible to study local woodland development in detail as part of long-term environmental change. Moreover, the trees opened up possibilities for dendrochronological and dendroclimatological research. The tree-ring series show the occurrence of two successive phases of pine woodland development, which were 14C dated with high precision and calibrated using the recent IntCal20 14C calibration curve: 13,450–13,396 to 13,370–13,316 calBP (series LETR-A) and 12,952–12,937 to 12,754–12,739 calBP (series LETR-B). At the north-western boundary of its ecotone, Pinus was highly sensitive to climate change during the latter part of GI-1 and the transition to GS-1. The inability to set fruit and the disappearance of the pine woodland within decades before and after c. 12,745 calBP is interpreted as the vegetational response to abrupt climate deterioration at the start of the Younger Dryas (12,807 ± 12 cal BP). • A multiproxy analysis of a waterlogged Usselo paleosol reveals late Allerød to Younger Dryas environmental change in high detail. • Two precisely dated tree-ring chronologies over the Allerød-Younger Dryas Transition reflect climate sensitivity of Pinus sylvestris. • Pine woodland disappeared after 12,745 calBP as a delayed response to the abrupt climate change at the start of the Younger Dryas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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