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A 700‐year record on the effects of climate and human impact on the southern cape coast inferred from lake sediments of eilandvlei, wilderness embayment, south africa

Authors :
Lynne J. Quick
Thomas Kasper
Gerhard Daut
Roland Mäusbacher
Torsten Haberzettl
Kelly L Kirsten
Sarah Franz
Bastian Reinwarth
Michael E. Meadows
Jussi Baade
Jörg Helmschrot
Source :
Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography. 95:345-360
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2013.

Abstract

The southern Cape coast, South Africa, is sensitive to climate fluctuations as it is influenced by different atmospheric and oceanic circulation systems. Palaeoecological evidence of Holocene climate variations in this region is presently limited. Here, we present a lake sediment record spanning approximately the last 670 years from Eilandvlei, a brackish coastal lake situated mid-way between Cape Town and Port Elizabeth. The results from geochemical and sedimentological analyses point to an increase in minerogenic sediment input from the catchment starting around ad 1400. Changes in the seasonal distribution of rainfall during the Little Ice Age may have altered river discharge and increased erosion rates and fluvial sediment transport in pre-colonial times. A rising mean lake level, possibly associated with an altered water balance or relative sea-level rise, may offer an explanation for the deposition of finer sediments. After ad 1450, reduced burial flux of elements associated with autochthonous sediment formation may have resulted from ecological changes in Eilandvlei. Enhanced sedimentation rates, increasing carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous and biogenic silica concentrations, as well as high concentrations of proxies for allochthonous sediment input (e.g. aluminium, titanium, zirconium) point to increasing sediment and nutrient flux into Eilandvlei from the late nineteenth century onwards. The most likely factor involved in these recent changes is land-use change and other forms of human impact.

Details

ISSN :
14680459 and 04353676
Volume :
95
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f2b5c60da8493d0c24d52ee5a4171326
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/geoa.12015