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Glaciations of central asia in the late cenozoic according to the sedimentary record from lake baikal

Authors :
A. N. Gvozdkov
Eugene B. Karabanov
Alexander A. Prokopenko
Galina K. Khursevich
V. F. Gelety
M Schwab
E. V. Kerber
Mikhail I. Kuzmin
D. F. Williams
Elena V. Bezrukova
D Weil
Source :
Lake Baikal-A Mirror in Time and Space for Understanding Global Change Processes
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

Publisher Summary This chapter describes the paleoclimatic record over the period of 5 million years based on variations in diatom abundance in the sediments of a 200 m core obtained from Lake Baikal. The data represent a long, continuous continental record of climate changes in Central Asia during the Late Cenozoic. The record shows the climatic cooling trend that started in Pleistocene and is superimposed on the short-term cyclic climatic variations controlled by the Earth's orbital parameters. The record also reveals the presence of the two cold episodes (each about 300 Ka long) at the time intervals 2.82–2.48 Ma and 1.75–1.45 Ma characterized by glaciations at their maximum phases. These cooling periods in Lake Baikal record are also registered as global cooling in other paleoclimate records of the Northern Hemisphere. The continental record of Lake Baikal contains the majority of climatic events found in marine records and demonstrates that continental regions of Asia responded to all major changes in the Earth's climate recorded in the long oxygen isotopic records.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lake Baikal-A Mirror in Time and Space for Understanding Global Change Processes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....591199f82d1805f085495ab1bba3f2cb