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Precise date for the Laacher See eruption synchronizes the Younger Dryas

Authors :
Giulia Guidobaldi
Hardy Pfanz
Lukas Wacker
Adam Sookdeo
Christine Lane
Olaf Jöris
Clive Oppenheimer
Stefan Engels
Florian Adolphi
Jan Esper
Sabine Remmele
Ulf Büntgen
Frederick Reinig
Daniel Nievergelt
Paolo Cherubini
Michael Sigl
Alexander Land
Source :
Nature, Nature, 595 (7865)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Laacher See eruption (LSE) in Germany ranks among Europe’s largest volcanic events of the Upper Pleistocene1,2. Although tephra deposits of the LSE represent an important isochron for the synchronization of proxy archives at the Late Glacial to Early Holocene transition3, uncertainty in the age of the eruption has prevailed4. Here we present dendrochronological and radiocarbon measurements of subfossil trees that were buried by pyroclastic deposits that firmly date the LSE to 13,006 ± 9 calibrated years before present (bp; taken as ad 1950), which is more than a century earlier than previously accepted. The revised age of the LSE necessarily shifts the chronology of European varved lakes5,6 relative to the Greenland ice core record, thereby dating the onset of the Younger Dryas to 12,807 ± 12 calibrated years bp, which is around 130 years earlier than thought. Our results synchronize the onset of the Younger Dryas across the North Atlantic–European sector, preclude a direct link between the LSE and Greenland Stadial-1 cooling7, and suggest a large-scale common mechanism of a weakened Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation under warming conditions8–10. A revised date for the Laacher See eruption using measurements of subfossil trees shifts the chronology of European varved lakes relative to the Greenland ice core record, synchronizing the onset of the Younger Dryas across the North Atlantic–European sector.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, Nature, 595 (7865)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....64d351bc5b5edeb6563b604cb9287297