Title
The history of South American tropical precipitation for the past 25,000 years
Date Issued
26 January 2001
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Baker P.A.
Seltzer G.O.
Fritz S.C.
Dunbar R.B.
Grove M.J.
Cross S.L.
Rowe H.D.
Broda J.P.
Publisher(s)
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Abstract
Long sediment cores recovered from the deep portions of Lake Titicaca are used to reconstruct the precipitation history of tropical South America for the past 25,000 years. Lake Titicaca was a deep, fresh, and continuously overflowing lake during the last glacial stage, from before 25,000 to 15,000 calibrated years before the present (cal yr B.P.), signifying that during the fast glacial maximum (LGM), the Altiplano of Bolivia and Peru and much of the Amazon basin were wetter than today. The LGM in this part of the Andes is dated at 21,000 cal yr B.P., approximately coincident with the global LGM. Maximum aridity and lowest lake level occurred in the early and middle Holocene (8000 to 5500 cal yr B.P.) during a time of low summer insolation. Today, rising revels of Lake Titicaca and wet conditions in Amazonia are correlated with anomalously cold sea-surface temperatures in the northern equatorial Atlantic. Likewise, during the deglacial and Holocene periods, there were several millennial-scale wet phases on the Altiplano and in Amazonia that coincided with anomalously cold periods in the equatorial and high-latitude North Atlantic, such as the Younger Dryas.
Start page
640
End page
643
Volume
291
Issue
5504
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Geología
Geoquímica, Geofísica
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0035951464
PubMed ID
Source
Science
ISSN of the container
00368075
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus