A 14,000-Year Oxygen Isotope Record from Diatom Silica in Two Alpine Lakes on Mt. Kenya
- 22 June 2001
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 292 (5525) , 2307-2310
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1059612
Abstract
Oxygen isotopes are sensitive tracers of climate change in tropical regions. Abrupt shifts of up to 18 per mil in the oxygen isotope ratio of diatom silica have been found in a 14,000-year record from two alpine lakes on Mt. Kenya. Interpretation of tropical-montane isotope records is controversial, especially concerning the relative roles of precipitation and temperature. Here, we argue that Holocene variations in δ18O are better explained by lake moisture balance than by temperature-induced fractionation. Episodes of heavy convective precipitation dated ∼11,100 to 8600, 6700 to 5600, 2900 to 1900, and <1300 years before the present were linked to enhanced soil erosion, neoglacial ice advances, and forest expansion on Mt. Kenya.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Climate of East Africa 6000 14C Yr B.P. as Inferred from Pollen DataQuaternary Research, 2000
- Ice-core palaeoclimate records in tropical South America since the Last Glacial MaximumJournal of Quaternary Science, 2000
- Water isotopes in precipitation:Quaternary Science Reviews, 2000
- Variations of the stable isotopic compositions of rainfall events from the Cameroon rain forest, Central AfricaJournal of Hydrology, 1999
- A seasonal air transport climatology for KenyaJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 1999
- A 3000-Year Climatic Record from Biogenic Silica Oxygen Isotopes in an Equatorial High-Altitude LakeScience, 1998
- Abrupt Early to Mid-Holocene Climatic Transition Registered at the Equator and the PolesScience, 1997
- Tree ring D/H ratio from Kenya, East Africa and its palaeoclimatic significanceNature, 1985
- Deep water formation in the North Atlantic Ocean during the last ice ageNature, 1980
- Climatic Ice Core Records from the Tropical Quelccaya Ice CapScience, 1979