Mid-Holocene Climate in Northern Minnesota
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 28 (2) , 263-273
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(87)90064-0
Abstract
Study of Holocene ostracodes and diatoms from Elk Lake, in North-Central Minnesota, indicates that the local climate of the mid-Holocene can be subdivided into three intervals. Throughout interval 1 (ca. 7800 to 6700 yr B.P.), climate was colder and much drier than today. During intervals 2 and 3 (ca. 6700 to 4000 yr B.P.) average mean-annual air temperatures approached the modern mean (3.7°C), but warm summers persisted throughout interval 2, whereas during interval 3 warm summers fell into discrete episodes. Furthermore, average mean-annual precipitation was about 85 and 90% of modern during intervals 2 and 3, respectively. Transition times between the principal intervals were less than 50 yr. The expected effects of a retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet that initially maintained a winter-style circulation, followed by transitional climate states, and finally a near-modern circulation pattern may explain these local climatic events.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hypothesized resource relationships among African planktonic diatomsLimnology and Oceanography, 1986
- Responses of Floods to Holocene Climatic Change in the Upper Mississippi ValleyQuaternary Research, 1985
- Ground Water as a Silica Source for Diatom Production in a Precipitation-Dominated LakeScience, 1985
- The Variability of Holocene Climate Change: Evidence from Varved Lake SedimentsScience, 1984
- Distribution of an Arctic Ostracod Fauna in Space and TimeQuaternary Research, 1984
- The chemical composition of lakes in the north‐central United States1Limnology and Oceanography, 1983
- Freshwater shelled invertebrate indicators of paleoclimate in northwestern Canada during late glacial timesCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1977
- Classification of the hydrologic settings of lakes in the north central United StatesWater Resources Research, 1977
- The Dynamic Nature of Holocene Vegetation A Problem in Paleoclimatology, Biogeography, and Stratigraphic NomenclatureQuaternary Research, 1976
- The Impact of Forest Fire on the Nutrient Influxes to Small Lakes in Northeastern MinnesotaEcology, 1976