Impact of Bolivian paleolake evaporation on the ?18O of the Andean glaciers during the last deglaciation (18.5-11.7 ka): Diatom-inferred ?18O values and hydro-isotopic modeling

During the last deglaciation, the Bolivian Altiplano (15–23°S, 66–70°W) was occupied by paleolake Tauca covering, at least, ?51,000 km2 at its maximum highstand between 16.5 and 15 ka. Twenty-five hundred years later, after a massive regression, a new transgressive phase, produced paleolake Coipasa,...

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Autores:
Tipo de recurso:
Fecha de publicación:
2015
Institución:
Universidad del Rosario
Repositorio:
Repositorio EdocUR - U. Rosario
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.urosario.edu.co:10336/27849
Acceso en línea:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.04.022
https://repository.urosario.edu.co/handle/10336/27849
Palabra clave:
Bolivian
Altiplano
Deglaciation
Paleolakes
Andean ice cores
Diatoms
Ostracods
Oxygen isotopes
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License
Restringido (Acceso a grupos específicos)
Description
Summary:During the last deglaciation, the Bolivian Altiplano (15–23°S, 66–70°W) was occupied by paleolake Tauca covering, at least, ?51,000 km2 at its maximum highstand between 16.5 and 15 ka. Twenty-five hundred years later, after a massive regression, a new transgressive phase, produced paleolake Coipasa, smaller than Tauca and restricted to the southern part of the basin. These paleolakes were overlooked at the west by the Sajama ice cap. The latter provides a continuous record of the oxygen isotopic composition of paleo-precipitation for the last 25 ka. Contemporaneously to the end of paleolake Tauca, around 14.3 ka, the Sajama ice cap recorded a significant increase in ice oxygen isotopic composition (?18Oice). This paper examines to what extent the disappearance of Lake Tauca contributed to precipitation on the Sajama summit and this specific isotopic variation. The water ?18O values of paleolakes Tauca and Coipasa (?18Olake) were quantitatively reconstructed from 18.5 to 11.7 ka based on diatom isotopic composition (?18Odiatoms) and ostracod isotopic composition (?18Ocarbonates) retrieved in lacustrine sediments. At a centennial time scale, a strong trend appears: abrupt decreases of ?18Olake during lake fillings are immediately followed by abrupt increases of ?18Olake during lake level stable phases. The highest variation occurred at ?15.8 ka with a ?18Olake decrease of about ?10‰, concomitant with the Lake Tauca highstand, followed ?400 years later by a 7‰ increase in ?18Olake. A simple hydro-isotopic modeling approach reproduces consistently this rapid “decrease–increase” feature. Moreover, it suggests that this unexpected re-increase in ?18Olake after filling phases can be partly explained by an equilibration of isotopic fluxes during the lake steady-state. Based on isotopic calculations during lake evaporation and a simple water stable isotopes balance between potential moisture sources at Sajama (advection versus lake evaporation), we show that total or partial evaporation (from 5 to 60%) of paleolake Tauca during its major regression phase at 14.3 ka could explain the pronounced isotopic excursion at Sajama ice cap. These results suggest that perturbations of the local hydrological cycle in lacustrine areas may substantially affect the paleoclimatic interpretation of the near-by isotopic signals (e.g. ice core or speleothems).