Stratigraphic analyses of outcrops, shorelines, and diatoms from the southern Bolivian Altiplano (Uyuni-Coipasa basin) reveal two major lacustrine phases during the late-glacial period and the early Holocene, based on a chronology established by radiocarbon and U/Th control. A comparison of14C and230Th/234U ages shows that during times of high lake level, radiocarbon ages are valid. However, during low-water periods,14C ages must be corrected for a reservoir effect. The lacustrine Tauca phase started a little before 16,00014C yr B.P., and the lake level reached its maximum between 13,000 and 12,00014C yr B.P. A dry event (Ticaña) occurred after ca. 12,000 and before 950014C yr B.P. A moderate lacustrine oscillation (Coipasa event) occurred between ca. 9500 and 850014C yr B.P., using a reservoir-corrected conventional14C chronology. Comparisons between the lake-level chronology in the Uyuni-Coipasa basin and data from other southern tropical areas of South America suggest that the lacustrine evolution may reflect large-scale climatic changes.
This review paper synthesizes the recent published palaeoecological results obtained in Atlantic Equatorial Africa (ECOFIT program) on the history of forest ecosystems and inferred climate changes during the past 4000 years. Evidence are mainly provided by pollen analysis carried out at nine sites from Congo, Cameroon and Ghana, locally supported by macroflora remains, phytoliths, diatoms, 13 C and mineralogical data. At all the sites, except Lake Bosumtwi (Ghana), following a large expansion of rain and mesophilous forests until 3000 years BP, a major change is registered, affecting floristic composition, structure and geographical distribution. According to the hydrological sensitivity of the different sites, local openings of the forests with development of heliophilous formations and/or isolated enclosed savannas are observed at the most humid sites; complete disappearance of forested formations at the driest. The agreement between pollen records, hydrological and hydrobiological data definitely demonstrates that an arid event has been the primary driving factor of this change and is responsable for the main features of the modern landscapes in Atlantic Equatorial Africa. Moreover, the most recent palaeoecological data obtained in Congo (Lake Sinnda), indicate that this Late Holocene increasing aridity was of longer duration, from 4000 to 1300 years BP, and more progressive than previously inferred. A new expansion of forests is locally detected c. 900-600 BP despite increased human impact.
Diatom assemblages are described from surface sediments in thirteen salt lakes located in the southern Bolivian Altiplano. Factor analysis of correspondences and cluster analysis are used to classify the diatom assemblages. New methods are proposed to establish the qualitative and quantitative relationships between diatom floras and ecological parameters. Diatom assemblages are linked more to the ionic elements than to the salinity, pH, depth, temperature or elevation. Environmental variables are divided into three modalities which allow considerations of many different variables not under the same units.
A sedimentary and micropaleontological study of the Quillagua Formation provides a detailed paleohydrological reconstruction of the lacustrine system which occupied the present-day hyperarid Quillagua-Llamara fore-arc Basin (Northern Chile) from lattermost Miocene (5:8 š 0:4 Ma) to Early Pliocene times. Diatom and lithofacies analyses were carried out in two correlated stratigraphic sections of the lacustrine system. The Quebrada Temblor section is located at the southern margin of the ancient lake and is directly influenced by the freshwater inputs of a northward flowing fluvial system draining the Precordillera and Calama regions. The Cerro Mogote section occupies a western marginal location in the northern zone sheltered from direct fluvial inputs from the south but subjected to the activity of the alluvial fan systems of the Coastal Range. A mostly shallow oligosaline waterbody occupied the basin during the interval studied, though with fluctuations in salinity and the extent of the inner, open waters. The southern margin sector-represented by Quebrada Temblor-had, in general terms, a palustrine oligosaline character with almost freshwater conditions during certain periods, which favoured the establishment of semi-permanent to permanent freshwater plumes overlying a saline waterbody. Development of shoreline facies subjected to desiccation events was also characteristic at the top of this section. The innermost shallow lacustrine areas-represented by Cerro Mogote-maintained more homogeneous oligosaline characteristics and more persistent open waters. They were also subjected to freshwater pulses mediated in this case by the activity of the terminal alluvial fan zones. Paleohydrological evolution of the basin was strongly conditioned not only by shifts in the climatic-tectonic system but by variations in the local hydrological parameters. Four hierarchical orders of variability in the lake level of the basin were distinguished both by stratigraphic analysis of lithofacies and from changes undergone by the diatom record. Strong intrasample mixing of diatoms of incompatible salinity spectra and the presence of fine laminated lacustrine facies in some terms define the highest order short-term intra-or inter-annual pulses experienced by the lacustrine system (higher than 6th order). Diatom-based punctuated interruptions of the minor order bathymetrical trends highlight the high frequency variability in the basin (probably 6th order, 0.001-0.01 Ma), while the deepening=shallowing facies defined by the arrangement of the decimetre thick lithological sequences revealed a lower order of variability (5th order, 0.01-0.1 Ma). Combined lithofacies and diatom analyses delineate the lowest order of variability (4th order, 0.1-1 Ma) allowing the reconstruction of two well-established highstand and lowstand situations which implied the existence of a regressive trend between two transgressive trends. This order of variability is related to
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