ABSTRACT
Oxygen and carbon isotopic measurements of the total inorganic carbon
(TIC) fraction of sediments from Walker Lake (Nevada, USA) were
completed at a decadal-scale resolution spanning the last ~3000 years.
On the basis of radiocarbon dating of the total organic fraction of
cored sediments, the late Holocene isotope record recorded a relatively
dry climate in Period LH-1 (1000 BC to AD 800), a relatively wet
climate punctuated by a few severe droughts in Period LH-2 (AD 800 to
1900), and an anthropogenical perturbation era (L14-h: 1900-2000).
Relative high accumulation rates in Period LH-2 (AD 800 to 1900)
provided detailed information on climatic and hydrologic variability in
this region. Coupled with the tree-ring-based Sacramento River flow
record, the radiocarbon-based age model was refined for the interval of
AD 800 through 1900. A high-resolution (3.5 year per sample) TIC delta18O
record spanning the last 1200 years was generated to reflect
fluctuations in winter snowfall of the Sierra Nevada. This TIC delta18O
record shows two prolonged droughts that occurred during the Medieval
Warm Epoch, which are chronologically well consistent with previous
findings (STINF, 1994). Time series analyses on the TIC delta18O
and the Sacramento River flow records reveal that interdecadal and
centennial modes of climate variability persisted over the last
millennium. PDO-like interdecadal oscillations that centered in the
periods of 50-90 yr were almost in phase with thermal fluctuations in
ocean climate of the California Current, suggesting that indedacadal
climate oscillations in the Sierra Nevada were intimately linked with
the Pacific dynamics. The underlying centennial to multicentennial
variability corresponding to the Medieval Warm Epoch and the Little Ice
Age comprise the major share of total variance. In addition, the TIC
delta18O record of Walker Lake is visually well correlated
with the polar ice-core-based cosmogenic nuclide production and the
Rice Lake Mg/Ca records. This suggests that at least some centennial
oscillations in winter precipitation of the Sierra Nevada were
associated with solar activity over the last millennium.
Yuan, F., 2003. Late Holocene hydrologic and climatic variability in
the Walker Lake basin, Nevada and California.
Unpublished PhD dissertation, State University of New
York
at Albany. 167 pp., +xii;
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE MIC
Film QC 869 Z899 2003 Y93
Copies of this PhD dissertation can be ordered
from Proquest UMI