6000 years of environmental changes recorded in Blue Lake, South Australia, based on ostracod ecology and valve chemistry

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Gouramanis, Christos
Wilkins, Daniel
De Deckker, Patrick

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Elsevier

Abstract

A 4m long core taken from the freshwater Blue Lake crater near the township of Mount Gambier in southeastern South Australia provided a high-resolution palaeoclimatic record for the last six millennia. Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon (14C) dates were obtained from organic plant fibres and biogenic carbonates from the laminated sequence of the core and from a modern water sample. Large discrepancies between the radiocarbon ages determined from plant fibres and biogenic carbonates indicate the presence of a time-variable lacustrine reservoir, which is consistent with what is known of the lake's hydrology.Ostracod assemblages, associated with stable isotope (δ13C, δ18O) analyses and, in combination with Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Na/Ca analyses done on ostracod valves, infer salinity, temperature and water level changes in Blue Lake over the last 6 millenia. The influence of local aquifers through time has also been determined from the Na/Ca of ostracod valves. Approximately 900year cycles are evident in the δ13C record from 5.4ka to 1.8ka.The history of Blue Lake records an initial period of high hydrological variability around 6. ka, becoming increasingly deeper as groundwater flowed into the basin. By 4. ka, the lake had reached steady state with the lake level fluctuating by as much as 9. m, although significant geochemical variations represent temperature fluctuations until European settlement near the lake in 1839.

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Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology

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2037-12-31