Major postglacial summer temperature changes in the central coniferous boreal forest of Quebec (Canada) inferred using chironomid assemblages - Aix-Marseille Université Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Quaternary Science Année : 2018

Major postglacial summer temperature changes in the central coniferous boreal forest of Quebec (Canada) inferred using chironomid assemblages

Résumé

Chironomid head capsules preserved in lake sediments were used to reconstruct 8200 years of summer temperatures in the boreal forest of northeastern Canada. Two training sets were used derived from Canadian and Eastern Canadian transfer functions. Both models reconstructed similar climate patterns, but the Canadian model provided temperatures generally 2-3 ˚C lower than the Eastern Canadian model. Three main thermal changes inferred by chironomids were: (i) the Holocene Thermal Maximum, which occurred between 8 and 5k cal a BP, with temperatures generally higher than today's, maximum temperatures between 8 and 6.5k cal a BP, and an average of þ 0.9 ˚C; (ii) the Medieval Climate Anomaly around 1.1-1.2k cal a BP with an amplitude of þ 0.7 ˚C; and (iii) a colder period reconstructed between the 14th and 19th centuries, corresponding to the Little Ice Age, with summer temperatures on average À0.5 ˚C lower than the climate normal. For each of these three climatic events, the timing and the amplitude of changes were similar with other published regional, North American and Northern Hemisphere records.
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Dates et versions

hal-01890700 , version 1 (08-10-2018)

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Lisa Bajolle, Isabelle Larocque-Tobler, Emmanuel Gandouin, Martin Lavoie, Yves Bergeron, et al.. Major postglacial summer temperature changes in the central coniferous boreal forest of Quebec (Canada) inferred using chironomid assemblages. Journal of Quaternary Science, 2018, 33 (4), pp.409 - 420. ⟨10.1002/jqs.3022⟩. ⟨hal-01890700⟩
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