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Muted climate variations in continental Siberia during the mid-Pleistocene epoch

Alexander A. Prokopenko (), Douglas F. Williams, Mikhail I. Kuzmin, Eugene B. Karabanov, Galina K. Khursevich and John A. Peck
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Alexander A. Prokopenko: University of South Carolina
Douglas F. Williams: University of South Carolina
Mikhail I. Kuzmin: Institute of Geochemistry, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences
Eugene B. Karabanov: University of South Carolina
Galina K. Khursevich: Institute of Geological Sciences
John A. Peck: University of Akron

Nature, 2002, vol. 418, issue 6893, 65-68

Abstract: Abstract The large difference in carbon and oxygen isotope data from the marine record between marine oxygen isotope stage 12 (MIS 12) and MIS 11, spanning the interval between about 480 and 380 kyr ago, has been interpreted as a transition between an extremely cold glacial period and an unusually warm interglacial period, with consequences for global ice volume, sea level and the global carbon cycle1,2,3,4. The extent of the change is intriguing, because orbital forcing is predicted to have been relatively weak at that time5. Here we analyse a continuous sediment record from Lake Baikal, Siberia, which reveals a virtually continuous interglacial diatom assemblage, a stable littoral benthic diatom assemblage and lithogenic sediments with ‘interglacial’ characteristics for the period from MIS 15a to MIS 11 (from about 580 to 380 kyr ago). From these data, we infer significantly weaker climate contrasts between MIS 12 and 11 than during more recent glacial–interglacial transitions in the late Pleistocene epoch (about 130 to 10 kyr ago). For the period from MIS 15a to MIS 11, we also infer an apparent lack of extensive mountain glaciation.

Date: 2002
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DOI: 10.1038/nature00886

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