Get reliable rangeland science

A 10,000-year high-resolution diatom record from Pilkington Bay, Lake Victoria, East Africa
Author
Stager, J Curt
Cumming, Brian F
Meeker, L David
Publisher
Quaternary Research
Publication Year
2003
Body

A new diatom record from Lake Victoria's Pilkington Bay, subsampled at 21- to 25-year intervals and supported by 20 AMS dates, reveals a ~10,000 calendar year environmental history that is supported by published diatom and pollen data from two nearby sites. With their chronologies adjusted here to account for newly documented ancient carbon effects in the lake, these three records provide a coherent, finely resolved reconstruction of Holocene climate change in equatorial East Africa. After an insolation-induced rainfall maximum ca. 8800-8300 cal yr B.P., precipitation became more seasonal and decreased abruptly ca. 8200 and 5700 yr B.P. in apparent association with northern deglaciation events. Century-scale rainfall increases occurred ca. 8500, 7000, 5800, and 4000 yr B.P. Conditions after 2700 yr B.P. were generally similar to those of today, but major droughts occurred ca. 1200-600 yr B.P. during Europe's Medieval Warm Period.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
59
Journal Number
2
Journal Pages
172-181
Collection
Southern Africa Collection
Journal Name
Quaternary Research
Keywords
Africa
Diatoms
Lake Victoria
Monsoons
Paleoclimate
palaeobotany
palaeoclimate
Africa