Environmental and climatic changes in central Chilean Patagonia since the Late Glacial (Mallin El Embudo, 44° S)

Type Article
Date 2014
Language English
Author(s) de Porras M. E.1, Maldonado A.1, 2, Quintana F. A.3, Martel-Cea A.1, 4, Reyes O.5, Mendez C.6
Affiliation(s) 1 : CEAZA, La Serena, Chile.
2 : Univ Catolica Norte, Larrondo 1281, Coquimbo, Chile.
3 : CENAC, San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina.
4 : Univ La Serena, Dept Biol, La Serena, Chile.
5 : Univ Magallanes, Inst Patagonia, Ctr Estudios Hombre Austral, Punta Arenas, Chile.
6 : Univ Chile, Fac Ciencias Sociales, Dept Antropol, Santiago, Chile.
Source Climate Of The Past (1814-9324) (Copernicus Gesellschaft Mbh), 2014 , Vol. 10 , N. 3 , P. 1063-1078
DOI 10.5194/cp-10-1063-2014
WOS© Times Cited 35
Note Special issue The Past: A Compass for Future Earth – PAGES Young Scientists Meeting 2013 Editor(s): G. Chen, A.-L. Daniau, M. E. de Porras, A. Elmore, K. Mills, R. Saraswat, S. Phipps, A. Reyes, and T. Kiefer
Abstract

Multi-millennial environmental and climatic changes in central Chilean Patagonia (44-49 degrees S) during the Last Glacial-Interglacial cycle have been of particular interest as changes in the position and strength of the southern westerlies are the major forcing factor conditioning the environmental dynamics. Recent attempts to reconstruct regional environmental and climatic signals from central Chilean Patagonia reveal some discrepancies and unclear issues among the records. This paper presents the 13 ka pollen and charcoal records from Mallin El Embudo (44 degrees 40'S, 71 degrees 42'W) located in the deciduous Nothofagus forest in the middle Rio Cisnes valley. The paper aims to (1) establish the timing and magnitude of local vegetation changes and fire activity since the Late Glacial and (2) integrate these results at the regional scale in order to discuss the discrepancies and depict the environmental and climatic dynamics in central Chilean Patagonia since the Late Glacial. Open landscapes dominated by grasses associated with scattered Nothofagus forest patches dominated the middle Rio Cisnes valley between 13 and 11.2 ka suggesting low effective moisture but also indicating that landscape configuration after glacial retreat was still ongoing. At 11.2 ka, the sudden development of an open and quite dynamic Nothofagus forest probably associated with the synchronous high fire activity occurred, suggesting a rise in effective moisture associated with dry summers. Since 9.5 ka, the record reflects the presence of a closed Nothofagus forest related to higher effective moisture conditions than before combined with moderate dry summers that may have triggered a high frequency of low-magnitude crown fires that did not severely affect the forest. The forest experienced a slight canopy opening after 5.7 ka, probably due to slightly drier conditions than before followed by a sudden change to open forest conditions around 4.2 ka associated with fire and volcanic disturbances. Around 2 ka, the recovery of a closed Nothofagus forest related to slightly wetter conditions (similar to present) occurred and persisted under highly variable climatic conditions up to 0.1 ka when massive forest burning and logging due to European settlements occurred. Central Chilean Patagonian climatic and environmental changes at millennial-centennial timescales since the Late Glacial were driven by changes in the southern westerlies latitudinal position and/or intensity, but during the late Holocene fire, volcanism and humans arose as forces contributing to environmental dynamics.

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