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Peer-reviewed

Holocene climate evolution and human activity as recorded by the sediment record of lake Diss Mere, England

Laura Boyall, Celia Martín‐Puertas, Rik Tjallingii, Alice M. Milner, Simon Blockley

Journal of Quaternary Science · 2024

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Summary

ABSTRACT Lake sediments are ideal archives to evaluate the interactions between climatically driven environmental responses and human activity on seasonal to multi‐decadal timescales. This study focuses on the unique sediments of Diss Mere, the only lake in England providing an annually laminated (varved) record for most of the Holocene. We combine microfacies analysis with X‐ray core scanning data to explore the influence of natural and human‐led changes on sediment deposition over the past 10 200 years and evaluate the sensitivity of the lake sediments to climate variability through time. Variability of titanium (Ti), calcium (Ca) and silica (Si) explain most of the lithological changes observed in the sediment and we identify three stages with low (10 290–2070 cal a bp ), intermediate (

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1002/jqs.3646
Catalogue ID
SNmois7ptz-q195ef
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