TY - JOUR
T1 - Palaeolimnological development of Lake Njargajavri, northern Finnish Lapland, in a changing Holocene climate and environment
AU - Sarmaja-Korjonen, K
AU - Nyman, M
AU - Kultti, S
AU - Väliranta, M
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - "This study used palaeolimnological approaches to determine how Holocene climatic and environmental changes affected aquatic assemblages in a subarctic lake. Sediments of the small Lake Njargajavri, in northern Finnish Lapland above the present treeline, were studied using multi-proxy methods. The palaeolimnological development of the lake was assessed by analyses of chironomids, Cladocera and diatoms. The lake was formed in the early Holocene and was characterized by prominent erosion and leaching from poorly developed soils before the establishment of birch forests, resulting in a high pH and trophic state. The lake level started to lower as early as ca. 10,200 cal. BP. In the resulting shallow basin, rich in aquatic mosses, pH decreased and a diverse cladoceran and chironomid assemblage developed. It is likely that there was a slight rise in the water level ca. 8000 cal. BP. Later, during the mid-Holocene characterized by low effective moisture detected elsewhere in Fennoscandia, the lake probably completely dried out; this is manifest as a hiatus in the stratigraphy. The sediment record continues from ca. 5000 cal. BP onwards as the lake formed again due to increased effective moisture. The new lake was characterized by very low pH. The possible spread of pine to the catchment and the development of heath community may have contributed to the unusually steep (for northern Fennoscandia) decline in pH via change in soils, together with the natural decrease in leaching of base cations. Furthermore, the change in pH may have been driven by cooling climate, affecting the balance of dissolved inorganic carbon in the lake."
AB - "This study used palaeolimnological approaches to determine how Holocene climatic and environmental changes affected aquatic assemblages in a subarctic lake. Sediments of the small Lake Njargajavri, in northern Finnish Lapland above the present treeline, were studied using multi-proxy methods. The palaeolimnological development of the lake was assessed by analyses of chironomids, Cladocera and diatoms. The lake was formed in the early Holocene and was characterized by prominent erosion and leaching from poorly developed soils before the establishment of birch forests, resulting in a high pH and trophic state. The lake level started to lower as early as ca. 10,200 cal. BP. In the resulting shallow basin, rich in aquatic mosses, pH decreased and a diverse cladoceran and chironomid assemblage developed. It is likely that there was a slight rise in the water level ca. 8000 cal. BP. Later, during the mid-Holocene characterized by low effective moisture detected elsewhere in Fennoscandia, the lake probably completely dried out; this is manifest as a hiatus in the stratigraphy. The sediment record continues from ca. 5000 cal. BP onwards as the lake formed again due to increased effective moisture. The new lake was characterized by very low pH. The possible spread of pine to the catchment and the development of heath community may have contributed to the unusually steep (for northern Fennoscandia) decline in pH via change in soils, together with the natural decrease in leaching of base cations. Furthermore, the change in pH may have been driven by cooling climate, affecting the balance of dissolved inorganic carbon in the lake."
KW - chironomid-inferred july air temperature
KW - Cladocera
KW - diatoms
KW - Holocene lake-level changes
KW - multi-proxy research
KW - northern Fennoscandia
KW - TREE-LINE AREA
KW - ARCTIC FENNOSCANDIAN LAKES
KW - AIR TEMPERATURES
KW - KOLA-PENINSULA
KW - LEVEL CHANGES
KW - WATER-LEVEL
KW - QUANTITATIVE INDICATORS
KW - CHIRONOMID ASSEMBLAGES
KW - NORTHWEST-TERRITORIES
KW - VEGETATION CHANGES
KW - 119 Other natural sciences
U2 - 10.1007/s10933-005-7337-6
DO - 10.1007/s10933-005-7337-6
M3 - Article
SN - 0921-2728
VL - 35
SP - 65
EP - 81
JO - Journal of Paleolimnology
JF - Journal of Paleolimnology
ER -