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Climate change at the monsoon/Westerly boundary in Northern Mexico
Authors:S E Metcalfe  A Bimpson  A J Courtice  S L O‘Hara  D M Taylor
Institution:(1) Department of Geography, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH8 9XP, UK;(2) School of Geography and Earth Resources, University of Hull, Hull, HU6 7RX, UK;(3) Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, S10 2TN, UK
Abstract:Northern Mexico lies close to the present day boundary between mid-latitude (Westerly) and tropical (monsoonal) sources of moisture. Studies from the adjacent southwest USA have shown major changes in lake levels and vegetation distributions over the late Quaternary which have been interpreted in terms of significant variations in the relative strengths and positions of these climate systems. Palaeoclimatic data from this area have, however, left a number of unresolved questions which can only be answered by extending work into northern Mexico, closer to the major source of summer (monsoonal) rain, the Gulf of Mexico. Studies of palaeolake sediments from a series of hydrologically closed lake basins across a range of altitudes (1280 to 2200 m a.s.l.) in northern Chihuahua are in progress using geochemical, mineral magnetic, diatom and plant microfossil analyses. Preliminary results are presented from the Alta Babícora and Encinillas basins. The sites provide records of lacustrine deposition between >11thinsp000 and about 2500 yr BP. The diatom record from Babíora provides clear evidence for a deep water lake in this basin in the late glacial which persisted into the early Holocene. A dry episode coinciding with the timing of the Younger Dryas is recorded in Alta Babícora. Conditions wetter than present are indicated up to at least 7000 yr BP.
Keywords:Mexico  palaeoclimate  sediments  diatoms  pollen
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