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Introduction to the JoPL special issue, “Holocene paleoenvironmental records from Arctic lake sediment”

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Abstract

The 18 papers in this Special Issue of the Journal of Paleolimnology report new records of Holocene environmental and climate change from Arctic lake sediment. At least 15 distinct physical, chemical, and biological properties were analyzed at lakes located across the North American Arctic and subarctic, and northwestern Europe. The studies are notable for their multi-proxy approach (eight present data for at least five different proxies), and for the high quality of their geochronological control. Three of the studies analyzed sediment from more than one lake to test the influence of contrasting physiographic settings on the response of proxies to the same climate forcing. The sedimentary sequences analyzed in seven studies extend beyond 11.5 cal ka, providing evidence for pronounced climate shifts that took place during the late-glacial period. Two-thirds extend beyond 8 cal ka; many of these records were interpreted in terms of the shift in temperature and moisture that occurred during the transition from the warm early to middle Holocene to the cooler late Holocene. These records contribute to the growing network of sites that is needed to reconstruct the spatial pattern of this pronounced paleoclimate transition, and to address how ocean-atmospheric circulation changed with the mean state of climate.

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Acknowledgments

The 18 papers in this volume benefited from the generous and rigorous input of 53 peer reviewers. Their dedication to the review process and their insights into limnological records of paleoenvironmental and climatic change improved the presentation and guided the interpretation of results. I thank Andrew Henderson, JoPL Book Review Editor for handling the editorial duties for the papers that I authored, and Yarrow Axford for helpful comments on this introduction. Bruce Bauer at the World Data Center for Paleoclimatology provided support for the data archive. Research and project coordination for this volume were funded primarily by the Arctic System Science Program (ARCSS) of the US National Science Foundation, with assistance from the Arctic Research Consortium of the United States (ARCUS). I am grateful to the IGBP—Past Global Changes (PAGES) International Project Office in Bern, Switzerland for hosting me as a visiting scientist while I edited this volume.

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Correspondence to Darrell S. Kaufman.

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Kaufman, D.S. Introduction to the JoPL special issue, “Holocene paleoenvironmental records from Arctic lake sediment”. J Paleolimnol 48, 1–7 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-012-9621-6

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-012-9621-6

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