Insights into continental temperatures in the northwestern Black Sea area during the Last Glacial period using branched tetraether lipids. Sanchi, L., Ménot, G., & Bard, E. Quaternary Science Reviews, 84:98--108, January, 2014.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
In the continental realm, continuous quantitative temperature reconstructions spanning the Last Glacial are rare, especially in central and eastern Europe. Here, we provide a reconstruction from the northwestern Black Sea catchment, spanning 40 to 9ka BP, from a study of the relative distribution of branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) in Black Sea lacustrine sediments. First, the origins of brGDGTs are discussed. The comparison of geochemical proxies from the same core supports a dominant terrestrial origin for brGDGTs during the Last Glacial, and a strong decrease in the soil derived brGDGT proportion toward the Holocene. Since the lowering of soil vs. lacustrine derived brGDGTs is prone to bias the temperature signal that is reconstructed using a soil calibration, a correction for in situ-production is applied. The corrected signal is compared to independent discrete temperature records from the study area. The brGDGT-temperature relative evolution reconstructed in this work provides additional insight regarding millennial-scale climate variability in central and eastern Europe. Notably, the imprints of Heinrich event cold spells and Lateglacial climatic oscillations are consistent with other regional paleorecords from the Northern Hemisphere.© 2013 Elsevier Ltd.
@article{ sanchi_insights_2014,
  title = {Insights into continental temperatures in the northwestern {Black} {Sea} area during the {Last} {Glacial} period using branched tetraether lipids},
  volume = {84},
  doi = {10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.11.013},
  abstract = {In the continental realm, continuous quantitative temperature reconstructions spanning the Last Glacial are rare, especially in central and eastern Europe. Here, we provide a reconstruction from the northwestern Black Sea catchment, spanning 40 to 9ka BP, from a study of the relative distribution of branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) in Black Sea lacustrine sediments. First, the origins of brGDGTs are discussed. The comparison of geochemical proxies from the same core supports a dominant terrestrial origin for brGDGTs during the Last Glacial, and a strong decrease in the soil derived brGDGT proportion toward the Holocene. Since the lowering of soil vs. lacustrine derived brGDGTs is prone to bias the temperature signal that is reconstructed using a soil calibration, a correction for in situ-production is applied. The corrected signal is compared to independent discrete temperature records from the study area. The brGDGT-temperature relative evolution reconstructed in this work provides additional insight regarding millennial-scale climate variability in central and eastern Europe. Notably, the imprints of Heinrich event cold spells and Lateglacial climatic oscillations are consistent with other regional paleorecords from the Northern Hemisphere.© 2013 Elsevier Ltd.},
  language = {en},
  journal = {Quaternary Science Reviews},
  author = {Sanchi, L. and Ménot, G. and Bard, Edouard},
  month = {January},
  year = {2014},
  pages = {98--108},
  file = {SCOPUS Snapshot:C\:\\Users\̧onsultation\\AppData\\Roaming\\Mozilla\\Firefox\\Profiles\\1rk8mjlp.julien\\zotero\\storage\\7U2KAADC\\display.html:text/html}
}

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