Abstract
A lake sediment core recovered from Lake V57 on Victoria Island, Nunavut, Canada, spanning the last 2000 years, was analyzed for sub-fossil midge remains and organic-matter content (estimated by loss-on-ignition (LOI)). Significant changes in midge community composition occurred during the last 2000 years, with a distinct midge community appearing after 1600 AD. The chironomid community between 0 and 1600 AD was dominated by Heterotrissocladius, Tanytarsus, Abiskomyia, and Paracladius. At approximately 1600 AD, Heterotrissocladius decreased in relative abundance and taxa such as Corynocera ambigua, C. oliveri, Psectrocladius sordidellus type, and Pentanneurini increased in relative abundance. Previously published midge-based inference models for average July air temperature (AJAT) and summer surface–water temperature (SSWT) were applied to the subfossil midge stratigraphy. The AJAT reconstruction indicates relatively cool conditions existed between 1100 and 1600 AD, with exceptional warming occuring after 1600 AD, as lake productivity inferred from organic-matter content increased concomitantly with midge-inferred AJAT and SSWT. The cooler conditions between 1200 and 1600 AD, and the pattern of warming over recent centuries inferred from Lake V57 is broadly consistent with temperature-sensitive biogenic silica records from other sites in the central Canadian Arctic and the treeline zone to the south suggesting a regionally synchronous response to climate forcing.
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Acknowledgments
We thank Chase Langford (Department of Geography, UCLA) for creating the site map. We benefited greatly from conversations with J.P. Smol regarding the relationship between high-latitude warming and lake stratification, and the implication that stratification may have on chironomid-based temperature reconstructions. We thank D. Francis, D. Kaufman, and an anonymous reviewer for providing excellent, constructive suggestions that helped to greatly improve the paper. We are grateful to M. Peros, K. Gajewski, and S. Finkelstein for providing published and unpublished data incorporated in Fig. 5. We thank S. Handwork and the staff at NOSAMS for providing the radiocarbon dates. We are grateful to NSF, VECO, and Nunavut Research Institute (NRI) for field and logistical support. A NSF Paleoclimate award (ATM-0442177) to D.F.P and G.M.M. and Office of Polar Program awards to D.F.P (ARC-0455089) and G.M.M. (ARC-0455056) funded this work. This is a contribution to the ARCSS 2 kyr project.
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This is one of fourteen papers published in a special issue dedicated to reconstructing late Holocene climate change from Arctic lake sediments. The special issue is a contribution to the International Polar Year and was edited by Darrell Kaufman.
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Porinchu, D.F., MacDonald, G.M. & Rolland, N. A 2000 year midge-based paleotemperature reconstruction from the Canadian Arctic archipelago. J Paleolimnol 41, 177–188 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-008-9263-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-008-9263-x