Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The North Atlantic as a Quaternary magnetic archive
- 3 Palaeomonsoons I: the magnetic record of palaeoclimate in the terrestrial loess and palaeosol sequences
- 4 Palaeomonsoons II: magnetic records of aeolian dust in Quaternary sediments of the Indian Ocean
- 5 Bacterial magnetite and the Quaternary record
- 6 Incidence and significance of magnetic iron sulphides in Quaternary sediments and soils
- 7 Holocene environmental change from magnetic proxies in lake sediments
- 8 Magnetic monitoring of air- land- and water-pollution
- 9 Environmental factors affecting geomagnetic field palaeointensity estimates from sediments
- 10 Magnetic cyclostratigraphy: high-resolution dating in and beyond the Quaternary and analysis of periodic changes in diagenesis and sedimentary magnetism
- Index
7 - Holocene environmental change from magnetic proxies in lake sediments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The North Atlantic as a Quaternary magnetic archive
- 3 Palaeomonsoons I: the magnetic record of palaeoclimate in the terrestrial loess and palaeosol sequences
- 4 Palaeomonsoons II: magnetic records of aeolian dust in Quaternary sediments of the Indian Ocean
- 5 Bacterial magnetite and the Quaternary record
- 6 Incidence and significance of magnetic iron sulphides in Quaternary sediments and soils
- 7 Holocene environmental change from magnetic proxies in lake sediments
- 8 Magnetic monitoring of air- land- and water-pollution
- 9 Environmental factors affecting geomagnetic field palaeointensity estimates from sediments
- 10 Magnetic cyclostratigraphy: high-resolution dating in and beyond the Quaternary and analysis of periodic changes in diagenesis and sedimentary magnetism
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Lake sediments are natural archives of environmental information. Material settling on a lake bed may have originated from the atmosphere, the surrounding catchment or the lake itself, and samples of accumulated sediment may be examined in a variety of ways to reconstruct past environmental conditions. Since 1975, the sediments from over 100 different lakes world-wide have been analysed for their magnetic properties. This chapter is a review of the approaches which have been developed to interpret magnetic measurements and a summary of the environmental information which has been gained from magnetic records in different contexts – recent pollution, human and climate impact on hydrological processe and climate change. The focus is on the Holocene period but records which span glacial–interglacial timescales are briefly considered.
Lough Neagh revisited
When presented with a pollen diagram (Fig. 7.1) from Holocene lake sediments which displayed the same features as the sediment's record of magnetic susceptibility, a sediment property for which at the time little was known, there were alternative responses. A bizarre but unimportant coincidence? Or a correlation suggesting new insight, which demanded a closer look? In choosing the latter response, Frank Oldfield and Roy Thompson triggered not only new interest in the magnetic properties of environmental materials but also led a path of discovery along which completely novel applications of using magnetic measurements rapidly appeared.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Quaternary Climates, Environments and Magnetism , pp. 231 - 278Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
- 59
- Cited by