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Response of East African climate to orbital forcing during the last two glacial-interglacial cycles: The Lake Naivasha Coring Project

Subject Area Palaeontology
Term from 2003 to 2007
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 5399684
 
High-quality chronologies of late Pleistocene tropical climate have become increasingly important in discussions concerning tropical forcing of deglaciation, i.e., the transition from a glacial to an interglacial. The key argument of this hypothesis is that tropical climate leads high-latitude ice volumes by several thousand years. A tropical forcing of deglaciation would also help to explain why ice ages occur in both hemispheres simultaneously, although the changes in solar irradiance from orbital variations have opposite effects in the two hemispheres. Lake Naivasha provides a unique opportunity to study a continuous record of tropical climate changes during the last two glacial-interglacial cycles (approximately 175 kyr) through sedimentologic and paleoecologic changes reflected in the sediments. We propose a two-step strategy to reconstruct the lake history during this period: (A) a high-resolution seismic survey to characterize the depositional setting, lake-level fluctuations and neotectonics in the Naivasha basin. This survey will also guide up to the best sites for (B) two 50- and 40-m-long sediment cores from the present lake area. These sediment records are expected to fill the gap between a well-studied section exposed south of the present lake (175 to 60 kyr before present) and two sediment cores studied in the 1960's (25 kyr to present).
DFG Programme Research Grants
Participating Person Professor Manfred Strecker, Ph.D.
 
 

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