2019
DOI: 10.1177/0959683619865599
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Paleoenvironmental shifts spanning the last ~6000 years and recent anthropogenic controls inferred from a high-altitude temperate lake: Anchar Lake, NW Himalaya

Abstract: Integrating multiproxy results (geochemistry, mineral magnetism, grain size, and C/N ratio variability supported by 14C AMS dating), obtained from a 1.4-m sediment core retrieved from high-altitude Anchar Lake, Kashmir Valley, NW Himalaya, we present a 6000-years record of paleoenvironmental and paleolimnological shifts. Phase 1 (6000–4700 cal. yr BP) revealed a wetter climate with a significant terrestrial input corresponding to the gradual strengthening of the westerlies. Phase 2 (4700–3900 cal. yr BP) refle… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Millennial to centennial scale climate changes as observed in the Wular Lake sediments have also been documented by other studies from the Himalayan region (Babeesh et al, 2019; Demske et al, 2009; Khan et al, 2018; Lone et al, 2019; Rawat et al, 2015; Srivastava et al, 2017), in south Indian lakes and deltas (Achyuthan et al, 2016; Ponton et al, 2012; Rajmanickam et al, 2016; Sarkar et al, 2015), marine sediment records (Bond et al, 1997; Cullen et al, 2000; Gupta et al, 2003; Nagasundaram et al, 2014; Orme et al, 2018; Staubwasser et al, 2003), ice core records (Grootes and Stuiver 1997; Stuiver et al, 1995; Thompson et al, 1997), and speleothem records (Cai et al, 2010; Fleitmann et al, 2003; Lone et al, 2014; Smith et al, 2016; Wang et al, 2005; Yadava et al, 2004). These palaeoclimate records provide an integrated record that includes short and extreme dry/cool events such as at 10,300 yr BP, 8200 yr BP, 6300 yr BP, 4200 yr BP and 600–400 yr BP during the Holocene.…”
Section: A Regional Comparison Of the Palaeoclimate Recordssupporting
confidence: 76%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Millennial to centennial scale climate changes as observed in the Wular Lake sediments have also been documented by other studies from the Himalayan region (Babeesh et al, 2019; Demske et al, 2009; Khan et al, 2018; Lone et al, 2019; Rawat et al, 2015; Srivastava et al, 2017), in south Indian lakes and deltas (Achyuthan et al, 2016; Ponton et al, 2012; Rajmanickam et al, 2016; Sarkar et al, 2015), marine sediment records (Bond et al, 1997; Cullen et al, 2000; Gupta et al, 2003; Nagasundaram et al, 2014; Orme et al, 2018; Staubwasser et al, 2003), ice core records (Grootes and Stuiver 1997; Stuiver et al, 1995; Thompson et al, 1997), and speleothem records (Cai et al, 2010; Fleitmann et al, 2003; Lone et al, 2014; Smith et al, 2016; Wang et al, 2005; Yadava et al, 2004). These palaeoclimate records provide an integrated record that includes short and extreme dry/cool events such as at 10,300 yr BP, 8200 yr BP, 6300 yr BP, 4200 yr BP and 600–400 yr BP during the Holocene.…”
Section: A Regional Comparison Of the Palaeoclimate Recordssupporting
confidence: 76%
“…During the Holocene, climate varied in the northwest Himalayas (Das et al, 2010; Lone et al, 2019). Lesser Himalaya experienced warm and wet climate regime during the Early Holocene and dry and cold during the Late-Holocene (Das et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…( h ) A/C pollen ratio, (lake) Tso Moriri, Ladakh 57 . ( i ) Inferred environmental conditions, multiple records, Kashmir Valley 43 , 54 , 55 . …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite localised variability among regional lake or sediment records, multiple proxies indicate an overall drier environment during this period 50 53 . Environmental indicators from the current study sites 43 , other Kashmir Valley records 54 , 55 (Fig. 2 i) and proximal lake records from Ladakh (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Isolated, present-day vestiges of Lake Kerewa (Wular, Anchar, Dal and Manasbal Lakes, all with depths less than 14 m) are pinned to the NE edge of the valley as a result of uplift of the Pir Panjal range. With sedimentation rates of 0.15-0.44 mm/a (Shah et al, 2019;Lone et al, 2020) these surviving lakes would fill with sediment were it not for the persistent rise of the Jhelum's outlet above the NE side of the valley, which increments at the time of great thrust earthquakes beneath the Pir Panjal. Depending on the throw of these earthquakes each new event increases lake capacity, and the potential maximum depth of flooding.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%