PP31C-2265
Regional Variations in Middle Holocene Precipitation Across the Western United States
Abstract:
Most lacustrine paleoclimate records suggest that water levels were lower across the western US, due to warmer, drier conditions during the middle Holocene. Lake levels rose with increased precipitation and decreased evaporation in the late Holocene. The magnitude of the lake level changes and the timing of these transitions vary with latitude and local conditions such as proximity to the coast and elevation.
Favre Lake (2899 masl), located in the Ruby Mountains of northeastern Nevada filled gradually between 7625 and 5600 cal yr BP, after which lake level remained relatively stable for the remainder of the Holocene. Medicine Lake (2033 masl),lying within the caldera of Medicine Lake Volcano (northeastern California) filled to a maximum level between 11,400 and 6000 cal yr BP and then fluctuated by several meters during the remainder of the Holocene. The lowest elevation lake, Swamp Lake (1545 masl), exhibited the strongest record of changes in seasonality over the Holocene, beginning with a transition to warmer conditions ~10,800 cal yr BP, maximum drying between 7400-5500 cal yr BP, followed by a gradual increase in moisture for the remainder of the middle Holocene succeeded by a major shift to wetter conditions at about 3100 cal yr BP. Lower Bear Lake (2065 masl) in the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles is most strongly influenced by marine conditions. The overall Holocene trend is a gradual increase in salinity, suggesting drying conditions, but is also punctuated by several centuries-long pluvial events.