TY - JOUR
T1 - SG06, a fully continuous and varved sediment core from Lake Suigetsu, Japan
T2 - Stratigraphy and potential for improving the radiocarbon calibration model and understanding of late Quaternary climate changes
AU - Suigetsu 2006 Project Members
AU - Nakagawa, Takeshi
AU - Gotanda, Katsuya
AU - Haraguchi, Tsuyoshi
AU - Danhara, Toru
AU - Yonenobu, Hitoshi
AU - Brauer, Achim
AU - Yokoyama, Yusuke
AU - Tada, Ryuji
AU - Takemura, Keiji
AU - Staff, Richard A.
AU - Payne, Rebecca
AU - Ramsey, Christopher Bronk
AU - Bryant, Charlotte
AU - Brock, Fiona
AU - Schlolaut, Gordon
AU - Marshall, Michael Henry
AU - Tarasov, Pavel
AU - Lamb, Henry
N1 - Funding Information:
The SG06 core was recovered as a major part of the project funded by the United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) (grant NE/D000289/1 ). Preliminary analyses of the core were also supported by two other NERC projects (grants SM/1219.0407/001 and NE/F003048/1 ), as well as a German DFG project (grant TA-540/3-1 to P. Tarasov) and a Japanese KAKENHI project (grant 211001002 to H. Yonenobu). Coring was conducted by a team of Seibushisui Co. Ltd. Japan led by Mr. A. Kitamura. The whole coring campaign was fully supported by Wakasa town, the mayor of which in 2006 was Mr. C. Senda. The authors thank Mr. T. Tanabe and Mr. H. Kojima of Wakasa Johmon Museum for their invaluable support for logistics. The authors also thank Hayase Fishermen’s Union for having allowed us to use a precious space of their cold storage. Our special thanks go to Prof. Y. Yasuda and Prof. H. Kitagawa, who opened this area of science in Japan and have always given invaluable support and encouragement to our project. The authors thank Dr. K. Aoki for providing latest information about Japanese tephra ages, and Prof. J. Lowe and an anonymous reviewer of the paper for their constructive suggestions.
PY - 2012/3/12
Y1 - 2012/3/12
N2 - The high potential of the varved sediments of Lake Suigetsu, central Japan, to provide a purely terrestrial radiocarbon calibration model and a chronology of palaeoclimatic changes has been widely recognised for the last two decades. However, this potential has not been fully realised since the only available long sediment core from the lake (‘SG93’) was extracted from a single bore hole and was therefore interrupted by gaps of unknown duration between successive core sections. In the summer of 2006, a new sediment core (‘SG06’) was recovered from the lake. Four separate boreholes were drilled and the parallel sets of cores recovered were found to overlap completely, without gaps between segments. This new record provides the ability to test existing atmospheric radiocarbon calibration models, as well as to assess the scale of inter-regional leads and lags in palaeoclimatic changes over the last Glacial–Interglacial cycle. Multi-disciplinary analyses from SG06 are still ongoing, but a reliable description of the sedimentary sequence needs to be provided to the wider science community before major outputs from the project are released, thereby allowing fully-informed critical evaluation of all subsequent releases of data based on the SG06 record. In this paper, we report key litho-stratigraphic information concerning the SG06 sediment core, highlighting changes in the clarity of annual laminations (varves) with depth, and possible implications for the mechanism of the climate change. We also discuss the potential of the SG06 record to meet the fundamental goals of the INQUA-INTIMATE project.
AB - The high potential of the varved sediments of Lake Suigetsu, central Japan, to provide a purely terrestrial radiocarbon calibration model and a chronology of palaeoclimatic changes has been widely recognised for the last two decades. However, this potential has not been fully realised since the only available long sediment core from the lake (‘SG93’) was extracted from a single bore hole and was therefore interrupted by gaps of unknown duration between successive core sections. In the summer of 2006, a new sediment core (‘SG06’) was recovered from the lake. Four separate boreholes were drilled and the parallel sets of cores recovered were found to overlap completely, without gaps between segments. This new record provides the ability to test existing atmospheric radiocarbon calibration models, as well as to assess the scale of inter-regional leads and lags in palaeoclimatic changes over the last Glacial–Interglacial cycle. Multi-disciplinary analyses from SG06 are still ongoing, but a reliable description of the sedimentary sequence needs to be provided to the wider science community before major outputs from the project are released, thereby allowing fully-informed critical evaluation of all subsequent releases of data based on the SG06 record. In this paper, we report key litho-stratigraphic information concerning the SG06 sediment core, highlighting changes in the clarity of annual laminations (varves) with depth, and possible implications for the mechanism of the climate change. We also discuss the potential of the SG06 record to meet the fundamental goals of the INQUA-INTIMATE project.
KW - Climate change
KW - Lacustrine sediment
KW - Lake Suigetsu
KW - Radiocarbon calibration
KW - Varves
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/2160/8702
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84857357473&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.12.013
DO - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.12.013
M3 - Article
SN - 0277-3791
VL - 36
SP - 164
EP - 176
JO - Quaternary Science Reviews
JF - Quaternary Science Reviews
ER -