Holocene paleoclimatic variation in The Cordoba Mountains (Argentina). A contribution to climate reconstruction though silicophytolith analysis from archaeological site El Alto 3.

Authors

  • Melisa A. Giorgis
  • Maria L. Lopez
  • Diego Rivero
  • Ana M. Cingolani

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31055/1851.2372.v50.n3.12526

Keywords:

Mountains, climate change, C3 and C4, vegetation change.

Abstract

: Holocene paleoclimatic variation in The Cordoba Mountains (Argentina). A contribution to climate reconstruction though silicophytolith analysis from archaeological site El Alto 3. The analysis of silicophytoliths is an increasingly used tool for paleoclimatic reconstructions. However, in Córdoba climatic reconstruction has been performed with other techniques. In this work we aimed to calculate international climatic indices through silicophytoliths, validate these indices with the current vegetation and climate distribution in the Mountains, and present the first paleoclimatic reconstruction through silicophytoliths for the oldest archaeological site in Cordoba. The international indices were consistent with the patterns of the current vegetation and climate distribution; though the coolness index was more robust and sensitive than the aridity index. Along the analyzed profile the silicophytoliths indicated a cold and humid/wet climate, which is characteristic of a mountain site, but they showed important variation in the coolness and aridity index. The climatic reconstruction was consistent with the previous studies, since it showed a peak of aridity at the beginning of the Holocene, followed by a wetter and warmer climate than the current climate, a subsequent peak of higher aridity and warm was coincident with the presence of the Arecaceae family, and finally it showed a temperature reduction and precipitation increase until the present

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Published

2015-10-18

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

“Holocene Paleoclimatic Variation in The Cordoba Mountains (Argentina). A Contribution to Climate Reconstruction Though Silicophytolith Analysis from Archaeological Site El Alto 3”. 2015. Boletín De La Sociedad Argentina De Botánica (Journal of the Argentine Botanical Society 50 (3): 361-75. https://doi.org/10.31055/1851.2372.v50.n3.12526.

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