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100 _aFontana, Luciane
_952282
245 _aThe impact of climate change and human activity on the ecological status of Bosten Lake, NW China, revealed by a diatom record for the last 2000 years/
260 _bsage
_c2019
300 _aVol 29, Issue 12, 2019 : (1871-1884 p.).
520 _aWe present a 2000-year high-resolution diatom record from Bosten Lake (Yanqi Basin, Xinjiang), which is the largest inland freshwater lake in China. Our aims were to investigate the influence of climate change and human activity on its aquatic ecology during the late Holocene. During AD 280–480, a low water level and high salinity occurred, based on the dominance of epipelic and brackish diatoms. In addition, the diatom stratigraphy, combined with records of mean grain size and carbonate content, suggests that the lake experienced a high level of eolian input from the surrounding dunes. We hypothesize that during this interval, Loulan Kingdom, an important city of the Han Dynasty, located downstream of Bosten Lake, was abandoned due to the increasing scarcity of water resources and related harsh environmental conditions, including stronger eolian activity, which were the consequences of climate change. The dominance of meso-eutrophic small fragilarioid diatoms coincides with warm and arid intervals which also correspond to intensified human activity. These intervals correspond to the development of the Tang Dynasty (from ~AD 600), the ‘Medieval Warm Period’ (AD 1000–1200), and the last ~200 years. A shift from meso-eutrophic/benthic diatoms to oligotrophic/planktonic diatoms occurred during an interval of enhanced precipitation throughout the humid ‘Little Ice Age’ (AD 1600–1800). A return to markedly eutrophic conditions and a decreasing lake level occurred after the ‘Little Ice Age’, reflecting the more arid regional environment of the last 200 years. The high variability of the proxies suggests that both climate change and human activity were the major drivers of the ecological status of Bosten Lake during the late Holocene. We suggest that both the continuous increase of human activity and ongoing global warming will cause the major eutrophication or salinization of the freshwater lakes in the arid zone of northwest China.
650 _adiatoms,
_951325
650 _ahuman disturbance,
_952283
650 _a ‘Little Ice Age’,
_951726
650 _a Loulan Kingdom,
_951886
650 _aTang Dynasty
_952284
700 _aSun, Mingjie
_952285
700 _aHuang, Xiaozhong
_952286
773 0 _012756
_916504
_dLondon: Sage Publication Ltd, 2019.
_tHolocene/
_x09596836
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0959683619865586
942 _2ddc
_cART
999 _c12871
_d12871