NOAA/WDS Paleoclimatology - Zaca Lake, California 3000 Year Leaf Wax dD and Modern Vegetation Data
收藏NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information2026-04-23 收录
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The hydrogen isotopic composition of plant molecular markers in modern vegetation and marine sediments in southern California have been intensively studied. Here we report a late Holocene reconstruction from Zaca Lake in coastal southern California, together with modern hydrological and vegetation studies in the catchment. The small catchment and decadal sampling resolution throughout the 9 m, 3000 yr sedimentary record provided a high resolution terrigenous counterpart of nearby marine records from the Santa Barbara Basin. Today, dD values of precipitation average -51.5‰ ± 18 (1sigma, n = 7). Modern plant leaf wax dD values for the C28n-alkanoic acid averaged -141‰ ± 11 (1sigma, n = 10) for Quercus agrifolia, with a calculated fractionation relative to precipitation (Ewax/precip) of -94‰ ± 22 (1sigma, n = 10); in contrast, there was negligible production of the C28 acid by co-dominant Pinus coulteri. Downcore, the C28 acid dD values ranged between -101‰ and -177‰ (mean -150‰ ± 8, 1sigma, n = 490). Abundance distributions suggested that the sedimentary C28 acid was dominated by Quercus, implying that paleoprecipitation varied between extremes of −8‰ and −92‰ (mean −63‰ ± 14, compound 1σ, n = 490). The 3000 yr leaf wax D/H record from Zaca Lake revealed substantial temporal variability, greater than observed in a speleothem reconstruction of similar resolution. We suggest that the plant-based proxy may magnify the variability by sampling spring precipitation preferentially. Centennial-duration positive isotopic excursions were associated with more sub-tropical moisture sources and drier conditions including during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly, and negative excursions were associated with N Pacific sources and wetter conditions including during the Little Ice Age.



