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Mid-Wisconsin seasonal temperatures reconstructed from fossil beetle assemblages in eastern North America: comparisons with other proxy records from the Northern Hemisphere

✍ Scribed by Scott A. Elias


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
162 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0267-8179

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✦ Synopsis


Mutual climatic range (MCR) analysis was applied to 15 North American beetle assemblages spanning the interval from Ͼ 52 000 to 17 200 yr BP, bracketing a Mid-Wisconsin interstadial interval. The analyses yielded estimates of mean July (TMAX) and mean January (TMIN) temperatures. The oldest assemblage (Ͼ 52 ka) yielded TMAX values 7.5-8°C lower than present and TMIN values 15-18°C lower than present. A Mid-Wisconsin interstadial warming dating from 43.5-39 ka was rapid and intense. At the peak of the warming event, about 42 ka, TMAX values were only 1-2°C lower than modern. This level of amelioration apparently lasted only about 2000-3000 yr. By 23.7 ka, TMAX values declined to 11.5-10°C lower than modern, but another, small-scale amelioration is indicated by assemblages dating from 20.5 to 19.7 ka. The interstadial event recorded from the site at Titusville, Pennsylvania closely matches the timing and intensity of the climate change estimated from British beetle faunas in the Upton Warren interstadial. Another warm interval (ca. 31-32.5 ka) has been documented from fossil beetle assemblages in Europe and North America.