Major hydrological regime change along the semiarid western coast of South America during the early Holocene
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2012-09-08Metadata
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Ortega, Cristina
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Major hydrological regime change along the semiarid western coast of South America during the early Holocene
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Abstract
Water availability in the semiarid western coast of Chile (30–32°S) is conditioned by high interannual precipitation
variability, reflecting the transition between arid subtropical and moist mid-latitude climates in the Southeastern
Pacific Ocean. A paleoclimate reconstruction based on the latest Pleistocene–Holocene geological record
from the Quebrada Santa Julia archeological site in Chile (31°50′S) and on modern meteorological mechanisms
producing alluvial episodes in this region indicates a major change in the rainfall regime shortly after
8600 cal yr BP. This, together with other paleoclimate proxies along the west coast of South America (34°–
14°S), suggests La Niña-like conditions 13,000–8600 cal yr BP. Based on sedimentological and geomorphologic
evidence, we hypothesized that the absence of heavy rainfall events in northern Chile and the new hydrological
regime that prevailed ca. 8600–5700 cal yr BP in north-central Chile resulted froman increase in the large-scale
westerly flow over central Chile, as expected in near-neutral ENSO conditions. This atmospheric circulation
anomaly is compatible with an equatorward shift of the influence of the Southeast Pacific Subtropical Anticyclone
relative to the early Holocene, prior to the onset of modern ENSO variability.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125961
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Quaternary Research 78 (2012) 513–527
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