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07/19/2017 10:15

Millennial-scale fluctuations in Saharan dust supply across the decline of the African Humid Period

Susann Huster Stabsstelle Universitätskommunikation/Medienredaktion
Universität Leipzig

    The Sahara is the world's largest desert and dust source with significant impacts on trans-Atlantic terrestrial and large-scale marine ecosystems. Remote Saharan dust influences the earth's radiation budget and tropical North Atlantic ocean-atmosphere temperature variability that might even attenuate Hurricane activity. In a new research study an international team of geoscientists under direction of Dr. Christoph Zielhofer - Physical Geographer at Leipzig University in Germany - reconstructed the history of Saharan dust storms during the last 12.000 years.

    The researchers identified several millennial-scale phases of enhanced Saharan dust supplies during the transition of the former “green Sahara” to the present-day hyper-arid desert. The results were currently published in the famous geoscientific journal Quaternary Science Reviews.

    Physical Geographers and Geoscientists from Leipzig, Manchester and Island Universities as well as a meteorologist from Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research in Leipzig and two archaeologists from Cologne and Rabat were involved in the international research project. By the investigation of recovered cores from Lake Sidi Ali in the Moroccan Middle Atlas, the researcher traced back Saharan dust phases until a time of 12.000 years before present. ”We suggest that increases in Northern Saharan dust supply do not solely indicate sub-regional to regional aridity in Mediterranean Northwest Africa but might reflect aridity at a trans-Saharan scale”, said Christoph Zielhofer.

    The last 12.000 years of Saharan history comprises the end of the so-called African Humid Period. This transition toward the present-day hyper-arid desert took place during approximately 3000 to 7000 years before present following the current scientific debate. Before, the Saharan region was characterised by dry steppe and savannahs with elephants, lions and a large number of animals that occupy sub-Saharan biotopes under current climatic conditions. The large grasslands were used by pastoral groups that leaved a lot of archaeological remains in the nowadays hostile landscape. “Our history of Saharan dust storms provides chronological information about past desiccation phases of the Sahara that must have severe consequences for former vegetation cover, wildlife and humans“, said Hans von Suchodoletz, dust researcher at the Institute of Geography in Leipzig.

    The researcher discovered the surprising result that the end of the African Humid Period was not characterised by a single climatic transition toward a drier stage as formerly assumed but by multiple millennial-scale dust phases. The most prominent took place at approximately 10.200, 8.200 and 6.600 to 6.000 years before present. “The dust intervals at Lake Sidi Ali were interrupted by phases of low dust supply until at the latest at 4.700 years before present the atmospheric dust load was comparable to current climatic conditions”, said Christoph Zielhofer.


    The results of the dust study were published (17th July 2017) in:
    Zielhofer, C., von Suchodoletz, H., Fletcher, W.J., Dietze, E., Schneider, B., Schlegel, M., Schepanski, K., Weninger, B., Mikdad, A., Mischke, S., 2017.

    "Millennial-scale fluctuations in Saharan dust supply across the decline of the African Humid Period" Quaternary Science Reviews 171, 119–135.
    doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.07.010

    Principal Investigators:

    Dr Christoph Zielhofer
    zielhofer@uni-leipzig.de
    Chair of Physical Geography, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany
    phone: +49 341 97-32965

    Dr William Fletcher
    Department of Geography, School of Environment, Education and Development, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom

    Dr Steffen Mischke
    Faculty of Earth Sciences, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, Iceland


    More information:

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379117301580


    Images

    The Lake Sidi Ali is located in the Moroccan Middle Atlas at 2.080 metres above sea-level. The position of the lake is in the North Saharan desert margin
    The Lake Sidi Ali is located in the Moroccan Middle Atlas at 2.080 metres above sea-level. The posit ...
    Source: Photo: Sidi Ali dust research group

    Members of the international research team are preparing the drilling campaign
    Members of the international research team are preparing the drilling campaign
    Source: Photo: Sidi Ali dust research group


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars, all interested persons
    Geosciences
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

    The Lake Sidi Ali is located in the Moroccan Middle Atlas at 2.080 metres above sea-level. The position of the lake is in the North Saharan desert margin


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    Members of the international research team are preparing the drilling campaign


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