Paper No. 2
Presentation Time: 8:20 AM
EASTERN U.S. HOLOCENE CLIMATE VARIABILITY FROM CHESAPEAKE BAY SEDIMENTS
Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in North America, exhibits seasonal and inter-annual salinity variability controlled primarily by fluctuations in river discharge, which in turn are linked to regional precipitation. The oxygen isotopic composition of modern Chesapeake water (d18Obay) is strongly correlated with salinity (r2=0.96), and varies based on the mixing of fresh and marine bay water. Reconstruction of temporal trends in d18Obay were determined based on the d18Ocalcite of the benthic foraminifer Elphidium, and Mg/Ca paleothermometry from paired specimens of the ostracode Loxoconcha to correct for temperature influence on d18O. Salinity reconstructions in mesohaline and polyhaline regions show a range of d18Obay values from ~-0.5 to 3.5 per mil, which convert to paleosalinities from ~14 to > 30 ppt. Bay salinity and temperature exhibit multi-decadal and centennial variability, with large temperature excursions during the Little Ice Age (~1400-1900) and Medieval Warm Period (~800-1300) that may be indicative of North Atlantic circulation processes. Simple regression models used to estimate Susquehanna discharge and regional precipitation from salinity reconstructions suggest precipitation varied between 5 to >12 cm/month. Precipitation values show similar multi-decadal and centennial droughts and wet intervals, ~ 30% drier mean early Holocene conditions, and a wetter and more variable twentieth century that may indicate anomalous recent climate behavior.