A MULTI-PROXY INVESTIGATION OF LAKE SEDIMENT FROM THE UINTA MOUNTAINS, UTAH
Loss on ignition (LOI), biogenic silica (BSi), carbon to nitrogen ratios (C:N), and grain size distribution were analyzed at 1-cm intervals throughout both cores. AMS 14C dating of terrestrial macrofossils indicates that the cores contain sediment from ca. 14 ka BP through ca. 2 ka BP. Overall, the Reader Lake record features high variability in LOI, BSi, and grain size, while the Elbow Lake record features a prolonged interval of elevated LOI, C:N ratios, and grain size between 10 and 4 ka BP. Both lakes exhibit a pronounced shift in climate centered on 4 ka BP. In Reader Lake, this shift is characterized by unusually high LOI and low BSi, suggesting a profound change in the character of sediment accumulating in the lake at this time. In Elbow Lake, this event marks the end of a 6,000-year period of heightened C:N ratios.
Differences between the two records may reflect the geomorphology of the lake basins themselves. Reader Lake lacks an inflowing stream and likely operated as a closed basin for most of its history. Elbow Lake, on the other hand, has an active inflow linked to a large delta. Past changes in the amount or intensity of precipitation over this watershed may, therefore, have impacted the two lakes in different ways, underscoring the need to consider geomorphic setting when evaluating the suitability of a specific lake for a paleolimnological study.