GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017

Paper No. 265-1
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-6:30 PM

A MULTIPROXY APPROACH TO UNRAVELING CLIMATE AND HUMAN DEMOGRAPHY IN THE PERUVIAN ALTIPLANO FROM A 5000 YEAR LAKE SEDIMENT CORE


VAUGHT-MIJARES, Roxanna M.1, HILLMAN, Aubrey L.1, ABBOTT, Mark B.2, WERNE, Josef P.2 and ARKUSH, Elizabeth N.3, (1)School of Geosciences, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, 611 McKinley St, 333 Hamilton Hall, Lafayette, LA 70504, (2)Department of Geology & Environmental Science, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, (3)Department of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, roxanna.vaught@gmail.com

Drought and flood events are thought to have shaped the ways in which Andean societies have adapted to life in the Titicaca Basin region, particularly with regard to land use practices and settlement patterns. This study examines a small lake in the region, Laguna Orurillo. Water isotopes suggest that the lake primarily loses water through evaporation, making it hydrologically sensitive. In 2015, a 3.4 m overlapping sediment record was collected and inspected for evidence of shallow water facies and erosional unconformities to reconstruct paleohydrology. Sediment core chronology was established using 7 AMS radiocarbon dates and 210Pb dating and indicates that the core spans ~5000 years. Additional sediment core measurements include magnetic susceptibility, bulk density, organic/carbonate content, and XRD. Results show a pronounced change in sediment composition from brittle, angular salt deposits to massive calcareous silt and clay around 5000 years BP. Multiple transitions from clay to sand show potential lake level depressions at 1540, 2090, and 2230, yr BP that are supported by a drastic increase in carbonate composition from 2760-1600 yr BP. Additional shallow-water periods may be reflected in the presence of rip-up clasts from 4000 to 3000 yr BP. These early interpretations align well with existing hydrologic records from Lake Titicaca.

In order to develop a more detailed climate and land use record, isotope analyses of authigenic carbonate minerals using δ13C and δ18O and leaf waxes using δD are being developed. Ultimately, this record will be linked with records from nearby Lagunas Arapa and Umayo. Additional proxies for human population such as fecal 5β-stanols and proximal anthropologic surveys will be synthesized to contribute to a regional understanding of Holocene climate variability and human demography in the Peruvian Altiplano.