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Título
Freshwater tufa record from Spain supports evidence for the past interglacial being wetter than the Holocene in the Mediterranean region
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Tufa
Past Interglacial
Paleo-hydrology
Spain
Mediterranean
Clasificación UNESCO
2506 Geología
25 Ciencias de la Tierra y del Espacio
Fecha de publicación
2011
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
David Domínguez-Villar, Juan A. Vázquez-Navarro, Hai Cheng, R. Lawrence Edwards, Freshwater tufa record from Spain supports evidence for the past interglacial being wetter than the Holocene in the Mediterranean region, Global and Planetary Change, Volume 77, Issues 3–4, 2011, Pages 129-141, ISSN 0921-8181, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2011.04.006. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818111000609)
Resumen
[EN] The sedimentation of spring-fed tufa deposits is subject to two main factors: the ground water discharge from
the spring and the supersaturation of such waters with respect to carbonate at the surface. In Trabaque
Canyon (central Spain), several spring tufa deposits were formed during the Pleistocene and Holocene, mostly
during mild periods. They were linked to the outflow of ground waters that in each period cropped at a
different site along the canyon, depending on the intersection of the water table and the thalweg. Recent
lowering of the water table due to changes in land uses have resulted in a downstream shift of the spring
location along the bottom of the valley, confirming the relationship between the water table level and the
spring location. The elevation of the deposits is independent of their age and geomorphologic evidence
suggests that although over ten metres of tufa has been repeatedly deposited and eroded, there was not a
lowering of the base level in the canyon since the last interglacial. Thus, it is possible to compare the water
table levels during the last two interglacial periods. Due to the link of the spring and the tufa deposits, the
location of the latter has been considered an indicator of ancient water table and consequently as a proxy of
the recharge by rainwater to the aquifer. Geomorphic comparison of deposits from the previous interglacial to
those from the Holocene indicates that the former are at higher elevations along the valley, suggesting that
this period was wetter than the Holocene. Comparison of Trabaque Canyon record with other paleohydrological reconstructions from Southern Europe and the Mediterranean agree, supporting the scarce
number of continental records in which interglacial comparisons are possible in the region.
URI
ISSN
0921-8181
DOI
10.1016/j.gloplacha.2011.04.006
Versión del editor
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- DGL. Artículos [364]













