Reflection of Holocene climatic changes in mineralogy of bottom sediments from Yarkovsky Pool of Lake Chany (southern West Siberia)
Reflection of Holocene climatic changes in mineralogy of bottom sediments from Yarkovsky Pool of Lake Chany (southern West Siberia)
Russian Geology and Geophysics (June 2017) 58 (6): 692-701
- aragonite
- Asia
- C-13/C-12
- carbon
- carbonates
- Cenozoic
- climate change
- Commonwealth of Independent States
- dolomite
- Holocene
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- lacustrine environment
- lake sediments
- Novosibirsk Russian Federation
- O-18/O-16
- oxygen
- paleoclimatology
- Quaternary
- Russian Federation
- sediments
- stable isotopes
- West Siberia
- X-ray diffraction data
- Baraba Steppe
- Chany Lakes
- Yarkovskiy Pond
Sediments of lakes located in closed basins in inland areas are an excellent archive of environmental and climatic changes. One of such archives is the Chany lake system located in the Baraba steppe of southern West Siberia and comprising three associated lakes: Bol'shie Chany, Malye Chany, and Yarkul', connected by watercourses. We present the first data on the mineral composition of the Holocene sediments of Yarkovsky Pool of Lake Bol'shie Chany with predominantly carbonate sedimentation. The sediments were studied by X-ray diffraction (XRD), IR spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, (super 18) O and (super 13) C stable-isotope geochemistry, laser granulometry, elemental analysis, and radioisotope dating. Mathematical modeling of complex XRD profiles of carbonate minerals in the sediments has revealed Mg-calcites with different Mg contents, excess-Ca dolomites, and aragonite. The obtained carbonate record gives an insight into the stratigraphic distribution of chemogenic carbonates, in which the number and proportion of phases are determined by the Mg/Ca ratio, salinity, and total alkalinity of the lake water. The phase proportions change depending on climatic cycles and lake level fluctuations. Comparison of the carbonate record with the lithologic data, delta (super 18) O and delta (super 13) C values, and distribution of some geochemical indicators of sedimentary environments showed several stages of evolution of Yarkovsky Pool related to Holocene regional climatic changes.