High-resolution 14C dating of a 25,000-year lake-sediment record from equatorial East Africa

Maarten Blaauw*, Bas van Geel, Iris Kristen, Birgit Plessen, Anna Lyaruu, Daniel R. Engstrom, Johannes van der Plicht, Dirk Verschuren

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

67 Citations (Scopus)
219 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

We dated a continuous, ~22-m long sediment sequence from Lake Challa (Mt. Kilimanjaro area, Kenya/Tanzania) to produce a solid chronological framework for multi-proxy reconstructions of climate and environmental change in equatorial East Africa over the past 25,000 years. The age model is based on a total of 168 AMS 14C dates on bulk-organic matter, combined with a 210Pb chronology for recent sediments and corrected for a variable old-carbon age offset. This offset was estimated by i) pairing bulk-organic 14C dates with either 210Pb-derived time markers or 14C dates on grass charcoal, and ii) wiggle-matching high-density series of bulk-organic 14C dates. Variation in the old-carbon age offset through time is relatively modest, ranging from ~450 yr during glacial and late glacial time to ~200 yr during the early and mid-Holocene, and increasing again to ~250 yr today. The screened and corrected 14C dates were calibrated sequentially, statistically constrained by their stratigraphical order. As a result their constrained calendar-age distributions are much narrower, and the calibrated dates more precise, than if each 14C date had been calibrated on its own. The smooth-spline age-depth model has 95% age uncertainty ranges of ~50–230 yr during the Holocene and ~250–550 yr in the glacial section of the record. The d13C values of paired bulk-organic and grass-charcoal samples, and additional 14C dating on selected turbidite horizons, indicates that the old-carbon age offset in Lake Challa is caused by a variable contribution of old terrestrial organic matter eroded from soils, and controlled mainly by changes in vegetation cover within the crater basin.

We produced a 25 ka chronology for a new key archive from equatorial East Africa. Its chronology is based on 210Pb dates as well as bulk and charcoal 14C dates. We model a temporally varying old-carbon offset for bulk 14C dates. Our record has one of the most reliable 14C chronologies for any lake worldwide.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3043-3059
JournalQuaternary Science Reviews
Volume30
Issue number21-22
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01 Oct 2011

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Geology
  • Global and Planetary Change
  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Archaeology
  • Archaeology

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