The characterization of natural climate variability is important in order to understand the climate response to natural forcings and to identify anthropogenic influences. The aim of this thesis is to reconstruct climate changes in the southwest of France, a region which is characterised by recurrent drought periods, where high resolution proxy records of the last millennia were lacking.The reconstruction is based on multiple proxies from two continental archives: speleothems and tree rings. Their combination can make use of the strengths of each archive while compensating their weaknesses. There are two principal objectives: first, to gain a better understanding of the climatic and non-climatic influences on each proxy; and second, to reconstruct drought periods in the past.The oxygen isotopic composition (δ18O) of speleothem fluid inclusions and tree ring cellulose is controlled to a large extent by the δ18O of precipitation, which can serve as a tracer of the atmospheric circulation. In order to interpret these proxies in terms of climate, it is necessary to understand how the climate signal becomes recorded in the proxy, and which processes modify the original signal during the formation of the archive.Measurements of δ18O in precipitation, cave drip water, and fluid inclusions in modern speleothem samples from Villars Cave demonstrated that the isotopic composition of cave drip water corresponds to the pluri-annual average precipitation. The speleothem fluid inclusions, in turn, preserve the isotopic composition of the drip water. Based on this calibration, it is possible to reconstruct drip water isotope variability using fluid inclusions in a more than 2000 year old stalagmite, which has been dated by laminae counting, as well as U-Th and 14C measurements. Changes in the cave environment, e.g. the vegetation cover, are indicated by other proxies from the same stalagmite (stable isotopes in calcite and trace element concentrations), but these changes do not seem to impact the fluid inclusion δ18O significantly.The isotopic composition of tree ring cellulose from Quercus spp. in the study area is strongly influenced by climate conditions during the summer. However, non-climatic influences on the isotopic composition of cellulose are identified. They are linked to the age of the trees and to site hydrology, and must be accounted for in the sampling and analytical procedures. Crossdated cores from living trees and timber wood in historic buildings near Angoulême are used to build an annually resolved chronology of cellulose δ18O. Significant correlations with meteorological data enable a calibration and a reconstruction of drought periods since 1360 AD.Lastly, this thesis explores a novel approach of integrating oxygen isotope records from speleothem fluid inclusions and tree ring cellulose from closely located sites to reconstruct both high- and low-frequency variability of droughts in the past.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:CCSD/oai:tel.archives-ouvertes.fr:tel-01063541 |
Date | 14 May 2014 |
Creators | Labuhn, Inga |
Publisher | Université Paris Sud - Paris XI |
Source Sets | CCSD theses-EN-ligne, France |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | PhD thesis |
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