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A 250,000-year climatic record from great basin vein calcite: Implications for Milankovitch theory

January 1, 1988

A continuous record of oxygen-18 (??18O) variations in the continental hydrosphere during the middle-to-late Pleistocene has been obtained from a uranium-series dated calcitic vein in the southern Great Basin. The vein was deposited from ground water that moved through Devils Hole - an open fault zone at Ash Meadows, Nevada - between 50 and 310 ka (thousand years ago). The configuration of the ??18O versus time curve closely resembles the marine and Antarctic ice core (Vostok) ??18O curves; however, the U-Th dates indicate that the last interglacial stage (marine oxygen isotope stage 5) began before 147 ?? 3 ka, at least 17,000 years earlier than indicated by the marine ??18O record and 7,000 years earlier than indicated by the less well dated Antarctic ??18O record. This discrepancy and other differences in the timing of key climatic events suggest that the indirectly dated marine ??18O chronology may need revision and that orbital forcing may not be the principal cause of the Pleistocene ice ages.

Publication Year 1988
Title A 250,000-year climatic record from great basin vein calcite: Implications for Milankovitch theory
Authors I.J. Winograd, B. J. Szabo, T. B. Coplen, A.C. Riggs
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70014457
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse