4.2 Article

Several distinct wet periods since 420 ka in the Namib Desert inferred from U-series dates of speleothems

Journal

QUATERNARY RESEARCH
Volume 81, Issue 2, Pages 381-391

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.yqres.2013.10.020

Keywords

Namib Desert; Speleothems; Th-230/U dating; Middle/Late Pleistocene; Paleoclimate; Paleoprecipitation; Milankovitch forcing

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [DFG He 722/14-5]

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The scarcity of numerical dates of the arid areas in southern Africa is a challenge for reconstructing paleoclimate. This paper presents a chronological reconstruction in the central part of the Namib Desert, Namibia, for the last 420,000 yr. It is based on Th-230/U dates (TIMS) from a large stalagmite and a thick flowstone layer in a small cave located in the hyper-arid central Namib Desert. The results provide for the first time evidence of three or possibly four succeeding wet periods of decreasing intensity since 420 ka through which speleothem deposited at approximately 420-385 ka, 230-207 ka and 120-117 ka following the 100-ka Milankovitch cycle. Speleothem growth was not recorded for the Holocene. These wet periods interrupted the predominantly dry climate of the Namib Desert and coincided with wet phases in deserts of the northern hemisphere in the Murzuq Basin, Sahara, the Negev, Israel, the Nafud Desert, Saudi Arabia, and the arid northern Oman, Arabian Peninsula. (c) 2013 University of Washington. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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