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Two millennia of anthropogenic landscape modification and nutrient loading at Dian Lake, Yunnan Province, China

  • The University of Chicago
  • University of Pittsburgh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

40 Scopus citations

Abstract

Landscapes have been shaped by human activities for millennia and there is a pressing need to characterize pre-industrial impacts in order to mitigate present-day effects. We present the analysis of two sediment cores from Dian Lake in Yunnan, China, which span 4000 years. We compare cores from the northern and southern ends of the lake to investigate spatial variability in natural and anthropogenic environmental changes in this large (300 km 2 ) lake. To document the initiation of human impacts on the landscape and characterize the attendant changes in the lake water and sediment quality, we rely on organic and inorganic geochemical measurements as well as sedimentology and stratigraphy. The character and magnitude of proxy changes are coherent between the two core sites with slight differences in the timing of events. At both core sites, we find definitive evidence for substantial anthropogenic change beginning AD 100 (1850 yr BP), coincident with the introduction of terraced agriculture. Sedimentological shifts are distinctive and characterized by an increase in magnetic susceptibility values and a visible change to red, fine-grained clay. The geochemistry of this sediment suggests that it was sourced from the eastern catchment of the lake and delivered into the basin following intensive agriculture and soil erosion. Anthropogenic impacts intensify after AD 900 through hydrologic modification and cultural eutrophication resulting from increased nutrient loading. This study presents evidence that human-affected landscapes have been present in this region of China for longer than previously believed and that ‘small-scale’ land use change can have measureable impacts on lakes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)505-517
Number of pages13
JournalHolocene
Volume29
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2019

Keywords

  • China
  • anthropogenic change
  • archaeology
  • carbon isotopes
  • geochemistry
  • landscape erosion
  • nitrogen isotopes
  • paleolimnology

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