Last interglacial hydroclimate in the Italian Prealps reconstructed from speleothem multi-proxy records (Bigonda Cave, NE Italy)

2021 
Abstract Past climate archives show the Last Interglacial (LIG) period as similar to slightly warmer than current temperatures. However, there is a lack of LIG proxy evidence regarding variations of the climate across large topographic features and how this manifests at different altitudes. Here, we analysed two flowstones from Bigonda Cave, northeast Italy, to reconstruct LIG climate conditions in a region where precipitation is strongly influenced by the presence of the Alps. Stable isotope ratios, trace element concentrations and speleothem petrography from 133 ka to 105 ka allowed the detection of various hydroclimate and environmental conditions. Composite speleothem δ18O records from northeast Italy were found to closely follow the Northern Hemisphere summer insolation curve, attesting to the influence of solar isolation on Earth's hydroclimate. Our reconstructions indicate a northward shift of the Intertropical Convergence Zone during the LIG maximum, permitting Atlantic-derived moisture to travel further east across North Africa than at present, before being directed north towards the Alps. The latter part of the LIG exhibited frequent, extreme precipitation events in the SE Prealps due to orographic lifting of moisture from both the Atlantic and Mediterranean seas. Socio-economic planning must prepare for extreme autumnal flooding events and serious summer droughts, particularly important in vulnerable mountainous regions.
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