A moist period in Western North America during the mid-to-late Holocene
The Neopluvial was a phase of wetter and colder climate that occurred during the late Holocene in the Western United States. During the Neopluvial, water levels in a number of now-dry lakes and closed lakes such as the Great Salt Lake rose and vegetation changed in response to increased precipitation. The event was not exactly synchronous everywhere, with neopluvial lake-level rises occurring between 6,000 and 2,000 years ago. It is correlative to the Neoglacial period.
During the Neopluvial, the Great Salt Lake became fresher,[4] and Pyramid Lake reached a water level of 1,186 metres (3,891 ft) above sea level.[5] Walker Lake, Owens Lake and Mono Lake experienced their highest Holocene water levels,[5] with the volumes of the latter two lakes more than doubling.[11] Likewise, water levels in Lake Tahoe rose to the point of overflowing into the Truckee River.[12] Silver Lake in the Mojave Desert formed a perennial lake and vegetation was more widespread in the Little Granite Mountains.[7] Summer Lake rose above its present-day level to an elevation of c. 1,278 metres (4,193 ft),[13] although it was not as high as during the mid-Holocene.[8] Water levels rose in Tulare Lake as well.[9]
In the Owens Valley region, during the Neopluvial the human population became more sedentary and trans-Sierra Nevada trade became established ("Newberry"/"Middle Archaic Period").[23] Population around Lake Alvord increased during this time and lasted even after the Neopluvial had ended there.[3] In Nevada, the largest indigenous houses were built during the neopluvial.[24]
Chronology
The beginning of the Neopluvial occurred about 6,000 years before present, but did not occur everywhere at the same time:[12]
The Neopluvial occurred between 4,000 and 2,000 years before present in the Carson Sink.[16] The Neopluvial in the Lake Lahontan basin ended about 2,000 years ago.[3]
In Fallen Leaf Lake, the Neopluvial occurred 3,700 years before present in Fallen Leaf Lake. The end occurred 3,650 years before present;[5] after that point precipitation became more irregular until the onset of the Little Ice Age about 3,000 years later.[25]
Its occurrence is dated between 5,100 and 2,650 years before present in the central-northern Great Basin,[18]
In the Great Salt Lake, the Neopluvial commenced 5,000 years before present and water levels reached their maximum between 3,000 and 2,000 years before present.[4]
It took place between 3,000 and 4,000 years before present in Lake Cochise.[6]
It occurred between 4,000 and 2,500 years before present in the Mojave Desert.[7]
In Pyramid Lake, the Neopluvial commenced starting from 5,000 years before present and reached a maximum between 4,100 and 3,800 years before present in Pyramid Lake.[5]
High elevation lakes in the Rocky Mountains with small watersheds, particularly sensitive to a changing water balance, showed synchronous increase in lake levels from 6,000 to 5,000 years before present, centered at 5,700 years ago.[26]
In the Summer Lake area, the Neopluvial is dated to have occurred between 4,000 and 1,900 years ago.[13]
Rising water levels in Lake Tahoe drowned trees between 4,800 and 5,700 years before present.[12]
In Tulare Lake, the Neopluvial lasted between 4,500 and 2,800 years before present; after that a severe drought occurred.[9]
Related events
The Neopluvial is in part correlative to the Neoglacial,[18] and might have been caused by a change in winter conditions over the North Pacific.[27] This cooling is primarily explained by steadily declining summer insolation, though synchronous patterns in hydrological responses at sub-millennial scales may be linked to atmospheric circulation shifts driven by factors such as internal variability in ocean-atmosphere teleconnections.[26] Strengthening ENSO variability, a cooling of the North Pacific and a southward shift of the Pacific jet stream also coincided with the Neopluvial.[28] The neopluvial resembles the Pluvial period that occurred in western North America during the late Last Glacial Maximum,[29] but was much weaker than the LGM wet period.[4]
Terminology
The term "neopluvial" was coined in 1982 and originally referred to high lake levels in Summer Lake.[10] The term has also been used for a mid-to-late Holocene phase of increased moisture noted in the form of increased wetness in eastern Texas, potentially linked to a stronger monsoon or to the neopluvial of the western US.[30]
^ abcPettigrew, Richard M. (1984). "Prehistoric Human Land-use Patterns in the Alvord Basin, Southeastern Oregon". Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology. 6 (1): 82–83. JSTOR27825172 – via eScholarship.
^ abcdefgNoble, Paula; Zimmerman, Susan; Ball, Ian; Adams, Kenneth; Maloney, Jillian; Smith, Shane (2016-04-01). "Late Holocene subalpine lake sediments record a multi-proxy shift to increased aridity at 3.65 kyr BP, following a millennial-scale neopluvial interval in the Lake Tahoe watershed and western Great Basin, USA". EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts. 18: EPSC2016–7533. Bibcode:2016EGUGA..18.7533N.
^ abcNegrini, Robert M.; Wigand, Peter E.; Draucker, Sara; Gobalet, Kenneth; Gardner, Jill K.; Sutton, Mark Q.; Yohe, Robert M. (2006-07-01). "The Rambla highstand shoreline and the Holocene lake-level history of Tulare Lake, California, USA". Quaternary Science Reviews. 25 (13): 1614. Bibcode:2006QSRv...25.1599N. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2005.11.014.
^Ababneh, Linah; Woolfenden, Wallace (2010-03-15). "Monitoring for potential effects of climate change on the vegetation of two alpine meadows in the White Mountains of California, USA". Quaternary International. 23rd Pacific Climate Workshop (PACLIM). 215 (1): 4. Bibcode:2010QuInt.215....3A. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2009.05.013.
^Westfall, Robert D; Millar, Constance I (2004-08-11). "Genetic consequences of forest population dynamics influenced by historic climatic variability in the western USA". Forest Ecology and Management. Dynamics and Conservation of Genetic Diversity in Forest Ecology. 197 (1): 160. Bibcode:2004ForEM.197..159W. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2004.05.011. S2CID85791011.
^Ababneh, Linah (2008-09-01). "Bristlecone pine paleoclimatic model for archeological patterns in the White Mountain of California". Quaternary International. The 22nd Pacific Climate Workshop. 188 (1): 63. Bibcode:2008QuInt.188...59A. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2007.08.041.
^Hockett, Bryan; Dillingham, Eric (2023). Large-Scale Traps of the Great Basin. Texas A&M University Press. p. 37.
^Liu, Tao; Ji, Lin; Baker, Victor R.; Harden, Tessa M.; Cline, Michael L. (5 February 2020). "Holocene extreme paleofloods and their climatological context, Upper Colorado River Basin, USA". Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment. 44 (5): 13. Bibcode:2020PrPG...44..727L. doi:10.1177/0309133320904038. S2CID213001302.
Hockett, Bryan (2015-06-01). "The zooarchaeology of Bonneville Estates Rockshelter: 13,000years of Great Basin hunting strategies". Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 2: 291–301. Bibcode:2015JArSR...2..291H. doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2015.02.011.