PotASH (Palaeolakes of the Arid Southern Hemisphere) workshop
2017 Workshop for Palaeolakes of the Arid Southern Hemisphere
PotASH (Palaeolakes of the Arid Southern Hemisphere) workshop
2017 Workshop for Palaeolakes of the Arid Southern Hemisphere
Oxford University (United Kingdom)
19 Sep 2017 - 19 Sep 2017
Dates
Sep 19th - 19th, 2017
Venue
Oxford University, (United Kingdom)
Summary
As potential archives
of Quaternary environmental and climatic change, dry lake basins are extremely
important repositories of palaeohydrological/palaeoclimate information in
desert regions where organic records are often lacking. By dint of the
distribution of landmasses and their interaction with present day circulation
systems, dry lakes are particularly prevalent in the arid zones and desert
margins of the Southern Hemisphere across Australia, southern Africa, and South
America. Dry lake basins however also represent
especially challenging environments from which to obtain palaeodata, requiring
a variety of research approaches and disciplines. Investigations however, are often
influenced/limited by existing regional collaborations and expertise. This
project aims to build a long-term pan-hemisphere network that will build
collaboration between palaeodata scientists and modellers, bringing together a
diversity of approaches and methods to dryland palaeolake investigations. The
project will also strive to build strong links with scientists working on
contemporary southern hemisphere playa processes to strengthen existing and
future palaeodata interpretations. Members will build a database of southern
hemisphere palaeolake records. The
structure of the database will be determined during the course of the project
but metadata
will include chronological resolution, assessment on the level of agreement
between multiple proxies (where available), and lake status (relative to
present day), with the potential to significantly update the Oxford Lake Level
database held by NOAA (Street-Perrott et al., 1989). The data will be mined for
evidence of perturbations,
transitions and abrupt events and an assessment will be made as to whether these
signals are localized, regional, or global responses. The project will also
seek to compare model outputs (e.g. Palaeoclimate Model Intercomparison Project
3 simulations; PMIP3) and the synthesised palaeodataset across the southern
hemisphere, in order to identify viable hypotheses for the mechanisms driving hemispheric
change in the southern hemisphere drylands.