Inhaltsbereich
Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 5836)
The freshwater Lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee) and the hypersaline Dead Sea are remnant lakes, evolved from ancient water bodies that
filled the tectonic depressions along the Dead Sea Transform (DST) during the Neogene–Quartenary periods. We reconstructed the
limnological history (level and composition) of Lake Kinneret during the past ~40,000 years and compared it with the history of the
contemporaneous Lake Lisan from the aspect of the regional and global climate history. The lake level reconstruction was achieved
through a chronological and sedimentological investigation of exposed sedimentary sections in the Kinnarot basin trenches and cores
drilled at the Ohalo II archeological site. Shoreline chronology was established by radiocarbon dating of organic remains and of
Melanopsis shells.
The major changes in Lake Kinneret level were synchronous with those of the southern Lake Lisan. Both lakes dropped significantly
~42,000, ~30,000, 23,800, and 13,000 yr ago and rose ~39,000, 26,000, 5000, and 1600 yr ago. Between 26,000 and 24,000 yr ago, the
lakes merged into a unified water body and lake level achieved its maximum stand of ~170 m below mean sea level (m bsl). Nevertheless,
the fresh and saline water properties of Lake Kinneret and Lake Lisan, respectively, have been preserved throughout the 40,000 years
studied. Calcium carbonate was always deposited as calcite in Lake Kinneret and as aragonite in Lake Lisan–Dead Sea, indicating that the
Dead Sea brine (which supports aragonite production) never reached or affected Lake Kinneret, even during the period of lake high stand
and convergence. The synchronous level fluctuation of lakes Kinneret, Lisan, and the Holocene Dead Sea is consistent with the
dominance of the Atlantic–Mediterranean rain system on the catchment of the basin and the regional hydrology. The major drops in Lake
Kinneret–Lisan levels coincide with the timing of cold spells in the North Atlantic that caused a shut down of rains in the East
Mediterranean and the lakes drainage area.
(2005): The late Quaternary limnological history of Lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee), Israel. Quaternary Research, 63, 1, 60-77.
(2005): The late Quaternary limnological history of Lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee), Israel. Quaternary Research, 63, 1, 60-77.

