The palaeolimnology of Lough Murree, a brackish lake in The Burren, Ireland
Citation
Cassina, F., Dalton, C., de Eyto, E. and Sparber, K. (2013) 'The palaeolimnology of Lough Murree, a brackish lake in the Burren, Ireland', Biology and Environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, 109B(3), 161-174, http:doi.org/10.3318/BIOE.2013.23.
Date
2013Author
Dalton, Catherine
Cassina, Filippo
de Eyto, Elvira
Sparber, Karin
Peer Reviewed
YesMetadata
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Cassina, F., Dalton, C., de Eyto, E. and Sparber, K. (2013) 'The palaeolimnology of Lough Murree, a brackish lake in the Burren, Ireland', Biology and Environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, 109B(3), 161-174, http:doi.org/10.3318/BIOE.2013.23.
Abstract
Lough Murree, a rock/karst barrier lagoon, is superficially isolated from the sea and seasonal variations in lake water level reflect precipitation and groundwater variation. Lake salinity influenced by subsurface saline intrusions, occasional barrier overwash together with precipitation and groundwater inflow, leading to poikilohaline conditions. Palaeolimnological reconstructions Murree support the supposition that the lagoon was once superficially connected to the sea around the mid-nineteenth century. Physical, chemical and biological proxies suggest an evolution to freshwater conditions. Uncertainties about the timing of the transition persist because of an unresolved sediment chronology. The isolation of Murree from the Atlantic Ocean has promoted the formation of dense charophyte beds composed of lagoonal specialist species, which are able tolerate large variations in salinity.
Keywords
PalaeolimnologyLough Murree
Brackish
Lake
The Burren
Ireland
Biology
Environment