Latest Holocene paleoenvironmental and paleoclimate reconstruction from an alpine bog in the Western Mediterranean region: The Borreguil de los Lavaderos de la Reina record (Sierra Nevada) López Avilés, Alejandro Jesús García-Alix Daroca, Antonio Jiménez Moreno, Gonzalo Mesa Fernández, José Manuel Jiménez Espejo, Francisco J. Geochemistry Alpine wetland Iberian Peninsula Late Holocene Climate change This study was supported by the projects CGL2013-47038-R and CGL2017-85415-R funded by Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional FEDER; Seneca Project 20788/PI/18; Junta de Andalucia FEDER Project B-RNM-144-UGR18, Proyectos I + D + i del Programa Operativo FEDER 2018 and the research group RNM-190 (Junta de Andalucia). Alejandro Lopez Aviles acknowledges the PhD funding, BES-2018-084293, provide by Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of the Spanish Government. Antonio Garcia-Alix acknowledges the Ramon y Cajal fellowship, RYC-2015-18966, provided by the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of the Spanish Government. R. Scott Anderson acknowledges travel support from Northern Arizona University. Several organic and inorganic geochemical analyses have been carried out in the sedimentary record of the Borreguil de los Lavaderos de la Reina (BdlR-03), an alpine peat bog located on the north face of the Sierra Nevada (southern Iberian Peninsula). This study permitted a high-resolution reconstruction of paleoenvironmental evolution for the last similar to 2700 cal yr BP in the highest mountain range of southern Iberian Peninsula. An overall trend towards a climatic aridification and a reduction of aquatic environments is observed in this record. Insolation and long-term positive North Atlantic Oscillation trends were the most important factors controlling this aridification, forcing regional and local environmental changes. Four phases are differentiated within the paleoenvironmental evolution of BdlR-03: (1) a pre-bog environment from 2700 to 2600 cal yr BP with important siliciclastic sedimentation and low organic content; (2) a bog environment with important presence of terrestrial vascular plant, water availability and maximum humid conditions between similar to 2600 and similar to 1870 cal yr BP, coinciding with the Iberian-Roman Humid Period; (3) a subsequent drier bog environment, between similar to 1870 and similar to 300 cal yr BP during the Dark Ages, the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the first stages of the Little Ice Age, characterized by lower productivity that affected the development of terrestrial vascular plants and aquatic environments; and (4) a wetland environment with an increase of aquatic algae, development of ephemeral pools and unstable climate conditions between similar to 300 cal yr BP and the present, coinciding with the final stages of the Little Ice Age and the Modern Global Warming. This recent environmental pattern, which is opposite to the general aridification trend in the western Mediterranean, is likely explained by the gradual melting of the perennial ice and/or snow packs at higher elevations in the last centuries. Aeolian inputs would have continuously contributed nutrients to these nutrient-impoverished alpine environments. High dust inputs are especially noticed during the last similar to 200 years, which can be explained by human-induced enhanced aridification and the development of the commercial agriculture in some North African regions. In addition, the environmental signal in the last century seems to be significantly affected by human activities. 2021-06-21T07:33:16Z 2021-06-21T07:33:16Z 2021-04-24 journal article Alejandro López-Avilés... [et al.]. Latest Holocene paleoenvironmental and paleoclimate reconstruction from an alpine bog in the Western Mediterranean region: The Borreguil de los Lavaderos de la Reina record (Sierra Nevada), Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 573, 2021, 110434, ISSN 0031-0182, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2021.110434] http://hdl.handle.net/10481/69300 10.1016/j.palaeo.2021.110434 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/ open access Atribución 3.0 España Elsevier