Open Access
Annual report on paleoclimate studies for the Yucca Mountain project site characterization conducted by the Desert Research Institute
Publication year - 1994
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/631156
Subject(s) - yucca , paleoclimatology , desert (philosophy) , aeolian processes , radioactive waste , geology , chronology , archaeology , physical geography , earth science , geomorphology , climate change , geography , paleontology , engineering , oceanography , ecology , waste management , philosophy , epistemology , biology
The prospect that Yucca Mountain may become a repository for high-level radionuclides with especially long half-lives means that the intended waste containment area must be well beyond the reach of the hydrologic system for at least ten millennia. Through the integration of several avenues of paleoclimatic proxy data, the authors intend to arrive at definite conclusions regarding rates of change, and extremes and stabilities of past climate regimes. These will in turn lead to rough estimates of: the amounts of rainfall available for recharge during past periods of effectively wetter climate, and the durations and frequencies of recharge periods. The paper gives summaries of the following studies: Late Quaternary and Holocene climate derived from vegetation history and plant cellulose stable isotope records from the Great basin of western North America; Accomplishments of paleofaunal studies, 1993--1994; Geomorphology studies in the Great Basin; Alluvial fan response to climatic change, Buena Vista Valley, central Nevada; Sedimentology, stratigraphy, and chronology of lacustrine deposition in the Fernley Basin, west-central Nevada; Tree-rings, lake chronologies, alluvial sequences and climate--Implications for Great Basin paleoenvironmental studies; Stable isotopic validation studies--Fossil snails; and Late Pleistocene and Holocene eolian activity in the Mojave Desert