Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Termination of the Last Glaciation in the Iberian Peninsula Inferred from the Pollen Sequence of Quintanar de la Sierra
View through CrossRef
AbstractA 4.5-m-thick late-glacial pollen sequence, supported by 17 AMS 14C dates, has been investigated at the Quintanar de la Sierra marshland (Iberian cordillera, north-central Spain). Pollen zones were defined that correspond to successive phases in vegetation history during the end of the Late Würm, late-glacial interstade, and Younger Dryas periods. A transfer function approach has been adopted to derive quantitative climate estimates from the pollen assemblage data. A first expansion ofJuniperus and Hippophae, about 13,500 14C yr B.P., indicates the beginning of the late-glacial interstade which is characterized by a Juniperus–Betula–Pinus succession that suggests higher temperatures and moisture than during full-glacial time. The Younger Dryas interval is recorded by a 120-cm-thick sediment unit that is dominated by herbaceous pollen. Transfer function estimates suggest that the climate during this period was cold, with low precipitation during most of the year, although not in summer. The Holocene arboreal recolonization in the area started about 10,000 14C yr B.P., with a renewed Juniperus–Betula–Pinus succession related to a strong increase in annual temperature and precipitation. The start of this process was synchronous with mean sea-surface temperature changes, as recorded from the nearby SU 81-18 marine core. The strong affinity with other European late-glacial pollen sequences demonstrates that the pattern of climatic changes during the last glacial–interglacial transition was similar in both northwestern and southwestern Europe.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Termination of the Last Glaciation in the Iberian Peninsula Inferred from the Pollen Sequence of Quintanar de la Sierra
Description:
AbstractA 4.
5-m-thick late-glacial pollen sequence, supported by 17 AMS 14C dates, has been investigated at the Quintanar de la Sierra marshland (Iberian cordillera, north-central Spain).
Pollen zones were defined that correspond to successive phases in vegetation history during the end of the Late Würm, late-glacial interstade, and Younger Dryas periods.
A transfer function approach has been adopted to derive quantitative climate estimates from the pollen assemblage data.
A first expansion ofJuniperus and Hippophae, about 13,500 14C yr B.
P.
, indicates the beginning of the late-glacial interstade which is characterized by a Juniperus–Betula–Pinus succession that suggests higher temperatures and moisture than during full-glacial time.
The Younger Dryas interval is recorded by a 120-cm-thick sediment unit that is dominated by herbaceous pollen.
Transfer function estimates suggest that the climate during this period was cold, with low precipitation during most of the year, although not in summer.
The Holocene arboreal recolonization in the area started about 10,000 14C yr B.
P.
, with a renewed Juniperus–Betula–Pinus succession related to a strong increase in annual temperature and precipitation.
The start of this process was synchronous with mean sea-surface temperature changes, as recorded from the nearby SU 81-18 marine core.
The strong affinity with other European late-glacial pollen sequences demonstrates that the pattern of climatic changes during the last glacial–interglacial transition was similar in both northwestern and southwestern Europe.
Related Results
Deriving Response Matrices from Central American Modern Pollen Rain
Deriving Response Matrices from Central American Modern Pollen Rain
Modern pollen samples collected from 80 locations and representing a wide array of mature habitats in Panama and Costa Rica provide analogs to assist in the interpretation of fossi...
A Pollen Record from Birket Qarun and the Recent History of the Fayum, Egypt
A Pollen Record from Birket Qarun and the Recent History of the Fayum, Egypt
Sediments and fossil pollen of two short cores from Birket Qarun, Egypt, reflect Nile floods, lake levels, and agricultural developments of the last 325 yr, and demonstrate the pot...
Peninsula Lost: Mapping Milton’s Celtiberian cartographies
Peninsula Lost: Mapping Milton’s Celtiberian cartographies
In A Mask Presented at Ludlow Castle (1634), John Milton depicts Comus “ripe and frolic of his full grown age, Roving the Celtic and Iberian fields.” While Milton’s complex engagem...
Multivariate Statistical Estimates of Holocene Vegetation and Climate Change, Forest-Tundra Transition Zone, NWT, Canada
Multivariate Statistical Estimates of Holocene Vegetation and Climate Change, Forest-Tundra Transition Zone, NWT, Canada
Newly derived fossil pollen data were obtained from four sites along a transect from the boreal forest limit into tundra in the eastern Northwest Territories. Multivariate statisti...
Late Quaternary Glaciation of the Eastern Queen Elizabeth Islands, N.W.T., Canada: Alternative Models
Late Quaternary Glaciation of the Eastern Queen Elizabeth Islands, N.W.T., Canada: Alternative Models
It has been suggested that during the last glaciation the Innuitian Ice Sheet existed over the eastern Queen Elizabeth Islands. This is based on the pattern of postglacial emergenc...
T. J. Alldridge’s Sierra Leone collections
T. J. Alldridge’s Sierra Leone collections
Abstract
Through his books, The Sherbro and its Hinterland (1901) and Sierra Leone: A transformed colony (1911), and his collections of ethnographic material from so...
II. The history of Old Smyrna
II. The history of Old Smyrna
The occupational history of the site, like its name Smyrna, goes back beyond Hellenic times. The earliest observed prehistoric habitation, dating to the third millennium B.C., and ...
Quantitative Analysis of Shallow Earthquake Sequences and Regional Earthquake Behavior: Implications for Earthquake Forecasting
Quantitative Analysis of Shallow Earthquake Sequences and Regional Earthquake Behavior: Implications for Earthquake Forecasting
<p>This study is a quantitative investigation and characterization of earthquake sequences in the Central Volcanic Region (CVR) of New Zealand, and several regions in New Zea...