Publikationer
Late Holocene multi-proxy records of environmental change
Avdelning/ar:
Publiceringsår: 2006
Språk: Engelska
Sidor: 539-560
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Volym: 241
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Sammanfattning
Sediment stratigraphies from three sites, one lake, one overgrown lake, and an exposed section, on the island Tristan da Cunha
in the temperate South Atlantic were analysed by means of pollen analysis, total carbon, nitrogen and sulphur content
determination, magnetic susceptibility measurements and detailed radiocarbon dating. The aim of these studies was to reconstruct
the late Holocene vegetation and climatic variations.
The oldest sediment sequence extends back to 2300 cal. years BP. The vegetation was relatively stable up to the arrival of
humans in the 17th century. The appearance of the introduced taxon Rumex acetosa/acetosella at c. 300 cal. years BP and a
subsequent decline in forest cover on the lowland plain provide evidence of substantial human influence on the vegetation well
before the establishment of the first permanent settlement in the 19th century. Before the first anthropogenic influence centennialscale
fluctuations in the proxy records are interpreted as reflections of local hydrological changes, probably caused by variations in
precipitation. As inferred mainly from changing proportions of pollen derived from telmatic and terrestrial taxa and corresponding
changes in the deposition of mineral matter by fluvial erosion, lake levels were low between c. 1450 and 1050 cal. years BP, and
high between c. 1050 and 300 cal. years BP. These variations coincide with known climatic changes in Southern Africa and in the
North Atlantic, suggesting that the inferred hydrological changes on Tristan da Cunha were related to large-scale variations in the
general oceanic and atmospheric circulation in the Atlantic region.
© 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
in the temperate South Atlantic were analysed by means of pollen analysis, total carbon, nitrogen and sulphur content
determination, magnetic susceptibility measurements and detailed radiocarbon dating. The aim of these studies was to reconstruct
the late Holocene vegetation and climatic variations.
The oldest sediment sequence extends back to 2300 cal. years BP. The vegetation was relatively stable up to the arrival of
humans in the 17th century. The appearance of the introduced taxon Rumex acetosa/acetosella at c. 300 cal. years BP and a
subsequent decline in forest cover on the lowland plain provide evidence of substantial human influence on the vegetation well
before the establishment of the first permanent settlement in the 19th century. Before the first anthropogenic influence centennialscale
fluctuations in the proxy records are interpreted as reflections of local hydrological changes, probably caused by variations in
precipitation. As inferred mainly from changing proportions of pollen derived from telmatic and terrestrial taxa and corresponding
changes in the deposition of mineral matter by fluvial erosion, lake levels were low between c. 1450 and 1050 cal. years BP, and
high between c. 1050 and 300 cal. years BP. These variations coincide with known climatic changes in Southern Africa and in the
North Atlantic, suggesting that the inferred hydrological changes on Tristan da Cunha were related to large-scale variations in the
general oceanic and atmospheric circulation in the Atlantic region.
© 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Disputation
Nyckelord
- Earth and Environmental Sciences
Övrigt
Published
Yes
- ISSN: 0031-0182

