Late Würm and Early-Middle Holocene environmental change and human activities in the Northern Apennines, Italy


Autoria(s): Branch, Nicholas P.; Morandi, Lionello
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

An enhanced radiocarbon-dated pollen-stratigraphical record from Rovegno (Liguria, 812m asl), northern Apennines (Italy), has provided a history of vegetation succession from before 17,056-16,621 cal yrs BP to the present day. The record indicates the transition from open Pinus woodland to Artemisia dominated grassland, and finally Juniperus shrubland during the late Würm. This is succeeded by Betula and Pinus woodland, and the expansion of thermophilous taxa, namely Abies, Corylus and Quercus during the Late Würm Lateglacial Interstadial. The ‘Younger Dryas’ is possibly represented by an increase in Betula and Artemisia. During the early Holocene, mixed coniferous-deciduous woodland is dominant with Quercus, as well as Abies, Fagus and Corylus. Fagus woodland becomes established sometime before 6488-6318 cal yrs BP, but never becomes a major component of the woodland cover. Throughout the middle Holocene, Abies woodland fl uctuates, with marked declines between 6488-6318 cal yrs BP and 5287-4835 cal yrs BP, although the cause remains uncertain. Finally, the paper evaluates the application of non-pollen palynomorphs, especially coprophilous fungal spores, at Prato Spilla ‘A’ (Emilia Romagna) and concludes that greater caution must be used when interpreting middle Holocene human activity based upon pollen data alone

Formato

text

Identificador

http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/48508/1/Branch_Morandi.pdf

Branch, N. P. <http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/view/creators/90000995.html> and Morandi, L. (2015) Late Würm and Early-Middle Holocene environmental change and human activities in the Northern Apennines, Italy. Il Capitale Culturale, 12. pp. 537-563. ISSN 2039-2362

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Università di Macerata

Relação

http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/48508/

creatorInternal Branch, Nicholas P.

http://riviste.unimc.it/index.php/cap-cult

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed