Climate and vegetation changes in coastal ecosystems during the Middle Pleniglacial and the early Holocene: Two multi-proxy, high-resolution records from Ria de Vigo (NW Iberia)
Pollen;
Dinoflagellate cysts;
Diatom frustules;
Lithostratigraphy;
Palaeoclimatology;
Sea level change;
MIS-3;
Early Holocene;
Southwestern Europe;
DINOFLAGELLATE CYST DISTRIBUTION;
SEA-SURFACE TEMPERATURE;
NORTH-ATLANTIC CLIMATE;
SAN SIMON BAY;
LATE PLEISTOCENE;
POLLEN TRANSPORT;
LEVEL CHANGE;
SW EUROPE;
KA BP;
LAST;
D O I:
10.1016/j.gloplacha.2019.02.015
中图分类号:
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号:
0705 ;
070501 ;
摘要:
New multi-proxy analyses were performed on two sedimentary sections from shallow marine ecosystems of Ria de Vigo (NW Iberia) to study the effects of the MIS-3 and early Holocene environmental variability. High resolution data (microfossils, sedimentary fades, and geochemistry) allowed performing a comprehensive reconstruction of the main environmental changes (climate, vegetation, hydrology and sea level) that occurred during part of the MIS-3 period (57.0-38.8 cal ka BP) and the early Holocene (11.2-7.0 cal ka BP). The chronology is supported by isotopic dating and the correlation of pollen data with other regional palaeo-climatic records. Several phases characterised by increasing pollen representation of deciduous Quercus alternate with others marked by increasing representation of heliophytes that may reflect the succession of Interstadials (GI) and Stadials (GS) described in Greenland ice cores. In addition, dinoflagellate cysts and diatoms reflect conditions in the marine environment (SST and productivity). New palynological data confirms that coastal ecosystems of Atlantic Iberia were sensitive to the main climatic oscillations affecting the North Atlantic. It also suggests that pinewoods, juniper communities and mesophilous deciduous forests with Carpinus betulus L. (which shows exceptionally high pollen abundances for the MIS-3) persisted in the surroundings of Ria de Vigo until similar to 7500 a BP. For the first time in this region, we describe the effects of an abrupt episode of cooling that may correspond to Bond cycle 7 (10.5 ka event).