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Vegetation and environmental changes in Northern Anatolia between 134 and 119ka recorded in Black Sea sediments

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Schumilovskikh, L. S., Arz, H. W., Fleitmann, D., Marret, F., Nowaczyk, N., Tarasov, P., Wegwerth, A. and Behling, H. (2013) Vegetation and environmental changes in Northern Anatolia between 134 and 119ka recorded in Black Sea sediments. Quaternary Research, 80 (3). pp. 349-360. ISSN 0033-5894 doi: 10.1016/j.yqres.2013.07.005

Abstract/Summary

This multiproxy study on SE Black Sea sediments provides the first detailed reconstruction of vegetation and environmental history of Northern Anatolia between 134 and 119 ka. Here, the glacial–interglacial transition is characterized by several short-lived alternating cold and warm events preceding a meltwater pulse (~ 130.4–131.7 ka). The latter is reconstructed as a cold arid period correlated to Heinrich event 11. The initial warming is evidenced at ~ 130.4 ka by increased primary productivity in the Black Sea, disappearance of ice-rafted detritus, and spreading of oaks in Anatolia. A Younger Dryas-type event is not identifiable. The Eemian vegetation succession corresponds to the main climatic phases in Europe: i) the Quercus–Juniperus phase (128.7–126.4 ka) indicates a dry continental climate; ii) the Ostrya–Corylus–Quercus–Carpinus phase (126.4–122.9 ka) suggests warm summers, mild winters, and high year-round precipitation; iii) the Fagus–Carpinus phase (122.9–119.5 ka) indicates cooling and high precipitation; and iv) increasing Pinus at ~ 121 ka marks the onset of cooler/drier conditions. Generally, pollen reconstructions suggest altitudinal/latitudinal migrations of vegetation belts in Northern Anatolia during the Eemian caused by increased transport of moisture. The evidence for the wide distribution of Fagus around the Black Sea contrasts with the European records and is likely related to climatic and genetic factors

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Item Type Article
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/40299
Item Type Article
Refereed Yes
Divisions Science > School of Archaeology, Geography and Environmental Science > Scientific Archaeology
Science > School of Archaeology, Geography and Environmental Science > Department of Archaeology
Interdisciplinary centres and themes > Centre for Past Climate Change
Publisher Elsevier
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