Climate, fire, and vegetation between about 13,000 and 9200 C-14 yr BP in the Chilean lake district

MORENO, PI

Abstract

A pollen record from Lago Condorito (41 degrees 45'S, 73 degrees 07'W) shows that North Patagonian Rain Forest taxa predominated between about 13,000 and 12,200 C-14 yr B.P. in the lowlands of southern Chile, near the city of Puerto Montt. This was followed by the expansion and persistence of the conifer Podocarpus nubigena between 12,200 and 9900 C-14 yr B.P. Trees favored by disturbance expanded between 11,200 and 9900 C-14 yr B.P., concurrent with sharp and sustained increases of microscopic charcoal particles. Taxa of low-elevation rain forests expanded and became more diverse in pulses centered at 9900 and 9000 C-14 yr B.P., following the disappearance of P. nubigena. These data suggest conditions approaching modern climate between about 13,000 and 12,200 C-14 yr B.P. The climate cooled between 12,200 and 9900 C-14 yr B.P., then quickly warmed to interglacial conditions. Stand-replacing fires occurred near Lago Condorito between 11,200 and 9900 C-14 yr B.P., under cool-temperate, humid conditions. The proximity and reported antiquity of the Monte Verde archeological site raise the possibility that these fires were set by human activities. (C) University of Washington.

Más información

Título según WOS: Climate, fire, and vegetation between about 13,000 and 9200 C-14 yr BP in the Chilean lake district
Título de la Revista: QUATERNARY RESEARCH
Volumen: 54
Número: 1
Editorial: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2000
Página de inicio: 81
Página final: 89
Idioma: English
URL: http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0033589400921483
DOI:

10.1006/qres.2000.2148

Notas: ISI