Title of article :
Was the climate of the Eemian stable? A quantitative climate reconstruction from seven European pollen records
Author/Authors :
Cheddadi، نويسنده , , Kazimiera Mamakowa، نويسنده , , K and Guiot، نويسنده , , J and de Beaulieu، نويسنده , , J.-L and Reille، نويسنده , , M and Andrieu، نويسنده , , V and Granoszewski، نويسنده , , W and Peyron، نويسنده , , O، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
13
From page :
73
To page :
85
Abstract :
The aim of the present study is to estimate the range of the climatic variability during the Eemian interglacial, which lasted about 10,000 years (marine isotopic stage 5e). The modern pollen analogue technique is applied to seven high resolution pollen records from France and Poland to infer the annual precipitation and the mean temperature of the coldest month. The succession of pollen taxa and the reconstructed climate can be interpreted coherently. The warmest winter temperatures are centred in the first three millennia of the Eemian interglacial, during the mixed oak forest phase with Quercus and Corylus as dominant trees. A rapid shift to cooler winter temperatures of about 6° to 10°C occurred between 4000 and 5000 years after the beginning of the Eemian, related to the spread of the Carpinus forest. This shift is more obvious for the reconstructed temperatures than for precipitation and is unique and irreversible for the whole Eemian period. Following this climatic shift of the Eemian, variations of temperature and precipitation during the last 5000 years were only slight with an amplitude of about 2° to 4°C and 200 to 400 mm/yr. The estimated temperature changes were certainly not as strong as those reconstructed for the stage 6/5e termination or the transition 5e/5d. This is consistent with the constantly high ratio of tree pollen throughout the Eemian, indicative of a succession of temperate forest types. This gradual transition between different forest landscapes can be related to intrinsic competition between the species rather than to a drastic climatic change.
Keywords :
Eemian , pollen record , palaeoclimatic reconstruction , plants refuge
Journal title :
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Record number :
2288952
Link To Document :
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