Parallel climate and vegetation responses to the early Holocene collapse of the Laurentide Ice Sheet.
Bryan Shuman, Patrick Bartlein, Nathaniel Logar, Paige Newby, Thompson Webb III (2002).
Quaternary Science Reviews 21: 1793–1805.

Abstract


 

Table 1:  Lake status is shown for 1000 calendar year intervals from 10,000 to 7000 cal yr BP, where 3 is low and 1 is high. Zero represents periods with a hiatus. References to Harrison (1989) and Webb and Webb III (1988) indicate sites included in these previous lake syntheses; other sites from these previous syntheses were not included here (see Methods). Unpublished data were obtained from the NAPD.

Table1.gif, 76K

 

Fig. 1. Modern pollen percentages for northern pines (Pinus) and beech (Fagus) from modern sediment samples collected in eastern North America (north of 391 Lat., and east of 1101 Long.). The maximum abundances of the two taxa occur within the same temperature range, but occur within different precipitation ranges.

Fig1.gif, 31K / Fig1.pdf, 50K

 

Fig. 2. Maps contrasting 10,000 and 9000 cal yr BP against 8000 and 7000 cal yr BP illustrate changing moisture-balance patterns and vegetation distributions as the LIS collapsed. The uppermost panel shows three types of lake-level data: multi-core, multi-proxy studies like Digerfeldt et al. (1992), qualitative assessments of lake-level indicators following Harrison (1989), and hiatuses in published pollen stratigraphies. The second panel shows the general trends in moisture-balance according to a locally weighted interpolation of the lake-level data. Two lower panels show parallel changes in the extent of regions with >25% pine (Pinus), 5% beech (Fagus), 15% prairie forb (Asteraceae, Chenopodiaceae/Amaranthanceae, and Artemisa), 10% ragweed (Ambrosia), and 10% hemlock (Tsuga) pollen. Four levels of elm (Ulmus) pollen percentages are mapped in the lowest panel.

Fig2.gif, 145K / Fig2.pdf, 1.8M

 

Fig. 3. Fossil pollen percentages of hemlock (Tsuga) and beech (Fagus) at North Pond, Massachusetts (Whitehead and Crisman, 1978), plotted versus calendar years along with the oxygen isotope record from GISP2 (Stuiver et al., 1995) and the area of the LIS over time, estimated from Dyke and Prest (1987) and Barber et al. (1999).

Fig3.gif, 31K / Fig3.pdf, 66K

 

Fig. 4. Fossil pollen percentages of spruce (Picea), pine (Pinus), alder (Alnus), birch (Betula), heaths (Ericaceae), oak (Quercus), hemlock (Tsuga), and beech (Fagus) at Crooked Pond (Shuman et al., in press) and Makepeace Cedar Swamp, Massachusetts (Newby et al., 2000), with lithostratigraphy and calibrated radiocarbon ages (Stuiver et al., 1998) for each core. Ages given for Crooked Pond, core H, are based on dates from cores D and K (italics; Shuman et al., 2001). Grey bands mark the Younger Dryas chronozone (YD, 12,900–11,600 cal yr BP) and the century-scale event around 8200 cal yr BP (B8.2). The estimated low lake-levels at both sites between these two periods are based on data from transects of cores (Newby et al., 2000; Shuman et al., 2001), including shallow-water lithostratigraphic facies (sand and peat) shown here.

Fig4.gif, 39K / Fig4.pdf, 42K