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Expansion of Magellanic Moorland during the Late Pleistocene: Palynological Evidence from Northern Isla de Chiloé, Chile
97
Citations
13
References
1988
Year
EngineeringGeomorphologyRio Negro SectionArchaeologyEarth ScienceSocial SciencesPaleoenvironmental ChangeVegetation-atmosphere InteractionsBiogeographyForest MeteorologyPleistoceneGeochronologyPalaeo-environmental ReconstructionNorthern IslaGeographyMagellanic MoorlandLate PleistoceneVegetation HistoryPaleoecologyQuaternary PeriodRío Negro Drainage
The late Quaternary vegetation of northern Isla de Chiloé is inferred from palynological analysis of a section in the Río Negro drainage (42°03′S, 73°50′W). At ca. 30,500 yr B.P., maxima of Astelia and Donatia occurred, suggesting wetland development. From that time until ca. 27,000 yr B.P., steppe indicators such as Compositae/Gramineae dominated, suggesting drier conditions. After 27,000 yr B.P., the moorland shrub Dacrydium gradually increased, reaching a maximum by 18,000 yr B.P. At this time Astelia increased again, suggesting development of cushion bog during cold and wet conditions. The glacial-postglacial transition is characterized by a marked change from peaty sediments to clays, a decrease in the cushion bog flora, and the prevalence of Gramineae/ Compositae and swamp taxa. This vegetation prevailed until ca.7000 yr B.P. when forest taxa became dominant. The floristic pattern inferred from the pollen spectra of the Rio Negro section suggests that the late Pleistocene vegetation of Chiloé resembled modern Magellanic Moorland vegetation (52°–56°lat S). Based on climatic conditions presently associated with Magellanic Moorland, its occurrence in Chiloé at low elevations during the late Pleistocene implies a decrease in average temperature of at least 4°C and an increase in annual precipitation of at least 1500 mm.
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