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Characterization and Palaeoecological Significance of Archaeological Charcoal Assemblages during Late and Post-Glacial Phases in Southern France
77
Citations
6
References
1998
Year
ArchaeologyBiostratigraphySouthern FranceEarth ScienceSocial SciencesPaleoenvironmental ReconstructionBiogeographyBioarchaeologyArchaeological RecordLanguage StudiesPalaeo-environmental ReconstructionArchaeological EvidenceKey Plant SpeciesGeographyArchaeological Charcoal AssemblagesSedimentologyPrehistoric ArchaeologyCorrespondence Factor AnalysisAnthropologyVegetation HistoryPost-glacial PhasesPaleoecologyArchaeological Dating
Archaeological sites at Abeurador and Font-Juvénal have produced extensive charcoal-rich horizons. The results of the charcoal analysis, based on the identification of woody species from anatomical features, contribute to the elaboration of plain phases within the development of vegetation in southern France. They are presented here in a new diagram and are interpreted as four major vegetation phases from 11,000 14 C yr B.P. to the recent past. In order to interpret the palaeoecological significance of the charcoal assemblages we have used multivariate analysis. The data base consists of 42 taxa and 48 archaeological levels. The division into four vegetation phases based on analytical interpretation is complemented by the more synthetic interpretation based on correspondence factor analysis (CFA). The results reveal the patterns of the vegetation history over the last 11 millennia, each being characterized by a key plant species.
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