Publication | Closed Access
Constructing Seasonal Climograph Overlap Envelopes from Holocene Packrat Midden Contents, Dinosaur National Monument, Colorado
20
Citations
16
References
2002
Year
Sand Canyon AlcovePaleoenvironmental ReconstructionPalaeo-environmental ReconstructionEngineeringPrecipitation TolerancesGeomorphologyBiogeographyPaleoenvironmental ChangeGeographyGeologyVegetation HistoryPaleoecologyEarth ScienceSocial SciencesDinosaur National MonumentModern Plant Tolerances
Abstract Five Neotoma spp. (packrat) middens are analyzed from Sand Canyon Alcove, Dinosaur National Monument, Colorado. Plant remains in middens dated at approximately 9870, 9050, 8460, 3000, and 0 14 C yr B.P. are used to estimate Holocene seasonal temperature and precipitation values based on modern plant tolerances published by Thompson et al. (1999a, 1999b). Early Holocene vegetation at the alcove shows a transition from a cool/mesic to a warmer, more xeric community between 9050 and 8460 14 C yr B.P. Picea pungens, Pinus flexilis , and Juniperus communis exhibit an average minimum elevational displacement of 215 m. Picea pungens and Pinus flexilis are no longer found in the monument. Estimates based on modern plant parameters (Thompson et al. , 1999a) suggest that average temperatures at 9870 14 C yr B.P. may have been at least 1° to 3°C colder in January and no greater than 3° to 10°C colder in July than modern at this site. Precipitation during this time may have been at least 2 times modern in January and 2 to 3 times modern in July. Discrepancies in estimated temperature and precipitation tolerances between last occurrence and first occurrence taxa in the midden record suggest that midden assemblages may include persisting relict vegetation.
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