Depositional history of peatland pines ( Pinus sylvestris L.) in NW Enontekiö, Finnish Lapland: implications for Middle Holocene drought and temperature fluctuations

High altitude and latitude findings of subfossil peatland pine trees were unearthed from the region of NW Finnish Lapland and dated by 14 C and tree‐ring methods. The depositional history of the trees illustrated two distinct peatland pine phases dated to Middle Holocene intervals 4900–4400 and 4100...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Boreas
Main Authors: Helama, Samuli, Herva, Hannu, Uusitalo, Joonas, Moir, Andy, Mielikäinen, Kari, Nöjd, Pekka, Oinonen, Markku, Sutinen, Raimo
Other Authors: Luonnontieteiden ja Tekniikan Tutkimuksen Toimikunta
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bor.12616
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/bor.12616
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Summary:High altitude and latitude findings of subfossil peatland pine trees were unearthed from the region of NW Finnish Lapland and dated by 14 C and tree‐ring methods. The depositional history of the trees illustrated two distinct peatland pine phases dated to Middle Holocene intervals 4900–4400 and 4100–3400 cal. a BC. It seems evident that both thermal and hydroclimatic fluctuations have played roles of varying importance in the establishment of this pine population and its demise. The presence of these pines, from a site ~60 km north of the coniferous timberline and conditions ~1 °C and 100 degree‐days colder than those at the present‐day timberline, concurs with previous studies demonstrating the association between the high‐latitude summer‐temperature cooling and circumpolar timberline retreat since the Middle Holocene due to Milankovitch forcing. On the other hand, the peatland pine recruitment was made possible by drier than present surface conditions during the previously reconstructed Middle Holocene drought anomaly (Hyvärinen‐Alhonen event). Our data suggest this event was not continuous but reached its two‐phase climax during the peatland pine phases, with an interruption of several centuries with moister surface conditions between 4400 and 4100 cal. a BC. The findings highlight the sensitivity of well‐dated peatland tree assemblages in terms of recording past climatic evolution and events and the need for new collections from north and south Fennoscandia and the Baltic region, for more detailed analyses over extended time intervals and regions.