Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany

The paper reports on the results of the pollen, plant macrofossil and geochemical analyses and the AMS 14C-based chronology of the «Rüdersdorf» outcrop situated east of Berlin in Brandenburg (Germany). The postglacial landscape changed from an open one to generally forested by ca. 14 cal. kyr BP. Wo...

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Main Authors: Kobe, Franziska, Bittner, Martin K., Leipe, Christian, Hoelzmann, Philipp, Long, Tengwen, Wagner, Mayke, Zibulski, Romy, Tarasov, Pavel E.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/35920
https://doi.org/10.17169/refubium-35635
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spelling ftfuberlin:oai:refubium.fu-berlin.de:fub188/35920 2023-05-15T18:40:28+02:00 Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany Kobe, Franziska Bittner, Martin K. Leipe, Christian Hoelzmann, Philipp Long, Tengwen Wagner, Mayke Zibulski, Romy Tarasov, Pavel E. 2022 16 Seiten application/pdf https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/35920 https://doi.org/10.17169/refubium-35635 eng eng https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/35920 http://dx.doi.org/10.17169/refubium-35635 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ CC-BY pollen analysis plant macrofossils sediment geochemistry AMS 14C dating vegetation climate change ddc:561 doc-type:article 2022 ftfuberlin https://doi.org/10.17169/refubium-35635 2022-08-21T22:23:19Z The paper reports on the results of the pollen, plant macrofossil and geochemical analyses and the AMS 14C-based chronology of the «Rüdersdorf» outcrop situated east of Berlin in Brandenburg (Germany). The postglacial landscape changed from an open one to generally forested by ca. 14 cal. kyr BP. Woody plants (mainly birch and pine) contributed up to 85% to the pollen assemblages ca. 13.4–12.5 cal. kyr BP. The subsequent Younger Dryas ( YD) interval is characterized by a decrease in arboreal pollen (AP) to 75% but led neither to substantial deforestation nor spread of tundra vegetation. This supports the concept that the YD cooling was mainly limited to the winter months, while summers remained comparably warm and allowed much broader (than initially believed) spread of cold-tolerant boreal trees. Further support for this theory comes from the fact that the relatively low AP values persisted until ca. 10.6 cal. kyr BP, when the «hazel phase» of the regional vegetation succession began. The postglacial hunter-gatherer occupation is archaeologically confirmed in Brandenburg since ca. 13 cal. kyr BP, i.e. much later than in the western part of Germany and ca. 1000 years after the major amelioration in the Rüdersdorf environmental record. Article in Journal/Newspaper Tundra Freie Universität Berlin: Refubium (FU Berlin)
institution Open Polar
collection Freie Universität Berlin: Refubium (FU Berlin)
op_collection_id ftfuberlin
language English
topic pollen analysis
plant macrofossils
sediment geochemistry
AMS 14C dating
vegetation
climate change
ddc:561
spellingShingle pollen analysis
plant macrofossils
sediment geochemistry
AMS 14C dating
vegetation
climate change
ddc:561
Kobe, Franziska
Bittner, Martin K.
Leipe, Christian
Hoelzmann, Philipp
Long, Tengwen
Wagner, Mayke
Zibulski, Romy
Tarasov, Pavel E.
Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany
topic_facet pollen analysis
plant macrofossils
sediment geochemistry
AMS 14C dating
vegetation
climate change
ddc:561
description The paper reports on the results of the pollen, plant macrofossil and geochemical analyses and the AMS 14C-based chronology of the «Rüdersdorf» outcrop situated east of Berlin in Brandenburg (Germany). The postglacial landscape changed from an open one to generally forested by ca. 14 cal. kyr BP. Woody plants (mainly birch and pine) contributed up to 85% to the pollen assemblages ca. 13.4–12.5 cal. kyr BP. The subsequent Younger Dryas ( YD) interval is characterized by a decrease in arboreal pollen (AP) to 75% but led neither to substantial deforestation nor spread of tundra vegetation. This supports the concept that the YD cooling was mainly limited to the winter months, while summers remained comparably warm and allowed much broader (than initially believed) spread of cold-tolerant boreal trees. Further support for this theory comes from the fact that the relatively low AP values persisted until ca. 10.6 cal. kyr BP, when the «hazel phase» of the regional vegetation succession began. The postglacial hunter-gatherer occupation is archaeologically confirmed in Brandenburg since ca. 13 cal. kyr BP, i.e. much later than in the western part of Germany and ca. 1000 years after the major amelioration in the Rüdersdorf environmental record.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kobe, Franziska
Bittner, Martin K.
Leipe, Christian
Hoelzmann, Philipp
Long, Tengwen
Wagner, Mayke
Zibulski, Romy
Tarasov, Pavel E.
author_facet Kobe, Franziska
Bittner, Martin K.
Leipe, Christian
Hoelzmann, Philipp
Long, Tengwen
Wagner, Mayke
Zibulski, Romy
Tarasov, Pavel E.
author_sort Kobe, Franziska
title Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany
title_short Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany
title_full Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany
title_fullStr Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany
title_full_unstemmed Lateglacial And Early Holocene Environments And Human Occupation In Brandenburg, Eastern Germany
title_sort lateglacial and early holocene environments and human occupation in brandenburg, eastern germany
publishDate 2022
url https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/35920
https://doi.org/10.17169/refubium-35635
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_relation https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/35920
http://dx.doi.org/10.17169/refubium-35635
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17169/refubium-35635
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