Palaeobotanical investigations of some peat deposits of Norse age at Qagssiarssuk, South Greenland.

Pollen- and macrofossil diagrams have been worked out from transects in four peat-covered depressions between Norse ruins at Qagssiarssuk. Willow scrub, rich in ferns and herbs, covered the area at the time of the landnam. After a clearance, grass-sedge communities rich in weeds, especially annuals,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fredskild, Bent
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Kommissionen for Videnskabelige Undersøgelser i Grønland 1978
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Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/meddrgroenland/article/view/147220
Description
Summary:Pollen- and macrofossil diagrams have been worked out from transects in four peat-covered depressions between Norse ruins at Qagssiarssuk. Willow scrub, rich in ferns and herbs, covered the area at the time of the landnam. After a clearance, grass-sedge communities rich in weeds, especially annuals, covered the area. Towards the end of the Norse period some of the transects indicate moister local conditions. Later on willow scrub spread again in the area. The history of some "Norse plants" is discussed, and finally the influence of the first agriculture on the vegetation in S. Greenland is compared with similar events in Scandinavia, Faroe Islands and Iceland. Pollen- and macrofossil diagrams have been worked out from transects in four peat-covered depressions between Norse ruins at Qagssiarssuk. Willow scrub, rich in ferns and herbs, covered the area at the time of the landnam. After a clearance, grass-sedge communities rich in weeds, especially annuals, covered the area. Towards the end of the Norse period some of the transects indicate moister local conditions. Later on willow scrub spread again in the area. The history of some "Norse plants" is discussed, and finally the influence of the first agriculture on the vegetation in S. Greenland is compared with similar events in Scandinavia, Faroe Islands and Iceland. Pollen- and macrofossil diagrams have been worked out from transects in four peat-covered depressions between Norse ruins at Qagssiarssuk. Willow scrub, rich in ferns and herbs, covered the area at the time of the landnam. After a clearance, grass-sedge communities rich in weeds, especially annuals, covered the area. Towards the end of the Norse period some of the transects indicate moister local conditions. Later on willow scrub spread again in the area. The history of some "Norse plants" is discussed, and finally the influence of the first agriculture on the vegetation in S. Greenland is compared with similar events in Scandinavia, Faroe Islands and Iceland.