The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley

The paucity of polliniferous deposits on the British chalklands has left something of a vacuum in the known vegetational history of the British Isles. Conflicting ideas of the past landscape of the chalklands have been presented by archaeologists (e.g. Clark, 1936) and botanists (e.g. Tansley, 1939;...

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Main Author: Bush, Mark Bennett
Other Authors: Flenley, John (Supervisor), Nuffield Foundation (Sponsor), National Educational Research Centre Radiocarbon Committee (Sponsor)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Geography, The University of Hull 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/assets/hull:5114a/content
id ftunivhull:oai:hull.ac.uk:hull:5114
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivhull:oai:hull.ac.uk:hull:5114 2023-05-15T18:40:40+02:00 The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley Bush, Mark Bennett Flenley, John (Supervisor) Nuffield Foundation (Sponsor) National Educational Research Centre Radiocarbon Committee (Sponsor) 1986-06 application/pdf Filesize: 22,353KB http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/assets/hull:5114a/content eng eng Department of Geography, The University of Hull hull:5114 http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/assets/hull:5114a/content (c) 1986 Mark Bennett Bush. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder. Geology Sedimentology Mineralogy text Thesis or Dissertation 1986 ftunivhull 2022-12-23T14:01:22Z The paucity of polliniferous deposits on the British chalklands has left something of a vacuum in the known vegetational history of the British Isles. Conflicting ideas of the past landscape of the chalklands have been presented by archaeologists (e.g. Clark, 1936) and botanists (e.g. Tansley, 1939; Pigott and Walters, 1954). The Tansleyan view, i.e. that the chalklands were forested until the Bronze Age, has held sway. Tansley suggested that the dominant species were Quercus and Fraxinus. This was challenged by the view that Tilia may have been a dominant on basic soils (Merton, 1970). Such palaeoecological evidence as exists would suggest that woodlands covered the southern chalklands prior to Bronze Age disturbance, thus vindicating the Tansleyan school.In this thesis data from a site lying on the Yorkshire Wolds are presented. For the first time a broad spectrum of palaeoecological information is presented from a British Flandrian chalkland deposit. Pollen, bryophytes, plant propagules and macrofossil remains, mollusc and insect data form the basis for an environmental reconstruction of the major water catchment area of the Yorkshire Wolds.This is complemented by a study of modern analogue sites where a vegetation survey had been undertaken. Plant propagules, molluscs and bryophytes from the surface soil and modern pollen rain (trapped over a one year period) were collected from each site. These data were incorporated into statistical analyses to compare the changes in the fossil data with the range of known analogue habitats (after Lamb, 1984).Willow Garth, an ancient carr woodland in the Great Wold Valley, yielded fossil-rich deposits from the late-glacial and Flandrian periods. Although the sedimentary history of this site would appear to be incomplete, an exceptionally detailed image of the palaeoecological history of this valley emerges. The transition from the late-glacial fen and tundra to the Pre-Boreal forest occurred at c. 9200 B.P. However, the progression towards the mixed woodland of the Boreal ... Thesis Tundra University of Hull: Hydra Carr ENVELOPE(130.717,130.717,-66.117,-66.117)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Hull: Hydra
op_collection_id ftunivhull
language English
topic Geology
Sedimentology
Mineralogy
spellingShingle Geology
Sedimentology
Mineralogy
Bush, Mark Bennett
The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley
topic_facet Geology
Sedimentology
Mineralogy
description The paucity of polliniferous deposits on the British chalklands has left something of a vacuum in the known vegetational history of the British Isles. Conflicting ideas of the past landscape of the chalklands have been presented by archaeologists (e.g. Clark, 1936) and botanists (e.g. Tansley, 1939; Pigott and Walters, 1954). The Tansleyan view, i.e. that the chalklands were forested until the Bronze Age, has held sway. Tansley suggested that the dominant species were Quercus and Fraxinus. This was challenged by the view that Tilia may have been a dominant on basic soils (Merton, 1970). Such palaeoecological evidence as exists would suggest that woodlands covered the southern chalklands prior to Bronze Age disturbance, thus vindicating the Tansleyan school.In this thesis data from a site lying on the Yorkshire Wolds are presented. For the first time a broad spectrum of palaeoecological information is presented from a British Flandrian chalkland deposit. Pollen, bryophytes, plant propagules and macrofossil remains, mollusc and insect data form the basis for an environmental reconstruction of the major water catchment area of the Yorkshire Wolds.This is complemented by a study of modern analogue sites where a vegetation survey had been undertaken. Plant propagules, molluscs and bryophytes from the surface soil and modern pollen rain (trapped over a one year period) were collected from each site. These data were incorporated into statistical analyses to compare the changes in the fossil data with the range of known analogue habitats (after Lamb, 1984).Willow Garth, an ancient carr woodland in the Great Wold Valley, yielded fossil-rich deposits from the late-glacial and Flandrian periods. Although the sedimentary history of this site would appear to be incomplete, an exceptionally detailed image of the palaeoecological history of this valley emerges. The transition from the late-glacial fen and tundra to the Pre-Boreal forest occurred at c. 9200 B.P. However, the progression towards the mixed woodland of the Boreal ...
author2 Flenley, John (Supervisor)
Nuffield Foundation (Sponsor)
National Educational Research Centre Radiocarbon Committee (Sponsor)
format Thesis
author Bush, Mark Bennett
author_facet Bush, Mark Bennett
author_sort Bush, Mark Bennett
title The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley
title_short The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley
title_full The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley
title_fullStr The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley
title_full_unstemmed The Late Quaternary palaeoecological history of the Great Wold Valley
title_sort late quaternary palaeoecological history of the great wold valley
publisher Department of Geography, The University of Hull
publishDate 1986
url http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/assets/hull:5114a/content
long_lat ENVELOPE(130.717,130.717,-66.117,-66.117)
geographic Carr
geographic_facet Carr
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_relation hull:5114
http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/assets/hull:5114a/content
op_rights (c) 1986 Mark Bennett Bush. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.
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