Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe

The Lateglacial and Postglacial terrestrial pollen records from Southern Europe, numerous and widespread in contrasting environments, are useful to reconstruct vegetational dynamics and main climatic trends as well as rapid changes. The forests began to spread at ca. 10500 radiocarbon years BP, with...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: SADORI, Laura
Other Authors: AA.VV., Sadori, Laura
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11573/169609
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spelling ftunivromairis:oai:iris.uniroma1.it:11573/169609 2023-11-05T03:44:03+01:00 Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe SADORI, Laura AA.VV. Sadori, Laura 2007 http://hdl.handle.net/11573/169609 unknown Elsevier country:NLD place:AMSTERDAM ispartofbook:Encyclopedia of Quaternary Sciences firstpage:2763 lastpage:2773 numberofpages:11 http://hdl.handle.net/11573/169609 climate change Holocene human impact Iberian Peninsula Italian Peninsula Lateglacial pollen record Mediterranean vegetation Postglacial Southern Balkan Peninsula Southern Europe Southern France info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart 2007 ftunivromairis 2023-10-11T16:46:41Z The Lateglacial and Postglacial terrestrial pollen records from Southern Europe, numerous and widespread in contrasting environments, are useful to reconstruct vegetational dynamics and main climatic trends as well as rapid changes. The forests began to spread at ca. 10500 radiocarbon years BP, with important regional differences in timing and extension of tree populations. All the tree taxa present today (apart the exotic ones) were found in the region at least since the end of the last glacial. They expanded, showing dynamics and timings which deserve further investigations, from multiple refugia located at different elevations. Vegetation changes, probably climate induced, are found at most sites; for a better understanding of this phenomenon the chronological setting of the records must be improved. A weak signal, hardly detected, is found in correspondence of the 8200 cal. years BP (ca. 7500-7400 uncal. years BP) north Atlantic event. A slow trend towards aridification began in western and central regions of Southern Europe around 7500-7000 uncal. years BP. In the last five thousands years it became more evident and widespread. In the last few millennia both anthropic and climate forcing can be considered as concomitant causes for the degradation of much of the forests and for the establishment of the present-day landscape. Book Part North Atlantic Sapienza Università di Roma: CINECA IRIS
institution Open Polar
collection Sapienza Università di Roma: CINECA IRIS
op_collection_id ftunivromairis
language unknown
topic climate change
Holocene
human impact
Iberian Peninsula
Italian Peninsula
Lateglacial
pollen record
Mediterranean vegetation
Postglacial
Southern Balkan Peninsula
Southern Europe
Southern France
spellingShingle climate change
Holocene
human impact
Iberian Peninsula
Italian Peninsula
Lateglacial
pollen record
Mediterranean vegetation
Postglacial
Southern Balkan Peninsula
Southern Europe
Southern France
SADORI, Laura
Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe
topic_facet climate change
Holocene
human impact
Iberian Peninsula
Italian Peninsula
Lateglacial
pollen record
Mediterranean vegetation
Postglacial
Southern Balkan Peninsula
Southern Europe
Southern France
description The Lateglacial and Postglacial terrestrial pollen records from Southern Europe, numerous and widespread in contrasting environments, are useful to reconstruct vegetational dynamics and main climatic trends as well as rapid changes. The forests began to spread at ca. 10500 radiocarbon years BP, with important regional differences in timing and extension of tree populations. All the tree taxa present today (apart the exotic ones) were found in the region at least since the end of the last glacial. They expanded, showing dynamics and timings which deserve further investigations, from multiple refugia located at different elevations. Vegetation changes, probably climate induced, are found at most sites; for a better understanding of this phenomenon the chronological setting of the records must be improved. A weak signal, hardly detected, is found in correspondence of the 8200 cal. years BP (ca. 7500-7400 uncal. years BP) north Atlantic event. A slow trend towards aridification began in western and central regions of Southern Europe around 7500-7000 uncal. years BP. In the last five thousands years it became more evident and widespread. In the last few millennia both anthropic and climate forcing can be considered as concomitant causes for the degradation of much of the forests and for the establishment of the present-day landscape.
author2 AA.VV.
Sadori, Laura
format Book Part
author SADORI, Laura
author_facet SADORI, Laura
author_sort SADORI, Laura
title Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe
title_short Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe
title_full Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe
title_fullStr Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe
title_full_unstemmed Pollen Records, Postglacial. Southern Europe
title_sort pollen records, postglacial. southern europe
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/11573/169609
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation ispartofbook:Encyclopedia of Quaternary Sciences
firstpage:2763
lastpage:2773
numberofpages:11
http://hdl.handle.net/11573/169609
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