Messinian vegetation maps of the Mediterranean region using models and interpolated pollen data |
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Authors: | Eric Favre,Louis Franç ois,Rachid Cheddadi,Jean-Pierre Suc |
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Affiliation: | a UMR 5125 PEPS CNRS, France, université Lyon 1, campus de La Doua, bâtiment Géode, 69622 Villeurbanne cedex, France b Laboratoire de physique atmosphérique et planétaire (LPAP), université de Liège, allée du 6-Août, 4000 Liège, Belgique c Institut de physique du Globe de Paris (UMR 7154 CNRS), université Denis-Diderot - Paris 7, boîte 89, 4, Place Jussieu, 75252 Paris cedex 5, France d Institut des sciences de l’évolution (UMR 5554 CNRS), équipe paléoenvironnements, université de Montpellier II, Place Eugène-Bataillon, 34095 Montpellier, France |
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Abstract: | This study proposes to compare the outputs from the CARAIB vegetation model forced by results from the LMD General Circulation Model with interpolated pollen data (Kriging method) from the Mediterranean region during the Messinian. The vegetation maps that have been obtained represent distinct phases of the salinity crisis: before the crisis and during the marginal evaporitic phase (interpolated map), and during the complete desiccation phase (simulated map). However, they are comparable in terms of vegetation density and agree on a strong contrast between the Northern (forest vegetation) and Southern (open vegetation) Mediterranean regions. Main differences concern the type of forests in the northern Mediterranean region, which are explained by discrepancies between precipitation amount predicted by the model and that calculated by a transfer function using pollen records. The interpolation method has been successfully tested in France using interpolated current pollen records by comparison with the present-day potential vegetation map. The resulting Messinian map is useful to validate or improve model simulation which does not take into account the depth of the Mediterranean Basin when it dried up. The Southern Mediterranean landscapes were open, with a steppe-like vegetation to the West and a savannah-like vegetation to the East. Forests prevailed to the North, organized in a mosaic system mainly controlled by relief. Such a contrast provides some explanation of the large number of deep fluvial canyons cut on the Northern margin at opposed to the South during the Mediterranean desiccation. |
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Keywords: | Palaeovegetation mapping Messinian Mediterranean region |
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