A 12 000-year record of environmental change in the Lomond Hills, Fife, Scotland: Vegetational and climatic variability |
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Authors: | Kevin J. Edwards Graeme Whittington |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Archaeology and Prehistory, The University of Sheffield, Northgate House, West Street, S1 4ET Sheffield, UK;(2) School of Geography and Geosciences, The University of St Andrews, KY16 9ST Fife, UK |
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Abstract: | The Lomond Hills of Fife, an isolated upland area rising to over 500 m, provide an opportunity to investigate the effect of altitude on vegetation and climate in an area otherwise dominated by lower-lying land. The West Lomond site contains sediments of the Devensian Late-glacial period; they reveal a well-defined sequence of Bolling-Older Dryas-Allerod-Younger Dryas events, commencing ca. 12 190 radiocarbon years B.P. and a probable Amphi-Atlantic Oscillation between ca. 11 040 and 10 800 B.P. The Holocene record is constrained by low sediment input but does reveal a woodland presence at this altitude, dominated byBetula andCorylus. Size statistics forBetula pollen are presented and the implications of the vegetational and climatic record are discussed. The traditional view of a smooth progress towards more temperate conditions following the Younger Dryas is not supported; between 10 180 and 9120 B.P., three cooler periods are inferred, the earliest of which may belong to a terminal phase of the Younger Dryas. Comparative pollen ‘influx’ data strongly suggest thatQuercus,Ulmus andAlnus were not present locally. As a working hypothesis, it is suggested that the demise of woodland, from ca. 5950 B.P., was a result of exposure. Pollen indicative of human impact was probably derived from areas of lowland agricultural activity from ca. 5330 B.P. onwards. |
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Keywords: | Palynology Late-glacial Holocene Climate change Scotland |
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