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Linking past cultural developments to palaeoenvironmental changes in Estonia
Authors:Ülle Sillasoo  Anneli Poska  Heikki Seppä  Maarten Blaauw  Frank M. Chambers
Affiliation:(1) Department of Landscape Ecology, Institute of Ecology at Tallinn University, Uus-Sadama 5, 10120 Tallinn, Estonia;(2) Centre for Landscape and Culture, Estonian Institute of Humanities, Centre of Excellence in Cultural Theory, Tallinn University, Uus-Sadama 5, 10120 Tallinn, Estonia;(3) Institute of Geology at Tallinn University of Technology, Ehitajate tee 5, 19086 Tallinn, Estonia;(4) Institute of Geology, Tartu University, Vanemuise 46, 51014 Tartu, Estonia;(5) Department of Geology, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 64, 00014 Helsinki, Finland;(6) School of Geography, Archaeology and Palaeoecology, Queen’s University, Belfast, UK;(7) Centre for Environmental Change and Quaternary Research, Department of Natural and Social Sciences, University of Gloucestershire, Francis Close Hall, Swindon Rd., Cheltenham, GL50 4AZ, UK
Abstract:Connections between environmental and cultural changes are analysed in Estonia during the past c. 4,500 years. Records of cereal-type pollen as (agri)cultural indices are compared with high-resolution palaeohydrological and annual mean temperature reconstructions from a selection of Estonian bogs and lakes (and Lake Igelsjön in Sweden). A broad-scale comparison shows increases in the percentage of cereal-type pollen during a decreasing trend in annual mean temperatures over the past c. 4,300 years, suggesting a certain independence of agrarian activities from environmental conditions at the regional level. The first cereal-type pollen in the region is found from a period with a warm and dry climate. A slow increase in pollen of cultivated land is seen around the beginning of the late Bronze Age, a slight increase at the end of the Roman Iron Age and a significant increase at the beginning of the Middle Ages. In a few cases increases in agricultural pollen percentages occur in the periods of warming. Stagnation and regression occurs in the periods of cooling, but regression at individual sites may also be related to warmer climate episodes. The cooling at c. 400–300 cal b.p., during the ‘Little Ice Age’ coincides with declines in cereal-type and herb pollen curves. These may not, however, be directly related to the climate change, because they coincide with war activities in the region.
Keywords:Late Holocene  Baltic Sea region  Palaeoclimate  Early agriculture  Pollen analysis  Archaeology
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