4.2 Article

Last interglacial plant macrofossils and climates from Ziegler Reservoir, Snowmass Village, Colorado, USA

Journal

QUATERNARY RESEARCH
Volume 82, Issue 3, Pages 553-566

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.yqres.2014.07.008

Keywords

Plant macrofossils; Last interglacial; Paleoecology; Paleoclimate

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Ninety plant macrofossil taxa from the Ziegler Reservoir fossil site near Snowmass Village, Colorado, record environmental changes at high elevation (2705 m asp in the Rocky Mountains during the Last Interglacial Period. Present-day vegetation is aspen forest (Populus tremuloides) intermixed with species of higher (Picea, Abies) and lower (Artemisia, Quercus) elevations. Stratigraphic units 4-13 contain montane forest taxa found near the site today and several species that today generally live at lower elevations within (Abies concolor, Lycopus americanus) and outside Colorado (Najas flexilis). These data suggest near-modern climatic conditions, with slightly warmer summer and winter temperatures. This montane forest period was succeeded by a shorter treeless interval (Unit 14) representing colder and/or drier conditions. In units 15-16, conifer trees reoccur but deciduous and herb taxa are lacking, suggesting a return to warmer conditions, although cooler than during the earlier forest period. Comparison of these inferred paleoclimatic changes with the site's geochronologic framework indicates that the lower interval of sustained warmth correlates with late MIS 6-early 5b (similar to 138-94 ka), the cold interval with MIS 5b (similar to 94-87 ka), and the uppermost cool assemblages with MIS 5a (similar to 87-77 ka). Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of University of Washington.

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