4.7 Article

15,000 Years of vegetation change in the Bonneville basin: the Blue Lake pollen record

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 28, Issue 3-4, Pages 308-326

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2008.09.027

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Desert Research Institute Anna McDowell Lander Fellowship
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. US Geological Survey
  4. University of Nevada EPSCoR Program
  5. Jonathan O. Davis Scholarship (DRI)
  6. Graduate Student Association (UNR)
  7. Herbert Splatt Scholarship (UNR Anthropology Department)
  8. Sundance Archaeological Research Fund (UNR Department of Anthropology)
  9. AmArcs of Nevada

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This paper contributes to the emerging picture of late Pleistocene and Holocene environmental change in the Bonneville basin, western North America, through analysis of pollen and sediments from the Blue Lake marsh system, a major wetland area located on the western margin of the Great Salt Lake desert. Analyses of data obtained from the upper 4 m of the Blue Lake core suggest that during the latest Pleistocene, when Lake Bonneville covered the Blue Lake site, pine and sagebrush dominated terrestrial plant communities. These steppe-woodland taxa declined in abundance after similar to 12 cal ka BP. Wetland plant communities developed at or nearby Blue Lake by similar to 11.9 cal ka BP and bulrush-dominated marshes were established no later than 10.8 cal ka BP. The Blue Lake wetlands largely desiccated during a dry and warm early middle Holocene similar to 8.3-6.5 cal ka BP. Climatic amelioration starting similar to 6.5 cal ka BP is marked principally by a local return of marshes at the expense of playa and grass meadow communities, and a regional increase in sagebrush relative to other dryland shrubs. Singleleaf pinyon pine migrated into the nearby Goshute Mountains after similar to 8 cal ka BP. Late Holocene fluctuations include cool intervals from similar to 4.4 to 3.4 and similar to 2.7 to 1.5 cal ka BP and warmer conditions from 3.4 to 2.7 cal BP and after 1.5 cal ka BR (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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