4.7 Article

Fijian, fire and grazing in Southern Tibet? A 20,000-year multi-proxy record in an alpine ecotonal ecosystem

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 256, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.106817

Keywords

Qinghai-Tibet-Plateau; Palynology; Ostracods; Black carbon; Climate modelling; Last Glacial Maximum; Holocene; Anthropocene; Neolithisation

Funding

  1. German Research Council (DFG)
  2. DFG under Germany's Excellence Strategy e EXC2037 CLICCS -Climate, Climatic Change, and Society [390683824]

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The study revealed the regional climate effects brought by the Himalayan arc, persistence of life during the Last Glacial Maximum, shifts in ecosystems, continuous fire records possibly linked to human activity, and the emergence of pastoralism during the early Mid Holocene Climatic Optimum, highlighting a significant gap between paleo-ecological and archaeological evidence.
The lithology, ostracods, palynomorphs and black carbon of a sediment core from a saline wetland in the southern Tibetan highlands (29 degrees 14'33.40 '' N/87 degrees 13'09.10 '' E, 4480 m a.s.I., A.R. Xizang, China) is analyzed and climate modelling applied with respect to core questions in Quaternary research: (1) Do mesoclimatic effects of regional landscape structures like high mountains overrule the effects of global climates? (2) Did life persist during the LGM? (3) Which shifts in ecosystems can be detected? (4) Does the fire-record testify for the presence of humans and their environmental impact? (5) How old is Neolithisation in the world's largest highlands? The results of this integrated multi-disciplinary investigation revealed (1) the meso-climatic effect of the Himalayan arc's relief channeled westerlies with West-Himalayan forest-pollen types into the southern Tibetan highlands, with (2) higher winter-precipitation, slightly lower summer precipitation, and the persistence of life for plants, and herbivores and therefore probably hunters. (3) The most arid period occurred between 17.8 and 15 cal kyr B.P., possibly synchronous with the Heinrich 1 event. Around 14.8 cal kyr B.P. humidity increased with torrential rains of high erosive power on sparsely plant-covered slopes and lasted until 4 cal kyr B.P. (4) The continuous fire-record proved the availability of combustible matter and a constant fire source which is believed to be human-attributed. Charcoal peaks around 17, 16 and 13 cal kyr B.P. remained sporadic until 11.5 cal kyr B.P. and attained the highest values since 8.7 cal kyr B.P. Black carbon increased steadily until 11 cal kyr B.P. and sharply peaked with high fluctuations around 10 cal kyr B.P., indicating high frequency intensive fires at the beginning of the Holocene. Between 10 and 6 cal kyr B.P. fire frequency decreases, with a slight peak around 4 cal kyr B.P. (5) The dawn of pastoralism in the early Mid Holocene Climatic Optimum dated back to 8.7 cal kyr B.P. with a decline of grass-pollen and the synchronous emergence of grazing weeds, leaving a perception gap of 5000 years between the palaeo-ecological and the archaeological state of the art. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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