4.2 Article

Lateglacial and early Holocene vegetation and climate gradients in the Nordfjord-Alesund area, western Norway

Journal

BOREAS
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages 783-798

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1502-3885.2010.00161.x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Norges Forskningsrad (Norwegian Research Council)

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Modern climate in western Norway shows a strong west-east gradient in oceanicity-continentality (coast to inner fjord) and altitudinal temperature gradients that control the regional and altitudinal zonation of vegetation. To discover if similar gradients existed during the Lateglacial and early Holocene, plant-macrofossil analyses were made from five lacustrine sediment sequences in the Nordfjord-Alesund region selected to sample the present climatic gradients. The macrofossil assemblages could be interpreted as analogues of the present vegetation, thus allowing reconstruction of past vegetation and climates. When the five sites were compared, climatic gradients could be detected. During the Lateglacial interstadial, mid-alpine assemblages with Salix herbacea and S. polaris occurred at the lowland coast and upland inland sites, whereas the inland lowland site had low-alpine dwarf-shrub heath dominated by Betula mina, demonstrating a strong west-east gradient in temperature and precipitation and an altitudinal gradient inland. During the Younger Dryas stadial, assemblages at the lowland coast and upland inland sites resembled high-alpine vegetation, whereas the inland lowland site was warmer with mid-alpine vegetation, demonstrating west-east and altitudinal temperature gradients. Gradients became less pronounced in the Holocene. The early abundance of Betula nana in the inner fjord sites but its rarity at the coast is striking and reflects the oceanicity gradient. All sites became forested with Betula pubescens a few centuries into the Holocene. This forest was probably close to tree line at 370 m a.s.l. at the coast. Inland, there was no detectable altitudinal gradient, with the tree line well above 400 in a.s.l. reflecting the present pattern of tree-line elevation.

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