4.3 Article

A 5600-yr history of changing vegetation, sea levels and human impacts from the Black Sea coast of Georgia

Journal

HOLOCENE
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 25-36

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0959683607073270

Keywords

Colchis; Caucasus; pollen; charcoal; sea-level rise; archaeology; vegetation; human impact; Holocene; Black Sea; Georgia

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Mid-late Holocene pollen evidence from the Ispani-II Sphagnum bog in lowland Western Georgia shows that 4500 years ago Castanea (chestnut)-dominated woods rapidly declined to be replaced by alder swamps and, later, during the first millennium be, by open, marshy landscapes in which fire played a prominent part. Around 1900 years ago, Sphagnum blanket bog encroached on the marshes and dense Fagus-Carpinus (beech-hornbeam) forest enveloped the surrounding land. This vegetation remained until the mid-twentieth century, when forests were clear-felled and marshes were drained for large-scale, mechanized agriculture. Previous studies have emphasized climate's governing role in setting the course of Holocene vegetation development in lowland Western Georgia, but our results provide little support for this hypothesis. To a much greater degree, episodes of coastal subsidence, sea-level rise and human impact have shaped the vegetation history of coastal Western Caucasus.

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