4.7 Article

Holocene fire activity during low-natural flammability periods reveals scale-dependent cultural human-fire relationships in Europe

期刊

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
卷 201, 期 -, 页码 44-56

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.10.005

关键词

Sedimentary charcoal; Fire; Human impact; Central europe; Land cover; Holocene; Archaeology

资金

  1. Virtual Helmholtz Institute of Integrated Climate and Landscape Evolution Analyses (ICLEA) [VH-VI-415]
  2. Past Global Changes from the US National Science Foundation
  3. Swiss Academy of Sciences
  4. Poland National Science Center [2015/17/13/ST10/03430, 2015/17/B/ST10/01656, NN305 062 240, NN306 061740, NN306 228039, 2PO4G 049 29]
  5. Swiss Contribution to the enlarged European Union [PSPB-013/2010]
  6. Swiss Government Excellence Postdoctoral Scholarship [FIRECO 2016.0310]
  7. University of Guelph [530-L145-D581-17]
  8. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education
  9. German Research Foundation (DFG) [RE3994-1/1, FE-1096/4-1]
  10. Research Council of Lithuania [S-MIP-17-133]
  11. Latvian National basic funding [Y5-AZ03-ZF-N-110, ZD2010/AZ03, AAP2016/B041]
  12. Latvian Council of Science project [LZP-2018/1-0171]
  13. Estonian Research Council [IUT1-8]
  14. Scientific Exchange Program from the Swiss Contribution to the New Member States of the European Union (Sciex-NMSch)-SCIEX Scholarship Fund [RE-FIRE 12.286]
  15. W. Szafer Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences
  16. NERC [bas0100034] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Fire is a natural component of global biogeochemical cycles and closely related to changes in human land use. Whereas climate-fuel relationships seem to drive both global and subcontinental fire regimes, human-induced fires are prominent mainly on a local scale. Furthermore, the basic assumption that relates humans and fire regimes in terms of population densities, suggesting that few human-induced fires should occur in periods and areas of low population density, is currently debated. Here, we analyze human-fire relationships throughout the Holocene and discuss how and to what extent human driven fires affected the landscape transformation in the Central European Lowlands (CEL). We present sedimentary charcoal composites on three spatial scales and compare them with climate model output and land cover reconstructions from pollen records. Our findings indicate that widespread natural fires only occurred during the early Holocene. Natural conditions (climate and vegetation) limited the extent of wildfires beginning 8500 cal. BP, and diverging subregional charcoal composites suggest that Mesolithic hunter-gatherers maintained a culturally diverse use of fire. Divergence in regional charcoal composites marks the spread of sedentary cultures in the western and eastern CEL The intensification of human land use during the last millennium drove an increase in fire activity to early-Holocene levels across the CEL Hence, humans have significantly affected natural fire regimes beyond the local scale - even in periods of low population densities - depending on diverse cultural land-use strategies. We find that humans have strongly affected land-cover- and biogeochemical cycles since Mesolithic times. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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