EARLY TO MID HOLOCENE POLLEN SAMPLES CONTAINING MANGROVE POLLEN FROM SPONGE BAY, EAST-COAST, NORTH-ISLAND, NEW-ZEALAND

Authors
Citation
Dc. Mildenhall, EARLY TO MID HOLOCENE POLLEN SAMPLES CONTAINING MANGROVE POLLEN FROM SPONGE BAY, EAST-COAST, NORTH-ISLAND, NEW-ZEALAND, Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 24(2), 1994, pp. 219-230
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
ISSN journal
03036758
Volume
24
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
219 - 230
Database
ISI
SICI code
0303-6758(1994)24:2<219:ETMHPS>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Mangroves (Avicennia marina var. resinifera (Forst.f.) Bakh.) lived in the Poverty Bay-East Cape region during the early to mid Holocene for about 4,000 years, from c. 9,800-6,000 years BP. This suggests an ess entially frost-free climate at least one degree warmer than the presen t day, as required to allow germination and growth of Avicennia seedli ngs. Sea levels were then lower which would have provided a suitable s ubstrate for the plants on the continental shelf, the local extinction of Avicennia was due to the combination of subsequent sea level rise, increased frostiness, and the disappearance of habitat. Pollen sample s from four localities on the east coast of the North Island were exam ined, and all contain abundant evidence of recycled pollen from Cretac eous and Cenozoic sediments. Several samples from one locality (Sponge Bay, near Gisborne, about 7 km southeast of the only previously known North Island east coast early Holocene record of Avicennia) contain A vicennia pollen. Precise paleoclimatic studies were hampered by a mass ive influx of modem pollen into many of the samples, possibly caused b y unrecognised modem cut and fill, recycling of the sediments, and hyd rostatic injection of spore- and pollen-bearing water into the soft Ho locene sediments under the pressure of the frequent flood conditions. However, radiocarbon dates are internally consistent, suggesting that the last-named is probably the prime cause.