SPATIAL DIVERSITY IN THE MID-FLANDRIAN VEGETATION HISTORY OF NORTH GILL, NORTH YORKSHIRE

Citation
J. Turner et al., SPATIAL DIVERSITY IN THE MID-FLANDRIAN VEGETATION HISTORY OF NORTH GILL, NORTH YORKSHIRE, New phytologist, 123(3), 1993, pp. 599-647
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
0028646X
Volume
123
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
599 - 647
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-646X(1993)123:3<599:SDITMV>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
The results of investigating a series of 11 pollen and stratigraphic p rofiles in peats along a 350 m stream section are described. Each prof ile has a small pollen catchment overlapping little with its neighbour 's and the diagrams therefore show fine spatial resolution of the vege tational history. Fine temporal resolution is provided by 1 cm, or for certain sections 1 mm, interval samples. There is evidence that durin g the Mesolithic distinct patches of the local forest vegetation, of t he order of tens rather than hundreds of metres in diameter, were mana ged by burning and the regular lopping of branches, for periods of up to a few hundred years each. Peat inception is thought to have occurre d as early as the 9th millenium BP in some parts of the stream and up to 3000 yr later in others. Lopping and burning was the immediate caus e at most sites within the channel of the gill, although fine-scale to pographic and geological variation affected the timing. The developing peat was bordered by an alder carr in the lower and middle reaches of the stream. Radiocarbon dating of the mid-Flandrian Ulmus decline sho ws it to be asynchronous. It was caused by a combination of factors in cluding disease and the affect the mesolithic management practices had had on the soil earlier in the Flandrian.