D. Penny, A 40,000 year palynological record from north-east Thailand; implications for biogeography and palaeo-environmental reconstruction, PALAEOGEO P, 171(3-4), 2001, pp. 97-128
There are few palaeoenvironmental data from the Indo-Chinese peninsula that
document environmental and climatic conditions prior to the Holocene. This
study of pollen and spores from a small peat-swamp in north-east Thailand
provides a record of vegetation change covering ca. 40,000 years B.P. (Befo
re Present). These data indicate that the region supported a Fagaceous-Coni
ferous forest, similar to contemporary vegetation described from south-west
China. Climatic conditions were cooler and probably drier than present day
climates in Thailand. Levels of biomass burning are relatively high throug
hout this period. Tropical broad-leaf deciduous forest becomes dominant at
the Pleistocene/Holocene boundary with the fragmentation of Fagaceous-Conif
erous forest in response to increased temperatures. (C) 2001 Elsevier Scien
ce B.V. All rights reserved.