Reconstructing the palaeoenvironments of the Early Pleistocene mammal fauna from the pollen preserved on fossil bones.
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
We carried out a systematic investigation on the pollen content of sediment adhering to skeletal
elements of large mammals which originate from the long lacustrine record of Leffe (Early Pleistocene of
the Italian Alps). Three local faunas were discovered during mining activities along the intermediate part
(spanning from 1.5 to 0.95 Ma) of the basin succession. The excellent pollen preservation allowed testing
the reproducibility of the pollen signal from single skeletons. A clear palaeoenvironmental patterning,
consistent with the ecological preferences of the considered mammal species, emerged from the
canonical correspondence analysis of pollen types diagnostic for vegetation communities. Edaphic
factors related to seasonal river activity changes and to the development of swamp forests in the
riverbanks are significantly associated to the occurrences of Hippopotamus cf. antiquus, whereas finds of
Mammuthus meridionalis belong to fully forested landscapes dominated by conifer or mixed forests of
oceanic, warm to cool-temperate climate. Rhinoceros habitats include variable forest cover under
different climate states. Distinct cool-temperate, partially open vegetation could be recognized for large
deer included Cervalces cf carnutorum.
A palynostratigraphic correlation between individual spectra and a reference palynostratigraphic
record allowed assignment of many fossil remains to a precise stratigraphic position. This procedure also
shown that the Leffe local faunas include specimens accumulated under different environmental and
climate states, as a consequence of high-frequency climate changes characterizing the Late Villafranchian
Early Pleistocene.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Pini, Roberta; Ravazzi, Cesare
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