The vegetation and climate history of the last glacial cycle in a new pollen record from Lake Fimon (southern Alpine foreland, N-Italy).
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
The sediments of Lake Fimon, N-Italy, contain the first continuous archive of the Late Pleistocene
environmental and climate history of the southern Alpine foreland. We present here the detailed
palynological record of the interval between Termination II and the Last Glacial Maximum. The
ageedepth model is obtained by radiocarbon dating in the uppermost part of the record. Downward, we
correlated major forest expansion and contraction events to isotopic events in the Greenland Ice core
records, via a stepping-stone approach involving intermediate correlation to isotopic events dated by
TIMS U/Th in Alpine and Apennine stalagmites, and to pollen records from marine cores of the Iberian
margin. Modelled ages obtained by Bayesian analysis of deposition are thoroughly consistent with actual
ages, with maximum offset of 1700 years. Sharp expansion of broad-leaved temperate forest and of
sudden water table rise mark the onset of the Last Interglacial after a treeless steppe phase at the end of
penultimate glaciation. This event is actually a two-step process which matches the two-step rise
observed in the isotopic record of the nearby Antro del Corchia stalagmite, respectively dated to 132.5
2.5 and 129 1.5 ka. At the interglacial decline mixed oak forests were replaced by oceanic mixed
forests, the latter persisting further for 7 ka till the end of the Eemian succession. Warm-temperate
woody species are still abundant at the Eemian end, corroborating a steep gradient between central
Europe and the Alpine divide at the inception of the last glacial. After a stadial phase marked by
moderate forest decline, a new expansion of warm broad-leaved forests, interrupted by minor events and
followed by mixed oceanic forests, can be identified with the north-alpine Saint Germain I. The spread of
beech during the oceanic phase is a valuable circumalpine marker. The subsequent stadialeinterstadial
succession, lacking the telocratic oceanic phase, is also consistent with the evidence at the north-alpine
foreland. The Middle Würmian (full glacial) is marked by persistence of mixed forests dominated by
conifers but with significant lime and other broad-leaved species. A major Arboreal Pollen decrease is
observed at modelled age of 38.7 0.5 ka (larch expansion and last occurrence of lime), which has been
related to Heinrich Event 4. The evidence of afforestation persisting south of the Alps throughout most of
MIS 3 contrasts with a boreal and continental landscape known for the northern alpine foreland,
pointing to a sharp rainfall boundary at the Alpine divide and to southern air circulation. This is in
agreement with the Alpine paleoglaciological record and is supported by the pressure and rainfall
patterns designed by mesoscale paleoclimate simulations. Strenghtening the continental high pressure
during the full glacial triggered cyclogenesis in the middle latitude eastern Europe and orographic
rainfall in the eastern Alps and the Balkanic mountains, thus allowing forests development at current
sea-level altitudes.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Ravazzi, Cesare; Pini, Roberta
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