The southern Alpine foreland, facing windward to moist southern airmasses, is claimed to have supported forest vegetation throughout the Last Glaciation. Here we present a multiproxy paleoecological record from a compressed peat, uncovered at Casaletto Ceredano, N-Italy, spanning the interval from 33 to 30.5 kyr cal BP. Stratigraphically, it underlies a fluvioglacial belt attributed to the Last Glacial Maximum. The peat records a floodplain swamp community with tree birch and tall sedges, pine woodlands in upland areas, and only limited patches of open vegetation. Plant macrofossils - bark, charcoal, wood and fruits - establish the predominant role of Betula pubescens group (downy birch) in the anoxic wetland, thanks to its ability to enhance gas exchange through a distinctive type of bark lenticels. A fire-induced birch-to-pine cycle is repeated twice along the 2500 years-time span covered by the peat layer. The climate reconstructed from modern pollen analogs compares to northern boreal zone, with Tjuly < 15 °C, excluding warm-temperate trees. A major flood sealing the swamp with minerogenic silt is precisely dated to 30,497 ± 594 yr cal BP (2? uncertainty). Here, the pollen record shows a substantial forest withdrawal, and development of grasslands and semideserts, pointing to co-factorial action of increased climate continentality and of river dynamics. According to teleconnections with the Atlantic and Arctic framework of the stadial-interstadial climate variability, the age and pattern of this event are consistent with the onset of Heinrich Stadial 3, causing a lockdown of moist westerlies and of their Rossby waves in the W-Mediterranean.

Birch-sedge communities, forest withdrawal and flooding at the beginning of Heinrich Stadial 3 at the southern Alpine foreland

Ravazzi C;Badino F;Bertuletti P;Pini R
2020

Abstract

The southern Alpine foreland, facing windward to moist southern airmasses, is claimed to have supported forest vegetation throughout the Last Glaciation. Here we present a multiproxy paleoecological record from a compressed peat, uncovered at Casaletto Ceredano, N-Italy, spanning the interval from 33 to 30.5 kyr cal BP. Stratigraphically, it underlies a fluvioglacial belt attributed to the Last Glacial Maximum. The peat records a floodplain swamp community with tree birch and tall sedges, pine woodlands in upland areas, and only limited patches of open vegetation. Plant macrofossils - bark, charcoal, wood and fruits - establish the predominant role of Betula pubescens group (downy birch) in the anoxic wetland, thanks to its ability to enhance gas exchange through a distinctive type of bark lenticels. A fire-induced birch-to-pine cycle is repeated twice along the 2500 years-time span covered by the peat layer. The climate reconstructed from modern pollen analogs compares to northern boreal zone, with Tjuly < 15 °C, excluding warm-temperate trees. A major flood sealing the swamp with minerogenic silt is precisely dated to 30,497 ± 594 yr cal BP (2? uncertainty). Here, the pollen record shows a substantial forest withdrawal, and development of grasslands and semideserts, pointing to co-factorial action of increased climate continentality and of river dynamics. According to teleconnections with the Atlantic and Arctic framework of the stadial-interstadial climate variability, the age and pattern of this event are consistent with the onset of Heinrich Stadial 3, causing a lockdown of moist westerlies and of their Rossby waves in the W-Mediterranean.
2020
Istituto di Geologia Ambientale e Geoingegneria - IGAG
Floodplain paleoecology
Betula pubescens
Bark lenticels
Climate-driven alluvial activity
Heinrich Stadial 3
Radiocarbon chronology
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/382542
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