Paleoecological Interpretation and Age of an Interstadial Lake Bed in Western New York
- 20 January 1992
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 37 (1) , 75-88
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(92)90007-6
Abstract
Pollen assemblages from a 6.6-m exposure of Pleistocene lake silt in central western New York consist of anomalous mixtures dominated by spruce, pine, and sedge but with a significant representation of deciduous forest elements. Leaves ofDryas integrifoliaand plants of the terrestrial mossDistichiumfrom the lake silt yielded AMS ages of 24,900 ± 1000 and 24,180 ± 900 yr B.P., indicating that the silt was deposited during the middle Wisconsinan Plum Point interstade and that the pollen of beech, hickory, and other deciduous trees was recycled from an interglacial deposit. Caution therefore must be exercised in the paleoecological interpretation of interstadial lake deposits. Plant macrofossil assemblages (seeds, fruits, mosses) from the silt also probably are mixtures of primary and secondary fossils. Scanning electron microscopy of surface features of fruits and seeds revealed two classes of preservation. The best-preserved fossils had intact surface microfeatures and are considered of primary origin. Those with the outer cell layer degraded or absent probably have been recycled. The distributions of species represented in the latter category center on the Great Lakes region and southward, whereas those of the primary fossils are more northern and indicate tundra and spruce-jack pine forest. The late Wisconsinan Kent ice margin advanced across central western New York after ca. 24,500 yr B.P. into a mosaic of tundra and conifer forest.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Does Altonian Drift Exist in Pennsylvania and New Jersey?Quaternary Research, 1990
- Glacially redeposited pollen in tills of southern Ontario, CanadaCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1989
- Transport, sorting, and reworking of late Wisconsinan plant macrofossils from Lake Erie, CanadaBoreas, 1986
- The Gowanda Hospital interstadial site, New YorkAmerican Journal of Science, 1982
- Two origins of the stratified Catfish Creek Till at Plum Point, Ontario, CanadaBoreas, 1982
- Pre-Quaternary microfossils—A guide to errors in radiocarbon datingGeology, 1980
- Paleobotany of Wisconsinan Interstadials, Eastern Great Lakes Region, North AmericaQuaternary Research, 1975
- Pollen-bearing sediments of the St. Davids buried valley fill at the Whirlpool, Niagara River gorge, OntarioCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1970
- THE PORT TALBOT INTERSTADE OF THE WISCONSIN GLACIATIONCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1966
- Quaternary section at Otto, New YorkAmerican Journal of Science, 1964