Holocene Vegetation History of the Prince William Sound Region, South-Central Alaska
- 1 May 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 19 (3) , 337-355
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(83)90040-6
Abstract
Vegetation history during the Holocene is interpreted from the pollen and sedimentary records of nine sections of peat deposits located in sedge tundra at sites in the northern and northwestern parts of the Prince William Sound region. Basal radiocarbon ages of the deposits are between 10,015 and 580 yr B.P. Modern surface pollen data from these and 25 additional sites, ranging from lowlands to an altitude of 675 m in the alpine tundra, were used to aid in the interpretation of the fossil records. Both frequency and influx pollen diagrams of the oldest section disclose a sequence of communities beginning with sedge tundra, containing thickets of willow and alder, followed by alder, which became predominant at about 8300 yr B.P. Later, alder declined, and an inferred growth of sedge tundra and the establishment of colonies of mountain hemlock and Sitka spruce with some western hemlock occurred about 2680 yr B.P. Finally, regrowth of sedge tundra accompanied by the development of forest communites took place over the past 2000 yr. The influence of glacier advances on the vegetation in the fjords occurred during Neoglacial episodes dated at 3200–2500 yr B.P. and during recent centuries. Regional Holocene tectonic activity was also an influential factor, especially at the time of the 1964 earthquake.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Holocene Climatic Variations—Their Pattern and Possible CauseQuaternary Research, 1973
- A Checklist of the Mosses of AlaskaThe Bryologist, 1970
- Distribution of Surging Glaciers in Western North AmericaJournal of Glaciology, 1969
- Chronology of neoglaciation in the North American CordilleraAmerican Journal of Science, 1967
- Tectonic Deformation Associated with the 1964 Alaska EarthquakeScience, 1965
- The Response of Fjord Glaciers to Changes in the Firn LimitJournal of Glaciology, 1961
- Pollen Profiles from Prince William Sound and Southeastern Kenai Peninsula, AlaskaEcology, 1955
- Vegetation of the Prince William Sound Region, Alaska; With a Brief Excursion into Post‐Pleistocene Climatic HistoryEcological Monographs, 1942
- Observations on Alaskan Coastal Glaciers in 1935Geographical Review, 1937
- The Glaciers of the Northern Part of Prince William Sound, AlaskaGeographical Review, 1932