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Document Description
Title
A
palynological
investigation
of the
late
Quaternary
vegetational
history
of the
Baie
Verte
Peninsula
,
northcentral
Newfoundland
Author
Dyer
,
Alison
K.
Description
Thesis
(M.Sc.)
--
Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1986.
Geography
Date
1986
Pagination
ix, 182 leaves, 5 charts in pocket at back : ill., maps
Subject
Palynology--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Baie
Verte
Peninsula;
Paleobotany--Quaternary;
Paleobotany--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Baie
Verte
Peninsula;
Degree
M.Sc.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Geography
Discipline
Geography
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador--Baie Verte Peninsula
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
168-182
Abstract
Key
words:
pollen
analysis
,
vegetation
reconstruction
,
postglacial
,
climatic
change
,
deglaciation
,
Newfoundland
,
species
migration.
--
Palynological
studies
of
peat
and
lacustrine
sediments
in
Atlantic
Canada
have
provided
outlines
of the
late-
and
postglacial
development
of the
vegetation.
Furthermore
, these
vegetational
changes
have
permitted
researchers
to
interpret
late-glacial
and
Holocene
climatic
changes.
On the
Island
of
Newfoundland
,
however
, the
relative
paucity
of
palynological
work
has
hampered
the
development
of a
regional
synthesis
of
vegetational
and
climatic
history.
This
thesis
examines
the
sequence
of
vegetational
changes
in
northcentral
Newfoundland
in
order
to
add
to the
knowledge
of
late
Quaternary
palaeoenvironments
of this
province.
--
Duplicate
cores
from
two
lakes
on the
Baie
Verte
Peninsula
were
obtained
for
pollen
analysis
,
radiocarbon
dating
, and
loss-on-ignition
analysis.
The
results
indicate
that the
Peninsula
was
ice-covered
during
the
Late
Wisconsin
and that the
ice
limit
probably
extended
at
least
to the
northern
terminus.
The
northern
highlands
were
deglaciated
by
11
,
800
BP
and
dissipation
of the
ice
progressed
by
downwasting
and
ice
recession
toward
the
interior
of the
peninsula.
--
Pollen
percentage
,
concentration
and
influx
diagrams
are
presented
and a
tentative
regional
pollen
zonation
for the
northern
Baie
Verte
Peninsula
is
proposed
as
follows:
(I)
Gramineae-herb
zone
,
before
11
,
800
BP;
(IIa)
Betula-Cyperaceae
subzone
,
11
,
800
to
10
,
000
BP;
(IIb)
Shrubs-Picea
subzone
,
10
,
000
to
8500
BP;
(IIIa)
Alnus-Abies
subzone
,
8500
to
6700
BP;
(IIIb)
Betula-Picea-Alnus
subzone
,
6700
to
3200
BP;
(IV)
Picea-Betula-Alnus
zone
,
3200
BP
to
present.
--
Pioneering
communities
were
replaced
by a
dwarf-shrub
tundra
after
11
,
800
BP.
A
prolonged
shrub-tundra
phase
was
probably
a
result
of
residual
ice
in
lowland
areas
which
acted
as a
physical
barrier
to
tree
migration
and
which
may
have
affected
the
local
climate.
Arboreal
immigration
commenced
after
9500
BP
with
Picea.
The
closing
of the
forest
canopy
and the
development
of a
white
birch-black
spruce
forest
occurred
after
6700
BP.
From that
time
to
about
3200
BP
the
climate
was
warmer
and
drier
than at
present.
A
subsequent
cooling
trend
is
inferred
primarily
from a
resurgence
of
black
spruce
at the
expense
of
white
birch.
A
significant
decline
in
total
pollen
abundance
after
2000
BP
is
attributed
to a
decrease
in the
density
of the
regional
vegetation
and
decreased
sediment
focussing.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
75380777
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(28.53
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Dyer_AlisonKathryn.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
317582.cpd