Estimating the Relevant Source Area of Pollen in the past cultural landscapes of southern Sweden -- A forward modelling approach

Archive ouverte

Hellman, Sofie | Gaillard, M.J. | Bunting, Jane | Mazier, Florence

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. Middle and Late Holocene in southern Sweden, in order to explore the possible effects of past changes in vegetation composition, openness and structure in terms of patch size and spatial distribution. The RSAP of small basins (bogs or lakes) in the past has to be estimated if quantitative reconstruction of past vegetation at the local spatial scale is to be achieved using Sugita's Landscape Reconstruction Algorithm (LRA). In this study we apply a forward modelling approach to estimate past RSAP using the computer simulation model HUMPOL. The landscape designs are based on past landscape maps produced using a combination of palaeobotanical, archaeological and historical data, and the area's geology and soil characteristics. Four time windows characterised by different landscape/land-use were selected, i.e. Early Neolithic, Late Bronze Age, Viking Age, and Middle Ages. We found that RSAP estimates for hypothetical past landscapes in Skåne differ by ca. 600 m to 1200 m between the selected time periods, whatever the size of the basin (lake or bog, 25- 250 m radius). The most probable explanation for the differences in RSAP between time slices is variable patch size and spatial distribution of patches in the landscape. The RSAPs vary between ca. 1200 and 2300 m for small basins (25 m and 70 m radius), and between ca. 2000 and 3000 m for larger basins (250 m radius). These values are within the range of earlier estimates of modern and past RSAPs for southern Scandinavia obtained using simulated or empirical data. These results suggest that, given the type of setting of that region in terms of taxa composition and traditional land-use, the RSAP for small-size lakes (25-250 m radius) will generally be in the range ca. 1200-3000 m. The forward modelling approach is found to be useful to assess the possible effects on RSAP of changes in vegetation/landscape characteristics between different periods of the past. Moreover, comparison of RSAP estimates obtained using both the forward and backward modelling approaches will be important to identify the most credible RSAP estimates for the past.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The use of modelling and simulation approach in reconstructing past landscapes from fossil pollen data: a review and results from the POLLANDCAL network

Archive ouverte | Gaillard, M.J. | CCSD

International audience. Information on past land cover in terms of absolute areas of different landscape units (forest, open land, pasture land, cultivated land, etc.) at local to regional scales is needed to test h...

Pollen productivity estimates of key European plant taxa for quantitative reconstruction of past vegetation: a review

Archive ouverte | Brostrom, Anna | CCSD

International audience. Information on the spatial distribution of past vegetation on local, regional and global scales is increasingly used within climate modelling, nature conservancy and archaeology. It is possib...

Palynological perspectives on vegetation survey: a critical step for model-based reconstruction of Quaternary land cover

Archive ouverte | Bunting, Jane | CCSD

International audience. 1. Quantitative reconstruction of past vegetation distribution and abundance from sedimentary pollen records provides an important baseline for understanding long term ecosystem dynamics and ...

Chargement des enrichissements...