Author | dc.contributor.author | Fletcher, Michael-Shawn | |
Author | dc.contributor.author | Thomas, Ian | es_CL |
Admission date | dc.date.accessioned | 2011-06-03T14:00:05Z | |
Available date | dc.date.available | 2011-06-03T14:00:05Z | |
Publication date | dc.date.issued | 2010-11 | |
Cita de ítem | dc.identifier.citation | JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Volume: 37, Issue: 11,Pages: 2183-2196, 2010 | es_CL |
Identifier | dc.identifier.uri | https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119227 | |
General note | dc.description | Artículo de publicación ISI | es_CL |
Abstract | dc.description.abstract | Aim To reconstruct the Late Glacial and Holocene vegetation history of western
Tasmania and to test the long-held notion of a replacement of forest by moorland
during the mid to late Holocene in western Tasmania, Australia.
Location Western Tasmania, Australia.
Methods Fossil pollen data were screened with a modern pollen dataset using
detrended correspondence analysis and charcoal data were analysed using
significance tests.
Results At the landscape scale, the distribution of vegetation types in western
Tasmania has remained remarkably stable through the post-glacial period. Open
moorland has dominated the landscape since the Late Glacial, while rain forest
expanded at that time in to areas which it occupies today. Vegetation
development in the Holocene is markedly different and charcoal values are
significantly higher when compared with those in previous interglacial periods.
Main conclusions The dominant paradigm of a replacement of rain forest by
moorland across western Tasmania during the mid to late Holocene is not
supported by this regional analysis. The arrival of humans in Tasmania during the
Last Glacial Stage provided an ignition source that was independent of climate,
and burning by humans through the Late Glacial period deflected vegetation
development and facilitated the establishment of open moorland in regions
occupied by rain forest during previous interglacial periods. It is concluded that
the present dominance of the landscape of western Tasmania by open moorland
is the direct result of human activity during the Late Glacial and that this region
represents an ancient cultural landscape. | es_CL |
Patrocinador | dc.description.sponsorship | University of Melbourne | es_CL |
Lenguage | dc.language.iso | en | es_CL |
Publisher | dc.publisher | WILEY-BLACKWELL | es_CL |
Keywords | dc.subject | Cultural landscape | es_CL |
Título | dc.title | The origin and temporal development of an ancient cultural landscape | es_CL |
Document type | dc.type | Artículo de revista | |