Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1044525 Quaternary International 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Data from published palynological studies in southwestern Japan between 20 ka BP and the present were applied in a biomization procedure for Japan. The 20 biome maps obtained reveal a transition in biome from cool-mixed forest to warm-mixed/broadleaved evergreen forest and their migration routes. During the Last Glacial Maximum, southwestern Japan was covered with cool-mixed forest, and the climate was cooler than present. The warm-mixed/broadleaved evergreen forest was established in northern Kyushu Island and in the coastal areas of the Sea of Japan at 17 and 7 ka BP, respectively. There appears to have been a delay in its migration into the Chugoku region, caused by the environmental changes in the Sea of Japan. Before 8 ka BP, the relatively weak flow of the Tsushima warm current into the Sea of Japan created a climate resembling continental conditions and the winter temperatures were not high enough to permit the establishment of a warm-mixed/broadleaved evergreen forest. After 8 ka BP, warm-mixed/broadleaved evergreen forest spread into the Chugoku region, and reached higher altitudes 4 ka BP.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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