Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4393493 Journal of Arid Environments 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The understanding of the Holocene climatic fluctuations through the study of micromammal sequences can help to know the current environmental dynamic in arid lands. This is relevant because of the accelerated transformation that these environments are undergoing. We report the first stratified micromammal assemblage from the Monte desert on Northwestern Argentina, which span the last two millennia. We studied 11 700 cranial remains accumulated by owls’s trophic activities, representing 16 species (MNI = 5031). The assemblage composition is consistent with the species found in the area today, being the dominant Phyllotis xanthopygus, Eligmodontia spp., and Calomys musculinus. Relative frequencies and diversity show slight variations throughout the sequence, suggesting environmental stability. However, minor changes for several species indicate small-scale variations. We infer climatic conditions similar to those of the present for the period of 1600–1300 yBP, wetter conditions for 1000–600 yBP, and a return to xeric conditions up until the present. This reconstruction agrees with previous interpretations regarding global climatic dynamics, as those involving the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice Age. Since there are no areas potentially affected by agricultural activities within the owl’s hunting area, the fluctuations are interpreted as primarily the result of changes in climatic conditions.

► We study the first stratified micromammal assemblage at Northwestern Argentina. ► The assemblage come from the Monte desert and spans the last two millenia. ► Diversity indexes show slight variations suggesting small-scale environmental changes. ► We inferred similar climatic conditions to present ones for the 1600–1300 yBP span. ► We inferred more humid conditions than the present ones for the 1000–600 yBP span.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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