Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4737096 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2009 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
Few sites on the eastern Great Plains contain paleobotanical records for the mid-Wisconsin. We report on four sites, two stream cutbanks and two quarry exposures, ranging in age from >50 to â¼23.4Â ka. The oldest site at >50Â ka contains a suite of macrofossils from prairie and disturbed ground habitats, with no representation of trees, indicating an open prairie. By â¼38Â ka the assemblages include aquatic, wetland, mudflat, and prairie elements with rare specimens of Populus, Betula cf. papyrifera, Salix and at the most northerly site, Picea. This assemblage suggests a prairie/parkland with interspersed marshes, cooler temperatures and increased moisture. Populus and Salix continued to be represented from â¼36 to â¼29Â ka, but the only other taxon was Carex. A hiatus may be present at some time during this interval. After â¼29Â ka, Picea became dominant on the uplands and it was joined by sedges in local wetlands. At sites near riverine loess sources, loess accumulation began to fill in the wetlands and organic deposition ceased some time after 29Â ka.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
R.G. Baker, E.A. III, R.D. Mandel, J.A. Dorale, G.G. Fredlund,