4.2 Article

50,000 years of vegetation and climate history on the Colorado Plateau, Utah and Arizona, USA

Journal

QUATERNARY RESEARCH
Volume 70, Issue 2, Pages 322-338

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.yqres.2008.04.006

Keywords

packrat middens; Colorado Plateau; paleoecology; paleoclimate; monsoon; middle Wisconsinan; Pleistocene; Holocene; Canyonlands National Park; Grand Canyon National Park

Funding

  1. USGS Global Change Research Program
  2. DOE National Institute for Climate Change Research
  3. National Park Service, Denver. Colorado
  4. National Geographic Society [5422-95]
  5. Grand Canyon Natural History Association
  6. Cave Research Foundation
  7. Geological Society of America

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Sixty packrat middens were collected in Canyonlands and Grand Canyon National Parks, and these series include sites north of areas that produced previous detailed series from the Colorado Plateau. The exceptionally long time series obtained from each of three sites (>48,000 C-14 yr BP to present) include some of the oldest middens yet discovered. Most middens contain a typical late-Wisconsinan glaciation mixture of mesic and xeric taxa, evidence that plant species responded to climate change by range adjustments of elevational distribution based oil individual criteria, Differences in elevational range from today for trees and shrubs ranged from no apparent change to as much as 1200 m difference. The oldest middens from Canyonlands NP, however, differ in containing strictly xeric assemblages, including middens incorporating needles of Arizona single-leaf pinyon, far north of its current distribution. Similar-aged middens from the eastern end of Grand Canyon NP contain plants more typical of glacial climates, but also contain fossils of one-seed juniper near its Current northern limit in Arizona. Holocene middens reveal the development of modern vegetation assemblages on the Colorado Plateau, recording departures of mesic taxa from low elevation sites, and the arrival of modern dominant components much later. Published by University of Washington.

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