4.7 Article

Late Quaternary environmental change inferred from phytoliths and other soil-related proxies: Case studies from the central and southern Great Plains, USA

Journal

CATENA
Volume 85, Issue 2, Pages 87-108

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2010.08.015

Keywords

Opal phytoliths; Paleosols; Sporormiella; Stable carbon isotopes; Charcoal; Great Plains

Funding

  1. Oklahoma State University
  2. EPSCOR
  3. OSRHE (Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education)
  4. University of Kansas
  5. Center for Environmental Management of Military Lands at Colorado State University

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This study investigates stable carbon isotopes (delta C-13), opal phytolith assemblages, burnt phytoliths, microscopic charcoal and Sporormiella spores from modern soils and paleosols in Kansas and Oklahoma. Grass and dicot phytoliths in combination with delta C-13 are used as proxies for reconstructing the structure of grasslands and woodlands. Burnt grass phytoliths and microscopic charcoal are evaluated as proxies for reconstructing paleofire incidence. Concentrations of the fungal spore Sporormiella are used as a proxy for assessing large herbivore activity. These proxies were tested on various modern grassland communities of the central and southern Great Plains, including areas with bison, cattle, and small herbivores, and areas under different fire frequencies. Opal phytolith assemblages and delta C-13 values show that before cal 11 ka, C-3 grasses and woody plants predominated in areas that today are dominated by C-4 grasses. The origin of the shortgrass prairie dates back to about cal 10 ka. The origin of the tallgrass prairie, however, is not clear as phytolith data show variable assemblages throughout the Holocene (mixed-grass, tallgrass, and tallgrass-woodland mosaic). Different proxies (burnt phytoliths vs. charcoal) reveal different fire frequencies, but it is apparent that microfossil evidence for fire incidence is closely related to the abundance of woody plants in the landscape. Before cal 12 ka, soils show somewhat elevated concentration of Spororrniella, but lower concentrations than the modern high-density bison and cattle grazing areas. Throughout the Holocene. Sporormiella frequencies are low, which suggests lower large ungulate densities and perhaps high mobility. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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