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Postglacial climate and vegetation history, north-central Kola Peninsula, Russia: pollen and diatom records from Lake Yarnyshnoe-3
Authors:JEFFREY A SNYDER  GLEN M MACDONALD  STEVEN L FORMAN  GENNADY A TARASOV  WILLIAM N MODE
Institution:Department of Geology, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, 43403, USA e-mail:;Department of Geography, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA e-mail:;Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, 60680, USA e-mail:;Murmansk Marine Biological Institute, 17 Vladimirskaya Ul., Murmansk 183010, Russia e-mail:;Department of Geology, University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh, Oshkosh WI, 54901, USA e-mail:
Abstract:A sediment core from Lake Yarnyshnoe-3 (69°04'N; 36°04'E), an emerged coastal lake from the tundra of the north-central Kola Peninsula, has been analyzed for fossil pollen and diatoms. The pollen record shows the Younger Dryas event marked by increasing Artemisia coupled with decreases in Poaceae, Cyperaceae and Salix at c. 10 700 to 10 000 BP. This core provides the first well-defined palynological record of the Younger Dryas event on the Kola Peninsula. Stomates from Pinus were recovered from the core interval between 8000 and 6000 BP. The stomates, coupled with elevated values of pine pollen, indicate that Pinus sylvestris grew near the arctic coastline of the central Kola Peninsula in the middle Holocene. However, the small number of stomates suggests that pines were not plentiful. The diatom record from the core reflects basin isolation from the sea and indicates additional limnological changes during the climate transition between c. 5000 and 4000 BP. The broadly similar climate and vegetation history on the north-central Kola Peninsula and in Fennoscandia demonstrates the propagation of late glacial and Holocene climate events from the North Atlantic region into the Eurasian Arctic.
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