Late-Wisconsin Vegetational Changes in Unglaciated Eastern North America

1973 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 621-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald R. Whitehead

AbstractRecent pollen and macrofossil data from the Southeast is consistent with a displacement of boreal forest species by over 1000 km during full-glacial time. Data from west of the Appalachians suggests a displacement of some 600 km. Thus boreal forests were developed in a broad area south of the ice margin. Few deciduous forest elements persisted in that region. The displacement appears to have been azonal. There is good evidence to suggest a significant mid-Wisconsin interstadial (23,000-36,000 BP) characterized by a more temperate biota.

1975 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald B. Davis ◽  
Thompson Webb

By mapping and summarizing 478 pollen counts from surface samples at 406 locations in eastern North America, this study documents the relationships between the distributions of pollen and vegetation on a continental scale. The most common pollen types in this region are pine, birch, oak, and spruce. Maps showing isopercentage contours or isopolls for 13 important pollen types reflect the general N-S zonation of the vegetation. The maps and tabulations of average pollen spectra for the six major vegetational regions indicate high values for the following pollen types in each region: (1) tundra-nonarboreal birch, sedge, and alder; (2) forest/tundra-spruce, nonarboreal birch and alder; (3) boreal forest-spruce, jack pine (type), and arboreal birch with fir in the southeastern part; (4) conifer/hardwood forest-white pine, arboreal birch, and hemlock with beech, maple, and oak in the southern part; (5) deciduous forest-oak, pine, hickory, and elm, with beech and maple in the northern part, and highest values of oak and hickory west of the Appalachian crest; and (6) southeastern forest-pine, oak, hickory, tupelo, and Myricaceae. In some cases, less abundant pollen types are diagnostic for the region, e.g., bald cypress in the southeast. In the conifer-hardwood region and southward, pollen of weeds associated with deforestation and agriculture is abundant. The maps also show that much of southeastern U.S. and the area just to the east of Hudson Bay are in need of additional sampling. At 51 of the sites, absolute pollen frequencies (APF; grains/ml lake sediment) were obtained. These confirm the major conclusions from the percentage data, but differences are evident, e.g., the percentages of alder pollen peak in the tundra whereas alder APFs peak in the boreal forest, and spruce percentages peak in the forest-tundra whereas spruce APFs peak in the boreal forest. Because the APF data reflect the patterns of absolute abundance of individual taxa in the vegetation as well as the overall forest densities, future counts of modern pollen should include APF determinations. The effects of sedimentation processes on APF quantities indicate that APF samples should be obtained from moderate size lakes of similar morphology and hydrology and that, in each lake, several samples from the profundal zone should be pooled to create a sample representative of that lake.


Vegetatio ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl D. Monk ◽  
Donald W. Imm ◽  
Robert L. Potter ◽  
Geoffrey G. Parker

2009 ◽  
Vol 123 (3) ◽  
pp. 210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-David Moore

Artificial cover objects or coverboards have been widely used to study Eastern Red-backed Salamanders (Plethodon cinereus), a species that is very abundant in eastern North America and known to be one of the most common vertebrates within its geographical range. However, recent studies have suggested that potential bias may be associated with the use of coverboards compared with natural cover objects. In this study, age structure and body size (weight and snout-vent length, SVL) of P. cinereus found under coverboards and natural cover objects at Lake Clair (Quebec, Canada) were compared. Coverboards were made of Sugar Maple (Acer sacchrum), a native forest species dominant in the study area. In 2004 and 2005, a total of 162 P. cinereus were found under coverboards, and 156 P. cinereus were found under natural cover objects. No significant difference in the age structure, mean weight, or SVL of P. cinereus was observed between the two sets. This study suggests that the type of coverboard used at Lake Clair is a good method to obtain an accurate index of P. cinereus population demographics, and is similar to that expected under natural cover objects. This technique should help to establish a standard protocol that could better allow direct comparisons among studies in the future. However, more studies are needed to explain the high proportion of adult specimens found under both cover types at Lake Clair relative to studies in other regions in North America.


The Holocene ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 1912-1922 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathieu Frégeau ◽  
Serge Payette ◽  
Pierre Grondin

1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 442-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. E. Krogh ◽  
D. F. Strong ◽  
S. J. O'Brien ◽  
V. S. Papezik

The following new U–Pb dates are provided for zircons from volcanic and intrusive rocks of the Avalon Terrane of Newfoundland: Burin Group ophiolite (Wandsworth pegmatitic gabbro), [Formula: see text]; Marystown Group ash-flow tuff, [Formula: see text]; Rock Harbour Group rhyolite clast in conglomerate, [Formula: see text]; Harbour Main Group ash-flow tuff, [Formula: see text]; Harbour Main Group flow-banded rhyolite, [Formula: see text]; porphyritic rhyolite plug intruding Harbour Main Group, 632 ± 2 Ma; Holyrood Granite, [Formula: see text]; rhyolite dyke, Harbour Main Group, [Formula: see text]; and welded ash-flow tuff, "Grand Beach porphyry," [Formula: see text]. All of the dated zircons are simple, single-age populations with no trace of inheritance. These dates confirm that the ophiolitic Burin Group represents an older and separate event that correlates precisely with the Bou Azzer ophiolite of Morocco and that the Rock Harbour Group does not represent continental volcanism that preceded that event. The Rock Harbour, Marystown, and Harbour Main groups and the Holyrood Granite (632–608 Ma) are all part of the younger 650–550 Ma pulse of Pan-African orogenesis that affected a broad area extending through Africa, Asia, western Europe, southern England and Wales, and eastern North America. However, a shortage of high-precision dates throughout these terranes precludes very exact correlations and thus very exact interpretations in terms of specific tectonic or magmatic events. Although these dates require some revisions in the stratigraphy of the Newfoundland Avalon Terrane, they do not support suggestions that the Avalon Terrane comprises a "collage of suspect terranes." The age of the Grand Beach porphyry (394 Ma) places it squarely with the Acadian granites of the Appalachians and removes it from consideration as part of the Marystown Group.


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