Title
Holocene vegetation history from fossil rodent middens near Arequipa, Peru
Date Issued
01 January 2001
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Academic Press Inc.
Abstract
Rodent (Abrocoma, Lagidium, Phyllotis) middens collected from 2350 to 2750 m elevation near Arequipa, Peru (16°S), provide an ∼9600-yr vegetation history of the northern Atacama Desert, based on identification of > 50 species of plant macrofossils. These midden floras show considerable stability throughout the Holocene, with slightly more mesophytic plant assemblages in the middle Holocene. Unlike the southwestern United States, rodent middens of mid-Holocene age are common. In the Arequipa area, the midden record does not reflect any effects of a mid-Holocene mega drought proposed from the extreme lowstand (100 m below modern levels, >6000 to 3500 yr B.P.) of Lake Titicaca, only 200 km east of Arequipa. This is perhaps not surprising, given other evidence for wetter summers on the Pacific slope of the Andes during the middle Holocene as well as the poor correlation of summer rainfall among modern weather stations in the central Andes-Atacama Desert. The apparent difference in paleoclimatic reconstructions suggests that it is premature to relate changes observed during the Holocene to changes in El Niño Southern Oscillation modes.
Start page
242
End page
251
Volume
56
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Conservación de la Biodiversidad Ciencias de las plantas, Botánica
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0035470778
Source
Quaternary Research
ISSN of the container
00335894
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus