2007
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.1127
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A high‐resolution record of vegetation and climate through the last glacial cycle from Caledonia Fen, southeastern highlands of Australia

Abstract: 2007. A high-resolution record of vegetation and climate through the last glacial cycle from Caledonia Fen, southeastern highlands of Australia.ABSTRACT: A blocked tributary has provided a rare site of long-term sediment accumulation in montane southeastern Australia. This site has yielded a continuous, detailed pollen record through the last ca. 140 000 years and revealed marked vegetation and environmental changes at orbital to sub-millennial scales. Radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL, or… Show more

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Cited by 86 publications
(89 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
(75 reference statements)
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“…The southern climatic envelope model shows a contraction in response to post-glacial warming (21 -0 ka) and this is in agreement with the observed fossil record [37,[39][40][41]. Interestingly in the fossil record a longer-term decline since the last interglacial (130 -0 ka) has been observed among other podocarps [20,61,62], including P. elatus [39][40][41]. Bottleneck events are likely to have contributed to the divergence patterns (i.e.…”
Section: Declining Abundance and Changes In Habitat Suitabilitysupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The southern climatic envelope model shows a contraction in response to post-glacial warming (21 -0 ka) and this is in agreement with the observed fossil record [37,[39][40][41]. Interestingly in the fossil record a longer-term decline since the last interglacial (130 -0 ka) has been observed among other podocarps [20,61,62], including P. elatus [39][40][41]. Bottleneck events are likely to have contributed to the divergence patterns (i.e.…”
Section: Declining Abundance and Changes In Habitat Suitabilitysupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Bottleneck events are likely to have contributed to the divergence patterns (i.e. genetic disjunctions) between population groups of P. elatus and the low diversity/abundance of other rainforest conifers in Australia [20,[62][63][64].…”
Section: Declining Abundance and Changes In Habitat Suitabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is possible that drier conditions earlier in the Holocene may have delayed this maximum. In south-central Victoria, forest reached current levels at several high-altitude sites after 11,500 cal BP (McKenzie 1997(McKenzie , 2002Kershaw et al 2007), but wet Eucalpytus forests and Nothofagus did not achieve maximum extent until ca. 7000 cal BP (McKenzie 2002).…”
Section: Climate Inferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, Tasmania and southeastern Australia, in part because of Peter Kershaw's long-standing interest, have many intensively investigated subalpine to alpine sites and a wealth of information on their treeline history (e.g. Kershaw and Strickland 1988;McKenzie 1997McKenzie , 2002Kershaw et al 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Peter's supervisor patiently examined detailed records of change in fine temporal (and spatial) resolution (Walker et al 2000), and first coined the term 'fine-resolution pollen analysis', his student's focus was clearly on the ecological response of vegetation communities to Milankovich-scale climatic fluctuations. The pollen record from Lynch's Crater is progressively developed in an ever increasing number of publications (Kershaw 1978(Kershaw , 1986(Kershaw , 1993Turney et al 2006;Kershaw et al 2007) and this is complemented by long offshore records (Harle 1997;Moss and Kershaw 2007) and those from the western plains (Kershaw et al 1991;Kershaw, 1998;Harle et al 2004), and uplands (McKenzie and Kershaw 1997;Kershaw et al 2007) of Victoria. While Peter Kershaw's website observes that his research focus is on "Environmental Change … as a basis for understanding present landscapes and contributing to their future management", Peter has only occasionally ventured into the dark side of environmental management.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%