Original Articles
Dendroclimatology and Dendroecology
- Harold C. Fritts
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 419-449
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Dendrochronology is the science of dating annual growth layers (rings) in woody plants. Two related subdisciplines are dendroclimatology and dendroecology. The former uses the information in dated rings to study problems of present and past climates, while the latter deals with changes in the local environment rather than regional climate.
Successful applications of dendroclimatology and dendroecology depend upon careful stratification. Ring-width samples are selected from trees on limiting sites, where widths of growth layers vary greatly from one year to the next (sensitivity) and autocorrelation of the widths is not high. Rings also must be cross-dated and sufficiently replicated to provide precise dating. This selection and dating assures that the climatic information common to all trees, which is analogous to the “signal”, is large and properly placed in time. The random error or nonclimatic variations in growth, among trees, is analogous to “noise” and is reduced when ring-width indices are averaged for many trees.
Some basic facts about the growth are presented along with a discussion of important physiological processes operating throughout the roots, stems, and leaves. Certain gradients associated with tree height, cambial age, and physiological activity control the size of the growth layers as they vary throughout the tree. These biological gradients interact with environmental variables and complicate the task of modeling the relationships linking growth with environment.
Biological models are described for the relationships between variations in ring widths from conifers on arid sites, and variations in temperature and precpitation. These climatic factors may influence the tree at any time in the year. Conditions preceding the growing season sometimes have a greater influence on ring width than conditions during the growing season, and the relative effects of these factors on growth vary with latitude, altitude, and differences in factors of the site. The effects of some climatic factors on growth are negligible during certain times of the year, but important at other times. Climatic factors are sometimes directly related to growth and at other times are inversely related to growth. Statistical methods are described for ascertaining these differences in the climatic response of trees from different sites.
A practical example is given of a tree-ring study and the mechanics are described for stratification and selection of tree-ring materials, for laboratory preparation, for cross-dating, and for computer processing. Several methods for calibration of the ring-width data with climatic variation are described. The most recent is multivariate analysis, which allows simultaneous calibration of a variety of tree-ring data representing different sites with a number of variables of climate.
Several examples of applications of tree-ring analysis to problems of environment and climate are described. One is a specification from tree rings of anomalies in atmosphere circulation for a portion of the Northern Hemisphere since 1700 A.D. Another example treats and specifies past conditions in terms of conditional probabilities. Other methods of comparing present climate with past climate are described along with new developments in reconstructing past hydrologic conditions from tree rings.
Tree-ring studies will be applied in the future to problems of temperate and mesic environments, and to problems of physiological, genetic, and anatomical variations within and among trees. New developments in the use of X-ray techniques will facilitate the measurement and study of cell size and cell density. Tree rings are an important source of information on productivity and dry-matter accumulation at various sites. Some tree-ring studies will deal with environmental pollution. Statistical developments will improve estimation of certain past anomalies in weather factors and the reconstructtion of atmosphere circulation associated with climate variability and change. Such information should improve chances for measuring and assessing the possibility of inadvertent modification of climate by man.
Pollen Grains in Lake Sediments: Pollen Percentages in Surface Sediments from Southern Michigan1
- M. B. Davis, L. B. Brubaker, J. M. Beiswenger
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 450-467
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Pollen in surface sediments from five lakes in southern Michigan shows evidence of differential deposition. In most lakes, pollen from ragweed occurs in a higher ratio to tree pollen in shallow-water sediment than in deep water. Pine and certain herbs with small pollen grains follow the same pattern. One very deep lake is an exception, with the ratio of ragweed to tree pollen highest in deep-water sediment. Pollen from local aquatics and from willow, which grows along the lake shore, is also unevenly distributed, occurring in highest frequencies near the parent plants. Pollen from deciduous trees, however, occurs in similar ratios at all sampling stations within each lake. Deciduous pollen occurs in uniform ratios, also in older sediment, deposited in the early 19th century, when the landscape was still forested.
Percentages of deciduous tree pollen (as percent tree pollen) were compared among lakes. Single samples were taken for this purpose from the deepest part of each lake basin. Oak pollen percentages are higher in three lakes in western Washtenaw County than in three lakes in eastern Washtenaw County. This difference reflects a similar difference in present-day vegetation: second-growth oak forests grow near the lakes in the western half of the county, while all but 5% of the area in the eastern part of the county is farmland. (The difference in the ratio of farmland to forestland in the two parts of the county is not reflected clearly in the ratio of herb pollen to tree pollen, because there is so much variation within each lake.) In 140-year-old sediment, on the other hand, tree pollen percentages in the six samples are homogeneous as shown by a chi-square test. The homogeneity in sediment deposited before the forest was cleared is surprising, because witness-tree data from presettlement time show that the frequencies of tree species in the two areas were quite different. Pollen dispersal at that time must have been effective enough, to counteract differences over distances of a few tens of kilometers in the amounts and kinds of pollen produced by the vegetation.
Paleosols and the Forest Border in Keewatin, N.W.T.
- Curtis J. Sorenson, James C. Knox, James A. Larsen, Reid A. Bryson
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 468-473
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The morphology of paleosols and radiocarbon-dated charcoal from buried surface horizons of soils provide evidence to suggest that between periods of northward forest encroachment tundra climate has dominated areas at least 50 km south of the present forest/tundra border in southwest Keewatin. The present forest/tundra border climate is nearly as severe as any climate that has prevailed in the area since deglaciation.
The Cape Deceit Fauna—Early Pleistocene Mammalian Assemblage from the Alaskan Arctic
- R. D. Guthrie, John V. Matthews, Jr.
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 474-510
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Pleistocene exposures located near Cape Deceit on the south shore of Kotzebue Sound (Alaska) contain a complex sequence of organic sediments which have yielded fossil vertebrates of taxonomic, evolutionary, and zoogeographic significance. Cape Deceit Local Fauna from the Cape Deceit Formation, lowermost of three major stratigraphic units recognized at the site, contains representatives of the genera Canis, Rangifer, Cervus, Ochotona, Lemmus, Microtus, Pliomys, and a newly described genus and species, Predicrostonyx hopkinsi-predecessor of the extant genus Dicrostonyx. In addition to P. hopkinsi, new species of Ochotona, Pliomys, and Microtus are described from the Cape Deceit Local Fauna. the stage of evolution of Microtus deceitensis sp. n. and P. hopkinsi sp. n. indicate that the Cape Deceit Formation is at least of pre-Cromerian age. This assumption is substantiated by the stratigraphy of the overlying Inmachuk and Deering formations, fossils from these units (including Dicrostonyx torquatus and D. henseli), and C-14 dates. The Cape Deceit Local Fauna, therefore, contains the earliest North American record of several of the included genera in addition to the only North American record of Pliomys.
Stratigraphic features at the exposure indicate that the Cape Deceit Local Fauna mammals lived in a treeless (tundra) environment showing that the contemporary tundra mammalian fauna has a lengthy arctic-adapted evolutionary history. We postulate the existence in northeastern Eurasia and Alaska of a Pleistocene-Recent “Beringian” mammalian realm which has at times contributed to the fauna of more southern regions of the Palaerctic and Nearctic. The fact that this southern movement of arctic-adapted or arctic-derived Beringian mammals occurred at different times in Europe and North America (interpreted by some as indicating the existence of a “Beringian filter-bridge”) is, we think, due largely to differences of continental physiography and Pleistocene geography south of the Beringian area.
Investigations of Some Magnetic and Mineralogical Properties of the Laschamp and Olby Flows, France
- John Whitney, H. P. Johnson, Shaul Levi, Bernard W. Evans
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 511-521
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Rock-magnetic, paleomagnetic and petrologic properties of samples from the Laschamp and Olby basalt formations in France were studied to aid in determining the validity of the Laschamp geomagnetic field reversal reported by Bonhommet and Babkine. The Laschamp flow contains ilmenomagnetite, with partial alteration of the magnetite to hematite. Ilmenomagnetite in the Olby flow has largely recrystallized at high temperatures to a composite mozaic intergrowth of pseudobrookite, titanohematite and magnesioferrite, with rare residual magnetite and lamellae of ilmenite. The remanent magnetization is stable and resides primarily in single-domain magnetite particles. Our results indicate that the magnetizations of the Laschamp and Olby flows faithfully record the direction of the ambient magnetic field in which they cooled.
Possible Causes of the Variability of Postglacial Uplift in North America
- Richard H. Fillon
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 522-531
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Postglacial uplift data from 33 sites in northeastern North America reveal that during the period from 11,000 years B.P. to 7000 years B.P., glacio-isostatic uplift rates varied in a consistent manner with distance from the former margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. The consistent trends of these uplift rate variations with distance from the former ice sheet margin suggest that they were not the result of changes in the rate of ice sheet retreat or local tectonic activity. They instead may have resulted from rebound affected significantly by the earth's viscosity at a depth approximately equal to the wavelength of isostatic deformation [McConnell, R.K., Jr., Journal of Geophysical Research70, 5171 (1965)]. Extremely high viscosities below 600 km, however, probably provide the lower limit for this relationship.
Quaternary History of Northern Cumberland Peninsula, Baffin Island, N.W.T.: Part V: Factors Affecting Corrie Glacierization in Okoa Bay
- J. T. Andrews, R. E. Dugdale
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 532-551
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Corries in Okoa Bay contain glaciers, ice patches or are empty. Each of 165 corries is described by 17 variables that describe shape, location and geometry and also have some relationship to the glaciological conditions in each basin. Analyses of these data in terms of “explaining” the factors controlling glacierization (using information and graph-theoretic methods and multiple stepwise discriminant analysis) all emphasize the importance of elevation on the current pattern. Orientation is also significant as virtually all glaciers and ice patches are contained in north-facing corries. Residual elevations from a linear trend surface on corrie lip altitudes indicate that empty corries lie, on average, only 200 m below those currently ice-filled, thus the area is extremely sensitive to the effects of climatic change. Empty corries also lie at the same elevations, on average, in north- and south-facing locations. The orientation of glacierized corries toward the north is a reflection of the variations in insolation between north- and south-facing slopes at latitude 67°30′N. Calculations indicate a difference under clear skies of 25% for global radiation and ∼50% for absorbed short-wave radiation. The 200-m lowering of local snowline implied by the corrie lip data is equivalent to a 1.2°C temperature decrease—this is the same as estimates based on changes in the earth's orbital parameters for this latitude. A lowering of temperature results in an increase in the ratio: sublimation/melting which leads to a reduction in the amount of ablation. It is suggested that glacierization of much of Baffin Island is possible with a lowering of snowline by 200 m, this could then trigger other areas such as Labrador and Keewatin.
Other
Subject Index
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, p. 552
-
- Article
- Export citation
Original Articles
Author Index
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 January 2017, pp. 553-555
-
- Article
- Export citation