Alistair J. Monteath , Mary E. Edwards , Duane Froese , Lesleigh Anderson , Benjamin V. Gaglioti , Scott L. Cocker , Julie Brigham-Grette , Matthew J. Wooller , Bruce Finney , Mark B. Abbott
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This review covers recent discoveries and unresolved questions focused on the period 57,000–10,000 calendar years before C.E. 1950 (cal yr BP).</div><div>The middle Wisconsin interstadial (57,000–30,000 cal yr BP) was a period of relative warmth in eastern Beringia, compared with the late Wisconsin (30,000–14,000 cal yr BP). Early in the interstadial occasional <em>Picea</em> woodland was present amongst widespread shrub tundra. Palaeoecological, sedimentary and isotopic data indicate that climate was cooler and drier than the Holocene, with high rates of aeolian activity. Megafauna typically associated with the ‘mammoth steppe’ ecosystem (woolly mammoth [<em>Mammuthus primigenius</em>], horse [<em>Equus</em>] and steppe-bison [<em>Bison priscus</em>]) were present in some abundance.</div><div>The transition towards late Wisconsin cold-stage conditions (35,000–30,000 cal yr BP) coincided with the establishment of the Bering Land Bridge and featured expansion of spatially varied, herbaceous vegetation, sometimes associated with deep active layers. Sedimentary DNA (<em>seda</em>DNA) and macrofossil evidence show vegetation was not a prairie-like grassland, and the term “steppe-tundra” is a better descriptor. Permafrost pore-ice isotopic (δ<sup>18</sup>O) records suggest a step change in one or more climate drivers ca. 30,000 cal yr BP, by which time steppe-tundra was established across eastern Beringia. It remains uncertain whether <em>Picea</em> survived cold-stage conditions within isolated refugia, or whether it recolonized from south of the Laurentide-Cordilleran ice sheets. Genetic data suggest that <em>Picea</em> probably survived <em>in situ</em>; however, there is no definitive fossil evidence to support this.</div><div>The end-Pleistocene transition from steppe-tundra to shrub tundra began ca. 15,000 cal yr BP and took place within decades at local scales. The expansion of woody taxa coincided with rising sea levels, reduced sea-ice extent and an abrupt shift in atmospheric circulation that enhanced precipitation. During this time, Earth's orbital configuration caused high early-summer temperatures and strong seasonality, creating growing conditions very different from today. The vegetation consisted of <em>Salix</em> and <em>Betula</em> shrub tundra with open areas of herbs and graminoids. During the deglacial warming trend, the Younger Dryas oscillation (12,800–11,700 cal yr BP) was variably expressed. 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Megafauna typically associated with the ‘mammoth steppe’ ecosystem (woolly mammoth [<em>Mammuthus primigenius</em>], horse [<em>Equus</em>] and steppe-bison [<em>Bison priscus</em>]) were present in some abundance.</div><div>The transition towards late Wisconsin cold-stage conditions (35,000–30,000 cal yr BP) coincided with the establishment of the Bering Land Bridge and featured expansion of spatially varied, herbaceous vegetation, sometimes associated with deep active layers. Sedimentary DNA (<em>seda</em>DNA) and macrofossil evidence show vegetation was not a prairie-like grassland, and the term “steppe-tundra” is a better descriptor. Permafrost pore-ice isotopic (δ<sup>18</sup>O) records suggest a step change in one or more climate drivers ca. 30,000 cal yr BP, by which time steppe-tundra was established across eastern Beringia. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
东白令陆桥(阿拉斯加和育空地区西部)是北美一个广阔的高纬度地区,在整个第四纪期间基本上没有冰川覆盖。因此,它的沉积层保存了长期的环境记录,这让科学家们感兴趣了近一个世纪。古生态代用指标和年代测定方法的最新进展已被证明对解决长期存在的区域晚第四纪环境变化问题至关重要。与此同时,它们也带来了新的、有时颇具争议的假设。这篇综述涵盖了最近的发现和未解决的问题,集中在公元1950年之前的57,000-10,000日历年(calyr BP)。与威斯康辛州晚期(30,000-14,000 cal yr BP)相比,威斯康辛州中期间冰期(57,000-30,000 cal yr BP)是白令陆桥东部相对温暖的时期。早期间隔期间或有云杉林地出现在广泛分布的灌木苔原中。古生态、沉积和同位素资料表明,气候比全新世更冷、更干燥,风成活动率高。与“猛犸象草原”生态系统相关的大型动物(猛犸象[Mammuthus primigenius],马[Equus]和草原野牛[Bison priscus])也大量存在。向威斯康辛州晚期冷期条件(35000 - 30000 calyr BP)的过渡与白令陆桥的建立同时发生,其特征是空间变化的草本植被的扩张,有时与深层活跃层有关。沉积DNA (sedaDNA)和宏观化石证据表明,植被不是类似草原的草原,“草原-苔原”一词是更好的描述。多年冻土带孔隙冰同位素(δ18O)记录表明,大约在30,000 cal - yr BP,一个或多个气候驱动因素发生了阶跃变化,此时白令陆桥东部的草原-冻土带已经形成。目前还不确定云杉是在孤立的避难所中幸存下来的,还是从劳伦泰德-科迪勒兰冰盖以南重新定居下来的。遗传数据表明,云杉可能在原地存活了下来;然而,没有确凿的化石证据支持这一观点。更新世末期从草原冻土带到灌木冻土带的转变大约始于15,000 calyr BP,在局部尺度上发生了几十年。木质类群的扩张与海平面上升、海冰面积减少和大气环流的突变相吻合,而大气环流的突变增加了降水。在这段时间里,地球的轨道结构导致了初夏的高温和强烈的季节性,创造了与今天截然不同的生长条件。植被主要为柳、桦木灌丛苔原和开阔的草本植物和禾本科植物。在去冰变暖趋势中,新仙女木振荡(12,800-11,700 cal yr BP)表现为变量。这在受邻近海洋影响的记录中通常是明显的,但在大陆地区的地点可能没有。这些过去的条件和古环境变化对当代问题具有启示意义:关于更新世哺乳动物灭绝的假说;东白令陆桥对主要海洋重组和高频气候变率的敏感性;气候变暖对木本植物扩张的影响放牧、水文气候和火灾是对生态系统的控制;“更新世野生化”对碳捕获的效果。
Late quaternary environmental change in eastern Beringia
Eastern Beringia (Alaska and western Yukon) is an extensive, high-latitude region of North America that remained largely unglaciated throughout the Quaternary. Consequently, its sedimentary deposits preserve long-term environmental records that have intrigued scientists for nearly a century. Recent advances in palaeoecological proxies and dating methods have proved critical in addressing long-standing questions about regional late Quaternary environmental change. At the same time, they have led to new and sometimes controversial hypotheses. This review covers recent discoveries and unresolved questions focused on the period 57,000–10,000 calendar years before C.E. 1950 (cal yr BP).
The middle Wisconsin interstadial (57,000–30,000 cal yr BP) was a period of relative warmth in eastern Beringia, compared with the late Wisconsin (30,000–14,000 cal yr BP). Early in the interstadial occasional Picea woodland was present amongst widespread shrub tundra. Palaeoecological, sedimentary and isotopic data indicate that climate was cooler and drier than the Holocene, with high rates of aeolian activity. Megafauna typically associated with the ‘mammoth steppe’ ecosystem (woolly mammoth [Mammuthus primigenius], horse [Equus] and steppe-bison [Bison priscus]) were present in some abundance.
The transition towards late Wisconsin cold-stage conditions (35,000–30,000 cal yr BP) coincided with the establishment of the Bering Land Bridge and featured expansion of spatially varied, herbaceous vegetation, sometimes associated with deep active layers. Sedimentary DNA (sedaDNA) and macrofossil evidence show vegetation was not a prairie-like grassland, and the term “steppe-tundra” is a better descriptor. Permafrost pore-ice isotopic (δ18O) records suggest a step change in one or more climate drivers ca. 30,000 cal yr BP, by which time steppe-tundra was established across eastern Beringia. It remains uncertain whether Picea survived cold-stage conditions within isolated refugia, or whether it recolonized from south of the Laurentide-Cordilleran ice sheets. Genetic data suggest that Picea probably survived in situ; however, there is no definitive fossil evidence to support this.
The end-Pleistocene transition from steppe-tundra to shrub tundra began ca. 15,000 cal yr BP and took place within decades at local scales. The expansion of woody taxa coincided with rising sea levels, reduced sea-ice extent and an abrupt shift in atmospheric circulation that enhanced precipitation. During this time, Earth's orbital configuration caused high early-summer temperatures and strong seasonality, creating growing conditions very different from today. The vegetation consisted of Salix and Betula shrub tundra with open areas of herbs and graminoids. During the deglacial warming trend, the Younger Dryas oscillation (12,800–11,700 cal yr BP) was variably expressed. It is generally evident in records affected by adjacent oceans but can be absent at sites in continental areas.
These past conditions and paleoenvironmental changes have implications for contemporary issues: hypotheses about Pleistocene mammalian extinction; sensitivity of eastern Beringia to major oceanic reorganizations and high-frequency climate variability; the nature of woody plant expansion with climate warming; grazing, hydroclimate and fire as controls over ecosystems; the efficacy of “Pleistocene rewilding” for carbon capture.
期刊介绍:
Quaternary Science Reviews caters for all aspects of Quaternary science, and includes, for example, geology, geomorphology, geography, archaeology, soil science, palaeobotany, palaeontology, palaeoclimatology and the full range of applicable dating methods. The dividing line between what constitutes the review paper and one which contains new original data is not easy to establish, so QSR also publishes papers with new data especially if these perform a review function. All the Quaternary sciences are changing rapidly and subject to re-evaluation as the pace of discovery quickens; thus the diverse but comprehensive role of Quaternary Science Reviews keeps readers abreast of the wider issues relating to new developments in the field.