Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years

Building robust age-depth models to understand climatic and geologic histories from coastal sedimentary archives often requires composite chronologies consisting of multi-proxy age markers. Pollen chronohorizons derived from a known change in vegetation are important for age-depth models, especially...

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Main Authors: Christie, Margaret A., Bernhardt, Christopher E., Parnell, Andrew C., Shaw, Timothy Adam, Khan, Nicole S., Corbett, Dorbett Reide, García-Artola, Ane, Clear, Jennifer, Walker, Jennifer S., Donnelly, Jeffrey P., Hasse, Tobias R., Horton, Benjamin P.
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147577
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1475772024-04-18T01:43:10Z Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years Christie, Margaret A. Bernhardt, Christopher E. Parnell, Andrew C. Shaw, Timothy Adam Khan, Nicole S. Corbett, Dorbett Reide García-Artola, Ane Clear, Jennifer Walker, Jennifer S. Donnelly, Jeffrey P. Hasse, Tobias R. Horton, Benjamin P. Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Social sciences::Geography Pollen Age–depth Models Building robust age-depth models to understand climatic and geologic histories from coastal sedimentary archives often requires composite chronologies consisting of multi-proxy age markers. Pollen chronohorizons derived from a known change in vegetation are important for age-depth models, especially those with other sparse or imprecise age markers. However, the accuracy of pollen chronohorizons compared to other age markers and the impact of pollen chronohorizons on the precision of age-depth models, particularly in salt marsh environments, is poorly understood. Here, we combine new and published pollen data from eight coastal wetlands (salt marshes and mangroves) along the Atlantic Coast of the United States (U.S.) from Florida to Connecticut to define the age and uncertainty of 17 pollen chronohorizons. We found that 13 out of 17 pollen chronohorizons were consistent when compared to other age markers (radiocarbon, radionuclide 137Cs and pollution markers). Inconsistencies were likely related to the hyperlocality of pollen chronohorizons, mixing of salt marsh sediment, reworking of pollen from nearby tidal flats, misidentification of pollen signals, and inaccuracies in or misinterpretation of other age markers. Additionally, in a total of 24 models, including one or more pollen chronohorizons, increased precision (up to 41 years) or no change was found in 18 models. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version MC was funded by the National Science Foundation EAR 1624551. NSK, TS, and BPH were funded by the Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund MOE2018-T2-1-030 and MOE2019-T3-1-004, the National Research Foundation Singapore, and the Singapore Ministry of Education, under the Research Centres of Excellence initiative. This article is a contribution to International Geoscience Program (IGCP) Project 639, “Sea Level Change from Minutes to Millennia”. This work is Earth Observatory of Singapore contribution 349. AP wishes to acknowledge the funding Science Foundation Ireland Career Development Award (17/CDA/4695); an investigator award (16/IA/4520); a Marine Research Programme funded by the Irish Government, co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund (Grant-Aid Agreement No. PBA/CC/18/01); European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 818144; and SFI Research Centre awards 16/RC/3872 and 12/RC/2289_P2. 2021-04-06T06:38:02Z 2021-04-06T06:38:02Z 2021 Journal Article Christie, M. A., Bernhardt, C. E., Parnell, A. C., Shaw, T. A., Khan, N. S., Corbett, D. R., García-Artola, A., Clear, J., Walker, J. S., Donnelly, J. P., Hasse, T. R. & Horton, B. P. (2021). Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years. Water, 13(3). https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w13030362 2073-4441 0000-0002-9416-4115 0000-0002-9007-637X 0000-0001-9205-8362 0000-0002-9650-0776 0000-0001-9245-3768 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147577 10.3390/w13030362 2-s2.0-85101176146 3 13 en MOE2018-T2-1-030 MOE2019-T3-1-004 Water © 2021 The Authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Geography
Pollen
Age–depth Models
spellingShingle Social sciences::Geography
Pollen
Age–depth Models
Christie, Margaret A.
Bernhardt, Christopher E.
Parnell, Andrew C.
Shaw, Timothy Adam
Khan, Nicole S.
Corbett, Dorbett Reide
García-Artola, Ane
Clear, Jennifer
Walker, Jennifer S.
Donnelly, Jeffrey P.
Hasse, Tobias R.
Horton, Benjamin P.
Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years
description Building robust age-depth models to understand climatic and geologic histories from coastal sedimentary archives often requires composite chronologies consisting of multi-proxy age markers. Pollen chronohorizons derived from a known change in vegetation are important for age-depth models, especially those with other sparse or imprecise age markers. However, the accuracy of pollen chronohorizons compared to other age markers and the impact of pollen chronohorizons on the precision of age-depth models, particularly in salt marsh environments, is poorly understood. Here, we combine new and published pollen data from eight coastal wetlands (salt marshes and mangroves) along the Atlantic Coast of the United States (U.S.) from Florida to Connecticut to define the age and uncertainty of 17 pollen chronohorizons. We found that 13 out of 17 pollen chronohorizons were consistent when compared to other age markers (radiocarbon, radionuclide 137Cs and pollution markers). Inconsistencies were likely related to the hyperlocality of pollen chronohorizons, mixing of salt marsh sediment, reworking of pollen from nearby tidal flats, misidentification of pollen signals, and inaccuracies in or misinterpretation of other age markers. Additionally, in a total of 24 models, including one or more pollen chronohorizons, increased precision (up to 41 years) or no change was found in 18 models.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Christie, Margaret A.
Bernhardt, Christopher E.
Parnell, Andrew C.
Shaw, Timothy Adam
Khan, Nicole S.
Corbett, Dorbett Reide
García-Artola, Ane
Clear, Jennifer
Walker, Jennifer S.
Donnelly, Jeffrey P.
Hasse, Tobias R.
Horton, Benjamin P.
format Article
author Christie, Margaret A.
Bernhardt, Christopher E.
Parnell, Andrew C.
Shaw, Timothy Adam
Khan, Nicole S.
Corbett, Dorbett Reide
García-Artola, Ane
Clear, Jennifer
Walker, Jennifer S.
Donnelly, Jeffrey P.
Hasse, Tobias R.
Horton, Benjamin P.
author_sort Christie, Margaret A.
title Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years
title_short Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years
title_full Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years
title_fullStr Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years
title_full_unstemmed Pollen geochronology from the Atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years
title_sort pollen geochronology from the atlantic coast of the united states during the last 500 years
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147577
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