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Chapter 20. The Holocene. Guiding Questions. Did Earth move directly from the last glacial maximum to the present glacial minimum? Did species that form modern plant communities evolve together? Have climatic changes been gradual during Holocene time?
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Chapter 20 The Holocene
Guiding Questions • Did Earth move directly from the last glacial maximum to the present glacial minimum? • Did species that form modern plant communities evolve together? • Have climatic changes been gradual during Holocene time? • When did humans migrate from Eurasia to North America?
Present 11,600 ybp
End of the Ice Age • Glaciers began to retreat around 15,000 years ago • Waters drained to lakes • Sea level rose • Tundra shifted northward • Deciduous trees migrated northward
Younger Dryas • 14,680 years ago • Climates warmed in a decade • 13,000 years ago • Rapid cooling • Younger Dryas • Lasted through 11,600 years ago
Global Warming • Terminal moraine • Southern New Zealand during the Younger Dryas cooling event
End of the Ice Age • Prairie potholes • Depressions formed from remnant mounds of ice
End of the Ice Age • Vegetation changes occurred • Southern floras were very different than today • Trees species shifted at different times • Led to changes within communities
End of the Ice Age • Corals provide gauge for sea level changes • Acropora palmata • Grows with sea level • Radiocarbon, U-Th determined timing • Corrected for tectonic change
Migrations • Humans colonized North America • Clovis people • Approximately 11,000 years ago • Relied on elephants · Woolly mammoth · Mastadon - Tundra - Eastern forests - Small ears, short trunk - Curved molars
Migrations • Clovis hunters • Fluted spear point
Mass Extinction • Large mammal extinction • 12,000–10,000 years ago • All three American elephants • Large beavers • 5 species of horses • North American camel • Giant ground sloths • Giant armadillos • La Brea tar pits • Preserved fauna
Climate change Rapid change Younger Dryas Habitat change Grasslands changes to prairies Overkill hypothesis Human hunting may have led to a mass extinction of large mammals Mass Extinction
Agriculture • Hypsithermal Interval • 9000–6000 years ago • 2°C warmer than today • Agriculture developed • Zagros Mountains • First site • Greek islands • 8000 years ago • Europe • Northern Europe • 6000 years ago
Climate Fluctuations • Tree rings • Non-tropical areas • Annual rings • Bristlecone pine • 4600 years old • Methuselah
Climate Fluctuations • Cooling: cold intervals • 5800–4900 years ago • 3300–2400 years ago • 900–700 years ago • Medieval Warm Period • Viking expansion
Climate Fluctuations • Little Ice Age • Glaciers expanded • Short summers • Ended ~1850
Climate Fluctuations • Droughts also occurred • Dunes • Pine tree rings
Sea Level • Coastlines changed • Glaciers retreated • Lithospheric rebound • Great Britain • Coasts uplifting
Sea Level • Subsidence • Peripheral bulge • Produced by nearby glacier • Southern Great Britain • Northeastern US
Sea Level • Transgression • Lagoonal complexes transgress over coastal plain sediments • New Jersey • Regression • High sediment supply is causing coast to move offshore • Texas
Global Warming • CO2 has increased since the Industrial Revolution
Global Warming • Temperatures have increased • Models predict continued increase in temperature • Increase depends on CO2 concentrations
Global Warming • Warming leads to glacial melting • Mt. Kilimanjaro, 1993 and 2000
Global Warming • Many impacts • Migration • Change in precipitation • Desertification • Changes in plant communities • Sea level change
Global Warming • Sea level may rise 50 cm by 2100 • Antarctic ice cap may expand from increased snowfall • Or ice cap may collapse
Global Warming • Would also flood wetlands • Normally marsh would migrate with coastal change • Blocked by barriers
Global Warming • Flooding in Venice • 1990