Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
Introduction
Virtually all applications of Quaternary pollen analysis, whether ecological, climatological, archeological, or stratigraphic, are ultimately concerned with inferring temporal changes in vegetation composition from pollen assemblages. Stratigraphic changes in pollen assemblages are assumed to record changes in vegetation composition, which in turn provide information about changes in species distribution, prevailing climate, human activities, and cultural resources. Within certain spatial and temporal realms, spatially separated sites contain similar stratigraphic changes in pollen assemblages. These similarities form the basis for classical pollen-stratigraphic zonation, and for chronostratigraphic correlation when independent evidence (e.g., radiocarbon dates) indicates that the zones are contemporaneous among nearby sites. The synchroneity derives from the pollen sequences at the individual sites having recorded the same or similar changes in vegetation composition.
The interest in studying pollen sequences that record past vegetational changes has led Quaternary palynologists to seek sedimentary deposits with good pollen preservation, and stable, continuous, datable deposition. Preservation must be sufficiently good that most pollen grains can be reliably assigned to morphotypes corresponding to extant plant taxa at or below the family level. A stable depositional environment is required to ensure that changes in pollen assemblages can be attributed to vegetational changes rather than depositional episodes. Continuous, independently datable records are desirable for an uninterrupted record of vegetational changes at a site, for comparison of records among sites, and for linking the pollen record to other kinds of data (paleontologic, paleoclimatic, geologic, archeologic, biogeographic).
Quaternary palynologists bring additional criteria to bear in evaluating pollen records and potential sampling sites.
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