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Late-Quaternary Vegetation History at White Pond on the Inner Coastal Plain of South Carolina1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

W. A. Watts*
Affiliation:
Department of Botany, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland and Limnological Research Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

Abstract

At White Pond near Columbia, South Carolina, a pollen assemblage of Pinus banksiana (jack pine), Picea (spruce), and herbs is dated between 19,100 and 12,800 14C yr B.P. Plants of sandhill habitats are more prominent than at other sites of similar age, and pollen of deciduous trees is infrequent. The vegetation was probably a mosaic of pine and spruce stands with prairies and sand-dune vegetation. The climate may have been like that of the eastern boreal forest today. 14C dates of 12,800 and 9500 yr B.P. bracket a time when Quercus (oak), Carya (hickory), Fagus (beech), and Ostrya-Carpinus (ironwood) dominated the vegetation. It is estimated that beech and hickory made up at least 25% of the forest trees. Conifers were rare or absent. The environment is interpreted as hickory-rich mesic deciduous forest with a climate similar to but slightly warmer than that of the northern hardwoods region of western New York State. After 9500 yr B.P. oak and pine forest dominated the landscape, with pine becoming the most important tree genus in the later Holocene.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
University of Washington

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Footnotes

1

Contribution No. 188, Limnological Research Center, Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis.

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