dc.description.abstract | This thesis shows that Late Weichselian vegetation on Andøya may have been more
diverse than previous studies have revealed.
The thorough investigation of macrofossils in four parallel cores provides more reliable
evidence for interpreting changes in vegetation cover than reconstructions based on a single
core. The botanical macrofossils retrieved in this study largely support previous studies at the
northern tip of Andøya. Arctic plant communities, probably dominated by Papaver and several
species of Poaceae and Brassicaceae characterized the area. Climatic ameliorations occurred at
c. 22 000 – 20 100, 20 100 – 19 500, 19 500 – 19 200, 18 800 – 18 100, 17 500 – 16 800 and
15 100 – 14 500 cal. yr BP, and during these ameliorations, the vegetation may have been more
diverse than recorded both in the pollen- and macrofossil material.
Macrofossils (bones) of little auk (Alle alle), coupled with other evidence, suggest a longlasting
presence of sea birds in the area. Manuring by birds made a considerable impact on the
local terrestrial environment, and during the ameliorations in particular, these favorable local
habitats may have supported species not found in the present-day Arctic, e.g. Urtica dioica.
Sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) provides evidence that during the ameliorations,
Andøya may have hosted small enclaves of boreal conifer trees. Their presence on Andøya has
yet to be detected by macrofossil- or pollen analyses, but the DNA evidence provides an
important contribution to the debate concerning glacial survival of boreal trees within
Scandinavia. | en |
dc.description | The papers of this thesis are not available in Munin: <br/>1. Elverland, E. & Alm, T.: 'High resolution macrofossil analysis of Late Weichselian Arctic lacustrine sediments on Andøya, northern Norway' (manuscript) <br/>2. Elverland, E., Bjerke, J.W. & Alm, T.: 'Is one core enough? A study of the intrasite
macrofossil variability of a Late Weichselian lacustrine record on Andøya, North Norway' (manuscript) <br/>3. Alm, T. & Elverland, E.: 'A Late Weichselian Alle alle colony on Andøya, northern Norway : a contribution to the history of an important Arctic environment' (manuscript) <br/>4. Parducci, L., Jørgensen, T., Tollefsrud. M.M., Elverland, E., Alm, T., Fontana, S.L.,
Bennett, K.D., Haile, J., Matetovici, I., Suyama, Y., Edwards, M.E., Andersen, K., Rasmussen, M.,
Boessenkool, S., Coissac, E., Brochmann, C., Taberlet, T., Houmark-Nielsen, M., Krog-Larsen, N.,Orlando, L., Gilbert, M.T.P., Kjær, K.H., Alsos, I.G. & Willerslev: 'Glacial Survival of Boreal trees in Northern Scandinavia', Science (2012) vol.335 no.6072:1083-1086. Available at <a href=http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1216043>http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1216043</a> | en |