Vegetation changes and human settlement of Easter Island during the last millennia: a multiproxy study of the Lake Raraku sediments

dc.contributor.author
Cañellas Boltà, Núria
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Rull del Castillo, Valentí
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Sáez, Alberto
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Margalef Marrasé, Olga
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Bao Casal, Roberto
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Pla Rabés, Sergi
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Blaauw, Maarten
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Valero Garcés, Blas Lorenzo
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Giralt Romeu, Santiago
dc.date.issued
2013-05-23T16:30:36Z
dc.date.issued
2013-05-23T16:30:36Z
dc.date.issued
2013
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2013-05-23T16:30:36Z
dc.identifier
0277-3791
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https://hdl.handle.net/2445/43724
dc.identifier
626434
dc.description.abstract
Earlier palynological studies of lake sediments from Easter Island suggest that the island underwent a recent and abrupt replacement of palm-dominated forests by grasslands, interpreted as a deforestation by indigenous people. However, the available evidence is inconclusive due to the existence of extended hiatuses and ambiguous chronological frameworks in most of the sedimentary sequence studied. This has given rise to an ongoing debate about the timing and causes of the assumed ecological degradation and cultural breakdown. Our multiproxy study of a core recovered from Lake Raraku highlights the vegetation dynamics and environmental shifts in the catchment and its surroundings during the late Holocene. The sequence contains shorter hiatuses than in previously recovered cores and provides a more continuous history of environmental changes. The results show a long, gradual and stepped landscape shift from palm dominated forests to grasslands. This change started c. 450 BC and lasted about two thousand years. The presence of Verbena litoralis , a common weed, which is associated with human activities in the pollen record, the signi ficant correlation between shifts in charcoal influx, and the dominant pollen types suggest human disturbance of the vegetation. Therefore, human settlement on the island occurred c. 450 BC, some 1500 years earlier than is assumed. Climate variability also exerted a major influence on environmental changes. Two sedimentary gaps in the record are interpreted as periods of droughts that could have prevented peat growth and favoured its erosion during the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age, respectively. At c. AD 1200, the water table rose and the former Raraku mire turned into a shallow lake, suggesting higher precipitation/evaporation rates coeval with a cooler and wetter Pan-Pacific AD 1300 event. Pollen and diatom records show large vegetation changes due to human activities c. AD 1200. Other recent vegetation changes also due to human activities entail the introduction of taxa (e.g. Psidium guajava, Eucalyptus sp.) and the disappearance of indigenous plants such as Sophora toromiro during the two last centuries. Although the evidence is not conclusive, the American origin of V.litoralis re-opens the debate about the possible role of Amerindians in the human colonisation of Easter Island.
dc.format
3 p.
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application/pdf
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application/pdf
dc.language
eng
dc.publisher
Elsevier Ltd
dc.relation
Versió postprint del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.04.004
dc.relation
Quaternary Science Reviews, 2013, vol. 72, p. 36-38
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.04.004
dc.rights
(c) Elsevier Ltd, 2013
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.source
Articles publicats en revistes (Dinàmica de la Terra i l'Oceà)
dc.subject
Palinologia
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Palynology
dc.title
Vegetation changes and human settlement of Easter Island during the last millennia: a multiproxy study of the Lake Raraku sediments
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion


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