Abstract

Environment changes in the northwestern part of the Sea of Japan and adjacent land during last 21.0 kyr was reconstructed based on the analysis of pollen and diatom data with a high temporal resolution. Relatively dry climate caused a wide distribution of forest-steppe landscapes in the region between 21.0 to 16.6 ka. Boreal forests covered mountain slopes. Broad-leaved trees survived in refugia located in lower mountain belts. The low sea level during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) changed the general patterns in the sea circulation and longshore current directions, which transported the waters formed in the shallow areas of the northwestern and northern parts of the Sea of Japan. A slight increase in sublittoral benthic diatoms indicates the lowered sea level during the LGM. Occurrence of Betula indicates the start of warming after 18.5 ka; it was interrupted by the cold event Heinrich 1 and marked by the spread of coniferous Larix, Picea, and sphagnum bogs. The beginning of late glacial climatic amelioration Bølling-Allerød (BA) is contributed to dispersal of Quercus and Polypodiaceae ferns. The distribution of conifers Larix and Picea as well as of sphagnum bogs is correlated with the Younger Dryas (YD) cooling. Significant changes in vegetation occurred in the Holocene. The high percentage of sublittoral planktonic diatoms reflects a gradual rise in sea level during the BA and YD. A greater component of oceanic diatom species in the Holocene indicates the inflow of the Pacific waters through both the Tsushima and Tsugaru straits. Some increase in the participance and species diversity of relatively warm-water diatoms was noticed in the warming periods. The study of pollen and diatom records demonstrates a clear response to climatic fluctuations and changes in the Sea of Japan level in the Late Pleistocene and Holocene.

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