Abstract

The magnitude of change in climatic conditions and vegetation response to the last deglaciation in various parts of tropical Amazonia is poorly understood and controversial. Analysis of a sediment core e.g. fossil pollen, X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) and charcoal from Lake Malachite on the Hill of Six Lakes in northwestern Brazil provided a deglacial history of climate, vegetation change and fire. Pollen revealed a forested landscape throughout, with shifts in composition that were driven by warming and changes in precipitation. The glacial cooling of c. 4–5 °C had brought species characteristic of cooler climates into the Amazon lowlands and was followed by an initial warming that began at least 19.5 thousand calibrated years before the present (cal kyr BP). Temperature oscillations and changes in precipitation between (18–14.6 cal kyr BP) associated with Heinrich Stadial 1 were observed as wet-dry-wet oscillations similar to some of the previous studies, and were evident in both pollen and XRF data. The pollen spectra were consistent that of a mesic forest before and after the peak of the Last Glacial Maximum. Cool-adapted taxa had previously been described from other cores from the Hill of Six Lakes, and persisted in low abundances until c. 14.1 cal kyr BP. No distinct response to the Atlantic Cold Reversal was evident in our proxy data. The early Holocene was marked by pollen, charcoal, and sedimentary changes that could reflect a peak drought stress on the forest. The large occurrence of charcoal indicating an increase in fires coincided with disturbance elements e.g. Cecropia and Alchornea, that could have been consistent with human disturbance of the forest at c. 10.2 cal kyr BP.

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