Abstract

The permafrost properties and cryostructure of Holocene peatlands and underlying the Pre-Holocene deposits within Pur-Taz interfluve in the Northern West Siberia were studied. The cryolithological description, particle size, botanical compositions based on plant macro-fossils, and radiocarbon age from 8500 ± 240 cal BC to 1810 ± 150 cal AD were defined. The polygonal peatlands were formed in lacustrine-bog basins. The “arboreal” horizon at the bottom of the peat, which is characteristic of Northern West Siberia, was identified. This “arboreal” horizon dates to the Boreal and Atlantic periods of the Holocene – 8500 ± 240 cal BC and 7390 ± 210 cal BC, which explains the occurrence of forest tundra in the area of typical modern tundra during the Holocene Climatic Optimum. The vegetation composition of peat-forming plants, the ash content, and the decomposition degree of organic matter were controlled by changing natural conditions and dynamics of peat accumulation during the Holocene: flooding and burial of woody vegetation, overgrowing and eutrophication of water bodies, the gradual accumulation of peat and syngenetic ice-wedge polygon formation, peat accumulation slowing caused by drainage of drained lake basin surface. Organic frost boils on the peatland surface indicate modern deepening of the permafrost Table and are related to an increase of the microorganism activity in the thawed, poorly decomposed peat. The peat accumulation rate was about 1 mm per year. A 2-m peat layer containing ground ice has accumulated over 2500 years.The purpose of the present work is study of the history of the vegetation on the northern limits of treeline. Examination of the peat, macrofossil, decomposition degree, and ash content history of a peat sections on the Pur-Taz Interfluve in North-Western Siberia, provides a long-term view of vegetation dynamics, peatland change, and climate history during the Holocene at the Arctic treeline.

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