Abstract

A study of pollen, fossil mammals and lithology (including grain-size analysis) of the terrigenous deposits in the Bukovynka Cave enables the reconstruction of the environments of several geochronologic subdivisions of the Middle Pleniglacial, Late Glacial and Holocene. A comparison of pollen assemblages in surface samples from the cave deposits and from the soils prove the importance of cave palynology for palaeovegetation reconstruction. The same patterns were shown by a comparison of pollen from hyaena coprolites in the cave and their enclosing sediments. In the Trapeznyi Chamber record, the two interstadials and one stadial identified are correlated with those of the Moershoofd interval, and the following stadial (after 41,000 yrs BP) is compared with the Hosselo stadial of Western Europe. In the Sukhyi Chamber record, Late Glacial times (around 10,700 yrs BP) differed from the Holocene in having a much harsher climate (with the spread of boreal forest). During the Holocene, a relatively wet phase, transitional from Atlantic to Early Subboreal, was separated from the similar phase of the Late Subboreal (2800 yrs BP) by a drier Middle Subboreal (with the disappearance of water-loving trees and the existence of steppe rodents). The Subatlantic was the wettest time, with culmination of a broad-leaved flora in the Roman (2300–1800 yrs BP) and Medieval (1000 yrs BP) Warm Periods. The cultivation of Cerealia started from 2800 yrs BP, and forest clearances increased after the Medieval Warm Period.

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