Abstract
A Holocene sediment series from a lake in the northern birch forest region of eastern Finnish Lapland was studied pollen-analytically. In addition to conventional pollen analysis, birch pollen measurements were carried out. Betula pollen diameters were measured systematically. The resulting size-frequency distributions were analysed statistically to infer their species composition and to reconstruct the local history of birch. The results indicate pine arrival about 7500 14C years BP. Even during its optimum period of 7000–6000 BP, pine cover seems to have been thin and discontinuous. Pine and birch started to retreat soon after the pine optimum. In the interpretation of the birch pollen-size frequency distributions, no continuous record of Betula tortuosa was found. B. pendula seems to have had a more northerly distribution in the past than it has today.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
