Neogene and Quaternary quantitative palynostratigraphy and paleoclimatology from sections in Yukon and adjacent Northwest Territories and Alaska

Bulletin 543
By: , and 
Edited by: A. R. Sweet and D. H. McNeil

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Abstract

 quantitative pollen and spore zonation for the Neogene and Quaternary of Yukon, western Northwest Territories and central and northern Alaska has been assembled from seven sections and one borehole. The palynological spectra from 163 samples from these sections were grouped and averaged within the groups to produce twenty-one composite spectra that depict the long-term pattern of vegetation change. The oldest record included in the study is estimated to be within the late Early Miocene (ca. 18.3 Ma) and the record extends to the late Quaternary.
Pollen and spores are grouped and summed by environmental tolerances and physiognomy of the modern families and genera of plants to which they are related. Using these groups, pollen and spore ratios are drawn to track environmental parameters - temperature, forest canopy cover, and paludification of the study sites. Biostratigraphic and paleoecological patterns are explained in terms of known changes in global climate and the climatic effects of regional tectonics. Six assemblage zones and five subzones are proposed to describe the palynological succession.

Study Area

Publication type Report
Publication Subtype Other Government Series
Title Neogene and Quaternary quantitative palynostratigraphy and paleoclimatology from sections in Yukon and adjacent Northwest Territories and Alaska
Series title Bulletin
Series number 543
DOI 10.4095/210923
Year Published 1999
Language English
Publisher Natural Resources Canada
Description 30 p., 1 plate
Country Canada, United States
State Alaska, Northwest Territories, Yukon
Other Geospatial Canyon Village, Lost Chicken Mine, Mackenzie River, McCallum Creek, Taglu Island, Upper Ramparts Canyon
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