Ice age plant refugia in East Greenland

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    Abstract

    From the distribution of plants it has been inferred by some botanists that ice-free
    areas existed in East Greenland accommodating a flora which survived one or several ice
    ages in the area. Comparing this evidence with recent information on the chronology of
    glaciations and post-glacial vegetation development, there is both significant agreement
    and disagreement. The early hypothesis of survival of organisms since Tertiary times is
    refuted by the ubiquitous occurrence of glacigene deposits. However, some of the areas
    pointed out as sites for survival have remained ice-free longer than adjacent parts of
    Greenland. 14 C dating and amino-acid age estimates of marine sediments show that
    lowland areas near the outer coast have been ice-free for at least 40,000 years.
    The vegetation history, as reflected in pollen diagrams extending back to ca. 10,000 yr.
    B.P., has shown that many of the extant species immigrated from northern Europe and
    North America in post-glacial times. This contingency includes both some thermophilous
    species that were suggested as survivors by one group of botanists, and some extremely
    "hardy" species that were thought to have survived by another group. From the
    palynological evidence it is inferred that the flora in the refugia comprised mainly species
    which today occur over a wide geographical and ecological range. The "odd" occurrences
    that initiated the discussion may represent random.seed dispersal accumulated in the
    ice-free areas through long periods of time
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology - An International Journal for the Geo-Sciences
    Volume28
    Pages (from-to)279-295
    ISSN0031-0182
    Publication statusPublished - 1979

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