Pollen Geochronology from the Atlantic Coast of the United States during the Last 500 Years

Author:

Christie MargaretORCID,Bernhardt Christopher,Parnell Andrew,Shaw TimothyORCID,Khan NicoleORCID,Corbett D.ORCID,García-Artola Ane,Clear Jennifer,Walker JenniferORCID,Donnelly Jeffrey,Hasse Tobias,Horton BenjaminORCID

Abstract

Building robust age–depth models to understand climatic and geologic histories from coastal sedimentary archives often requires composite chronologies consisting of multi-proxy age markers. Pollen chronohorizons derived from a known change in vegetation are important for age–depth models, especially those with other sparse or imprecise age markers. However, the accuracy of pollen chronohorizons compared to other age markers and the impact of pollen chronohorizons on the precision of age–depth models, particularly in salt marsh environments, is poorly understood. Here, we combine new and published pollen data from eight coastal wetlands (salt marshes and mangroves) along the Atlantic Coast of the United States (U.S.) from Florida to Connecticut to define the age and uncertainty of 17 pollen chronohorizons. We found that 13 out of 17 pollen chronohorizons were consistent when compared to other age markers (radiocarbon, radionuclide 137Cs and pollution markers). Inconsistencies were likely related to the hyperlocality of pollen chronohorizons, mixing of salt marsh sediment, reworking of pollen from nearby tidal flats, misidentification of pollen signals, and inaccuracies in or misinterpretation of other age markers. Additionally, in a total of 24 models, including one or more pollen chronohorizons, increased precision (up to 41 years) or no change was found in 18 models.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Ministry of Education - Singapore

National Research Foundation Singapore

Science Foundation Ireland

SFI Insight Centre for Data Analytics

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

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