Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/140786
Title: Vegetation, climate and habitability in the Marseille Basin (SE France) circa 1 Ma
Authors: Andrieu, Valérie
Rochette, Pierre
Fournier, François
Demory, François
Robles, Mary
Peyron, Odile
Fauquette, Séverine
Charrat, Eliane
Magniez, Pierre
Gambin, Belinda
De Coignac, Samuel Benoît
Keywords: Paleoecology -- France -- Marseille
Paleobotany -- France -- Marseille
Paleoclimatology -- Pleistocene
Human beings -- Effect of climate on
Geology, Stratigraphic -- Quaternary
Habitat (Ecology) -- History -- To 1500
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: MDPI AG
Citation: Andrieu, V., Rochette, P., Fournier, F., Demory, F., Robles, M., Peyron, O.,...De Coignac, S. B. (2024). Vegetation, Climate and Habitability in the Marseille Basin (SE France) circa 1 Ma. Geosciences, 14(8), 211, 1-28.
Abstract: The environment of the Marseille basin in the Early Pleistocene was reconstructed through a multiproxy study of fluvial tufa deposits. Palaeomagnetic measurements revealed the Jaramillo subchron and dated the tufa to within the 0.8–1.5 Ma interval, probably between 0.9 and1.2 Ma. Sedimentological studies show varied depositional environments comprising natural dams formed by accumulations of plants promoting the development of upstream water bodies. The very negative δ 13C values indicate that the Marseille tufa is not travertine sensu stricto but tufa deposited by local cold-water rivers. Palynological analyses indicate a semi-forested, diverse, mosaic vegetation landscape dominated by a Mediterranean pine and oak forest. Along the streams, the riparian forest was diverse and included Juglans, Castanea, Platanus and Vitis. The potential diet reconstructed from pollen was varied. The most surprising discovery was the presence of proto-cereals, which could potentially enrich the diet with carbohydrates. The identification of spores of coprophilous fungi seems to indicate the presence in situ of large herbivore herds. It is possible that, as in Anatolia, the disturbance of ecosystems by large herbivores was responsible for the genetic mutation of Poaceae and the appearance of proto-cereals. Climatic reconstructions indicate a slightly cooler and wetter climate than the present.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/140786
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