Early colonization before inundation consistent with northern glacial refugia in Southern Doggerland - Latest paper from Bradford's Submerged Landscapes Research Centre

10 Mar by Gaffney, Vince

Early colonization before inundation consistent with northern glacial refugia in Southern Doggerland revealed by sedimentary ancient DNA Robin Allaby et al.

A new paper on theenvironmental data from cores taken from Doggerland as part of the Bradford, ERC Europe's Lost Frontiers Project has just been published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Abstract
Prior to the formation of the present-day North Sea during the mid-Holocene, North-Western Europe was connected through the Doggerland landmass. While it has been known for the past century that Doggerland was forested, it has not been clear when the onset of forestation occurred or whether the environment was more habitable for humans than surrounding European areas. In this study, we reconstruct the paleoecology of a river system, the Southern River, from the late Late Pleistocene to the late Holocene using sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) from 252 sediment samples from 41 cores spanning the length of the river system and headwater area. We identify secure and insecure sedaDNA signals by integrating sedimentological and sedaDNA data into a taphonomic model. Secure sedaDNA signals are found in silty and fine sand deposits where 95 to 98% originates from local deposition, but coarse sands and gravels are insecure with 60 to 70% of the sedaDNA associated with mixed ecosystem signals from reworked and influxed sediments. Secure sediments reveal the presence of several temperate tree genera such as Quercus, Ulmus, and Corylus over 16,000 y ago in the Late Pleniglacial, and thermal indicator genus Tilia several thousand years earlier than has been recorded for surrounding European areas. In this area, we also detect an anomalous signal of the genus Pterocarya, considered extinct in the region since the Hoxnian Stage (~400 ka). These observations are consistent with colonization from nearby northern glacial refugia, suggesting a favorable environment in which the cultural Mesolithic could develop.

Want to read more? Go to https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2508402123

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