Holocene vegetation, environment, and tephra recorded from Lake Pupuke, Auckland, New Zealand

2005 
Abstract Lake Pupuke provides a near‐complete, high‐resolution environmental record of the Holocene from northern New Zealand. Tephra beds constrain the timing of a range of proxy indicators of environmental change, and demonstrate errors in a radiocarbon chronology. Agathis australis forest progressively increases from c. 7000 yr BP and, in conjunction with indicators of reduced biomass productivity, support a model of long‐term climate change to drier conditions over the Holocene. However, except for Agathis, conifer‐hardwood forest dominated mainly by Dacrydium cupressinum shows little change throughout the pre‐human Holocene, suggesting environmental stability. Dramatic vegetation change occurred only within the last millennium as a result of large‐scale Polynesian deforestation by fire. This happened a short time before the local eruption of c. 638 cal. yr BP Rangitoto Tephra. The identification of two eruptions of tephra from Rangitoto volcano has implications for future hazard planning in the Auckl...
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