加勒比巴布达岛从土著早期到现代的人为火灾和植被动态

Allison R LeBlanc, Lisa M Kennedy, Michael J Burn, Allison Bain, Sophia Perdikaris
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摘要

我们对巴布达淡水池塘的沉积物岩芯进行了多代理分析,该岩芯是小安的列斯群岛为数不多的内陆古环境记录之一。我们的研究结果揭示了气候多变性以及哥伦布前后人类活动对巴布达岛植被和火灾动态的相对影响。沉积物记录中存在民族植物学上有用的植物类群和干扰指示植物类群的宏观木炭和花粉,这表明在公元前约 150 年至公元前约 1250 年期间,前哥伦布时期的生存活动发生在距池塘几公里的范围内。我们的记录将人为火灾延伸到了早期陶瓷时代(公元前 500 年至公元前 1500 年),也可能是晚期太古时代(公元前 3000 年至公元前 500 年),为岛上最早居民的到来时间提供了证据。从微观木炭碎片推断出的全岛生物质燃烧历史表明,在公元前 540 年至公元前 1610 年期间,火灾活动频繁,随后是一段沉寂期,这反映了与欧洲殖民该地区有关的前哥伦布时期向后哥伦布时期土地使用方式的过渡。英国人于 16 世纪 60 年代在巴布达建立了永久定居点,但由于巴布达不适合大规模农业、木材采伐、小规模耕作和牲畜饲养,因此没有留下可探测木炭足迹的活动很可能主导了后殖民时期的土地使用。淡水池塘重建的火灾历史与有效湿度之间缺乏明确的对应关系,这支持了巴布达晚全新世火灾活动主要由人类活动驱动的观点。
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Human-driven fire and vegetation dynamics on the Caribbean island of Barbuda from early indigenous to modern times
We present a multiproxy analysis of a sediment core from Freshwater Pond, Barbuda, one of just a few inland paleoenvironmental records from the Lesser Antilles. Our results shed light on the relative contributions of climate variability and Pre- and Post-Columbian human activities to vegetation and fire dynamics on Barbuda. The presence of macroscopic charcoal and pollen of ethnobotanically-useful and disturbance-indicator plant taxa in the sediment record suggests that Pre-Columbian subsistence activities occurred within a few kilometers of the pond between ~150 BCE and ~1250 CE. Our record extends anthropogenic fires back into the early Ceramic (500 BCE–1500 CE) and possibly late Archaic Ages (3000–500 BCE) adding evidence to the timing of arrival of the island’s earliest inhabitants. The history of island-wide biomass burning inferred from microscopic charcoal fragments showed heightened fire activity between ~540 and ~1610 CE followed by a period of quiescence that reflected the transition from Pre- to Post-Columbian land-use practices associated with European colonization of the region. The British established a permanent settlement on Barbuda in the 1660s, but given Barbuda’s unsuitability for large-scale agriculture, timber harvesting, small-scale farming, and livestock rearing, activities that left no detectable charcoal footprints likely dominated post-colonial land use. The lack of any clear correspondence between the reconstructed histories of fire and effective moisture at Freshwater Pond supports the idea that Late-Holocene fire activity on Barbuda was driven primarily by human activity.
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