Holocene Vegetation Dynamics, Landscape Change and Human Impact in Western Ireland as Revealed by Multidisciplinary, Palaeoecological Investigations of Peat Deposits and Bog-Pine in Lowland Connemara
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Sites
2.1. Ballydoo Bog, North-East Connemara
2.2. Derryinver, Letterfrack, Crocknaraw and Claddaghduff, North-West Connemara
2.3. Derryeighter, Eastern Connemara
3. Materials and Methods
Site (Name, Location, Altitude, etc.) ¶ | Publications, Theses, etc. * |
---|---|
Ballydoo Bog, north of Cornamona, north-east Connemara; basin size: 350 × 150 m; 4.5 ha (pollen) | |
BDB I (peat): ps: 88 + 4 sps; 14C: 12 (4); span: 11.7–0.23 ka 53.53383, −9.46091; 32 m asl; Figure 1C | * [11,30], * [31]; presented in detail |
Derryinver hill, Renvyle, north-west Connemara (stone alignment; pre-bog stone walls; henge-like enclosure) (pollen) | |
DYR I: mineral soil beneath stone wall. ps: 7; 14C: 1; top: 2.43 ka 53.58369, −9.98697; 74 m asl; Figure 2A | * [24]; [10] |
DYR II: mineral soil, overlying bk-peat. ps: 14; 14C: 3; span: 2.2–0.11 ka 53.58363, −9.9869; 73.6 m asl; Figure 2A | * [24]; [10] |
DYR III: mineral soil beneath stone wall. ps: 6; 14C: 1; top: 1.47 ka 53.5857, −9.9865; 66 m asl; Figure 2A | * [24]; [10] |
DYR VI: peat-filled ditch in enclosure; ps: 26; 14C: 2; span: 3.2–0.09 ka 53.58471, −9.98664; 78 m asl; Figure 2A | * [24]; [10] |
Derryinver basin bog, Renvyle (extensive blanket bog with pine timbers; cores from marginal location near hill) (pollen) | |
DYR V: peat profile beside hill; ps: 136; 14C: 11 (4); span: 11.5–0.25 ka 53.58407, −9.97903; 30 m asl; Figure 2A | * [24,25]; [9]; presented in detail |
DYR VIIc: 15 m from DYR V, nearer hill; ps: 8; 14C: 2; span: 5.86–4.87 ka 53.58419, −9.97908; 30 m asl; Figure 2A | * [25]; presented in detail |
Letterfrack, Connemara National Park, north-west Connemara (pollen and pine dendrochronology) | |
FRK II: basin peat; ps: 90; 14C: 11; span: 10.3–0.22 ka 53.54375, −9.93593; 97 m asl; Figure 2B | * [26]; [8] |
FRK III: blanket peat, mineral soil beneath; ps: 8; 14C: 2; span: 3.7–2.35 ka 53.54477, −9.9395; 91 m asl; Figure 2B | [27] |
FRK IV: blanket peat, mineral soil beneath; ps: 32; 14C: 4; span: 4.36–0.1 ka 53.54556, −9.94644; 70 m asl; Figure 2B | [27] (in part) |
Dendrochronology: pines from CNP, Letterfrack, and from Carrowkennedy (Co. Mayo) and Corboley (Barna, S.E. Connemara) (at VC, CNP); Figure 1A,B and Figure 2B | * [11]; presented in detail |
Crocknaraw (hilltop site) and Claddaghduff, north-west Connemara (stone walls at bog edge) (pollen) | |
CNR I: blanket peat, underlying mineral soil; ps: 10; 14C: 3; span: 6.3–3.26 ka 53.53502, −10.02508; 105 m asl; Figure 1B | * [11] |
CLD I: blanket peat and underlying mineral soil, beneath stone wall; ps: 17; 14C: 2; span: 4.9–2.9 ka 53.54895, −10.12698; 38 m asl; Figure 3A,B | * [24] |
Derryeighter, eastern Connemara (14C dating and pine dendrochronology;Figure 3C) | |
Derryeighter, Area 1 (centred on 53.4166853, −9.4052939; 42 m asl) Derryeighter, Area 2 (centred on 53.4153475, −9.4050792; 42 m asl) | * [11]; presented in detail |
4. Results
4.1. Ballydoo Bog, Cornamona
4.1.1. Peat Stratigraphy (in Basin and Core BDB I)
4.1.2. Radiocarbon Dating (Ballydoo)
4.1.3. Pollen and Related Data, Core BDB I
4.2. Derryinver, Renvyle
4.3. Other Investigations in North-West Connemara
4.3.1. Crocknaraw (Pollen Profile)
4.3.2. Claddaghduff (Pollen Profiles)
4.3.3. Letterfrack, Connemara National Park (Pine Dendrochronology and Pollen Profiles)
FRK W1, i.e., a stump on ~40 cm of peat located on elevated ground to the south of the Visitor Centre (VC) where shallow blanket bog has been largely cut away. Timber from the outer rings yielded the date 4080 ± 15 BP, which suggests that the tree died at c. 4.6 ka;
FRK W5, i.e., the large stump close to core FRK II. Rings 31–45 yielded the date 4420 ± 20 BP, which indicates that the pine tree began life before/at c. 5 ka. It died some 180 y later;
FRK W3, i.e., the largest stump and longest-lived tree (>180 y) in the basin and ~80 m distant from FRK II and FRK W5, yielded the date 4455 ± 15 BP (rings 40–50). This suggests that the tree probably began life before 5 ka and hence was contemporaneous with FRK W5 (the prefixes FRK and FRKC are generally omitted from the timber samples that derive from Letterfrack from here on).
4.4. Results of Investigations of Pine Timbers at Derryeighter, Eastern Connemara
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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O’Connell, M.; Jennings, E.; Molloy, K. Holocene Vegetation Dynamics, Landscape Change and Human Impact in Western Ireland as Revealed by Multidisciplinary, Palaeoecological Investigations of Peat Deposits and Bog-Pine in Lowland Connemara. Geographies 2021, 1, 251-291. https://doi.org/10.3390/geographies1030015
O’Connell M, Jennings E, Molloy K. Holocene Vegetation Dynamics, Landscape Change and Human Impact in Western Ireland as Revealed by Multidisciplinary, Palaeoecological Investigations of Peat Deposits and Bog-Pine in Lowland Connemara. Geographies. 2021; 1(3):251-291. https://doi.org/10.3390/geographies1030015
Chicago/Turabian StyleO’Connell, Michael, Eneda Jennings, and Karen Molloy. 2021. "Holocene Vegetation Dynamics, Landscape Change and Human Impact in Western Ireland as Revealed by Multidisciplinary, Palaeoecological Investigations of Peat Deposits and Bog-Pine in Lowland Connemara" Geographies 1, no. 3: 251-291. https://doi.org/10.3390/geographies1030015
APA StyleO’Connell, M., Jennings, E., & Molloy, K. (2021). Holocene Vegetation Dynamics, Landscape Change and Human Impact in Western Ireland as Revealed by Multidisciplinary, Palaeoecological Investigations of Peat Deposits and Bog-Pine in Lowland Connemara. Geographies, 1(3), 251-291. https://doi.org/10.3390/geographies1030015