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Science 22 December 2000: Vol. 290. no. 5500, pp. 2291 - 2294 DOI: 10.1126/science.290.5500.2291
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Reports
Millennial-Scale Dynamics of Southern Amazonian Rain Forests
Francis E. Mayle,1*
Rachel Burbridge,1
Timothy J. Killeen23
Amazonian rain forest-savanna boundaries are highly
sensitive to climatic change and may also play an important role in
rain forest speciation. However, their dynamics over millennial time scales are poorly understood. Here, we present late Quaternary pollen
records from the southern margin of Amazonia, which show that the humid
evergreen rain forests of eastern Bolivia have been expanding southward
over the past 3000 years and that their present-day limit represents
the southernmost extent of Amazonian rain forest over at least the past
50,000 years. This rain forest expansion is attributed to increased
seasonal latitudinal migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone,
which can in turn be explained by Milankovitch astronomic forcing.
1 Department of Geography, University of
Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK.
2 Center for
Applied Biodiversity Science, Conservation International, 2501 M
Street, NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20037, USA.
3 Museo de Historia Natural "Noel Kempff
Mercado," Avenida Irala 565, Casilla 2489, Santa Cruz de la Sierra,
Santa Cruz, Bolivia.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
fem1{at}leicester.ac.uk
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