Salas y Gomez: A natural pollen trap in the Pacific and its significance for the interpretation of island pollen diagrams

dc.contributor.author Flenley, J. R.
dc.contributor.author Empson, L. K.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-11-12T21:32:10Z
dc.date.available 2021-11-12T21:32:10Z
dc.date.issued 1996-01-01
dc.description.abstract <p>Those who attempt to reconstruct the history of the vegetation on remote oceanic islands by the technique of palynology have always been aware of the possibility that their results could be vitiated by pollen transported long distances through the atmosphere, from other islands or from distant continents. This possibility is not altogether fatuous. In a fanmous experiment using a vacuum cleaner Erdtman (1952) caught a single grain of <em>Pinus</em> on a ship in mid-Atlantic. Surface samples of peat from Tristan da Cunha yielded a few grains of <em>Nothofagus</em>, which must have traveled 4.000 krn from South America (Hafsten 1960). This genus even contributed pollen to Marion Island, over 7,000 km from the source area (van Zinderen Bakker, 1974).</p>
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10524/64247
dc.subject Rapa Nui
dc.subject Easter Island
dc.title Salas y Gomez: A natural pollen trap in the Pacific and its significance for the interpretation of island pollen diagrams
dc.title.alternative Salas y Gomez: A natural pollen trap in the Pacific
dc.type Research paper
dc.type.dcmi Text
prism.number 1
prism.volume 10
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