Detection of the impact of early Holocene hunter-gatherers on vegetation in the Czech Republic, using multivariate analysis of pollen data. Kuneš, P., Pokorný, P., & Šída, P. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 17(3):269–287, May, 2008. [IF2007=1.076]
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Pollen data from the Czech Republic was used to detect the early Holocene impact of hunter-gatherers on vegetation based on a selection of 19 early Holocene pollen profiles, complemented with archaeological information regarding the intensity of local and regional Mesolithic human habitation. Archaeological evidence was assigned to simple categories reflecting the intensity of habitation and distance from pollen sites. Multivariate methods (PCA and RDA) were used to determine relationships between sites and possible anthropogenic pollen indicators and to test how these indicators relate to the archaeological evidence. In several profiles the pollen signal was influenced by local Mesolithic settlement. Specific pollen types (e.g. Calluna vulgaris, Plantago lanceolata, Solanum and Pteridium aquilinum) were found to be significantly correlated with human activity. The role of settlement proximity to the investigation site, the statistical significance of pollen indicators of human activity, as well as the early occurrence of Corylus avellana and its possible anthropogenic dispersal, are discussed.
@article{kunes_detection_2008,
	title = {Detection of the impact of early {Holocene} hunter-gatherers on vegetation in the {Czech} {Republic}, using multivariate analysis of pollen data},
	volume = {17},
	copyright = {All rights reserved},
	issn = {0939-6314, 1617-6278},
	doi = {10.1007/s00334-007-0119-5},
	abstract = {Pollen data from the Czech Republic was used to detect the early Holocene impact of hunter-gatherers on vegetation based on a selection of 19 early Holocene pollen profiles, complemented with archaeological information regarding the intensity of local and regional Mesolithic human habitation. Archaeological evidence was assigned to simple categories reflecting the intensity of habitation and distance from pollen sites. Multivariate methods (PCA and RDA) were used to determine relationships between sites and possible anthropogenic pollen indicators and to test how these indicators relate to the archaeological evidence. In several profiles the pollen signal was influenced by local Mesolithic settlement. Specific pollen types (e.g. Calluna vulgaris, Plantago lanceolata, Solanum and Pteridium aquilinum) were found to be significantly correlated with human activity. The role of settlement proximity to the investigation site, the statistical significance of pollen indicators of human activity, as well as the early occurrence of Corylus avellana and its possible anthropogenic dispersal, are discussed.},
	language = {English},
	number = {3},
	journal = {Vegetation History and Archaeobotany},
	author = {Kuneš, Petr and Pokorný, Petr and Šída, Petr},
	month = may,
	year = {2008},
	note = {[IF2007=1.076]},
	keywords = {Database, Mesolithic, Multivariate analysis, Pollen, archeology, climate change, human impact, pre-Neolithic},
	pages = {269--287},
}

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