Holocene Flora, Vegetation and Land-Use Changes on Dingle Peninsula, Ireland, as Reflected in Pollen Analytical, Archaeological and Historical Records
2025
Michael O’Connell | Steffen Wolters
Palaeoecological investigations connected with extensive pre-bog, stone walls, and field systems at Kilmore, Dingle peninsula, Ireland, are presented. The main pollen profile, KLM I, spans the last 4000 years. When the record opened, pine (<i>Pinus sylvestris</i>) was already a minor tree, oak (probably <i>Quercus petraea</i>) was the main tall-canopy tree, and birch and alder were dominant locally. Substantial farming is recorded between ca. 1530 and 600 BCE (Bronze Age) when the stone walls were likely constructed. From ca. 560 CE onwards, intensive farming was conducted for much of the time. A largely treeless landscape emerged in the late twelfth century CE. Fine-spatial reconstructions of landscape and vegetation dynamics, including the timing of blanket bog initiation, are made. Post-glacial change in the western Dingle peninsula, based on published Holocene lake profiles and drawing on the new information presented here, is discussed. Reported are (a) fossil spores of the filmy ferns <i>Hymenophyllum tunbrigense</i>, <i>H. wilsonii</i>, and <i>Trichomanes speciosum</i>; (b) the first fossil pollen record for <i>Arbutus unedo</i> (strawberry tree) in the Dingle peninsula (540 CE); and (c) the first published records for <i>Fagopyrum</i> fossil pollen in Ireland, indicating that buckwheat was grown at Kilmore in the late eighteenth/early nineteenth centuries.
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