The lowland heathlands of southern England comprise ca. 14 % of the total area of this habitat in Europe yet their history is poorly understood. This paper presents the first detailed palaeoecological evidence (combining palynological, microscopic charcoal and radiocarbon data) relating to the origin and long-term dynamics of heathland vegetation in southern England. Valley peat sites, situated on the Lower Greensand Group (coarse-grained sandstones) at Conford (Hampshire) and Hurston Warren (West Sussex) have been investigated. The sequence from Conford indicates the unusually late survival of Pinus sylvestris (to as late as ca. 6050 cal. B.P.) in southern England. This is attributed to edaphic factors and, after ca. 7050 cal....
The evolution of heathlands during the Holocene has been registered in various soil records. Paleoec...
The historic era, which in Cumbria begins with the Roman invasion of AD 71, is a frequently neglecte...
Pollen evidence has, to date, made little contribution to our understanding of the origins and devel...
The lowland heathlands of southern England comprise ca. 14% of the total area of this habitat in Eur...
There have been few Late Quaternary vegetation records from the acidic lithologies of south east Eng...
There have been few Late Quaternary vegetation records from the acidic lithologies of south east Eng...
Black Ridge Brook is an upland peat site in a high rainfall area of SW England. Pollen evidence has ...
An investigation was carried out into the role of human impact on natural vegetation development wit...
Pollen analyses of a peat profile collected from Butterburn Flow, northern England have been used to...
Palaeoenvironmental evidence for the character of lowland cultural landscapes during the last 2500 y...
Plant macrofossil analyses of five peat cores from undisturbed fens in the flood-plain of the Ant Va...
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from Brill via the DOI in thi...
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA In a recent discussion of research priorities for palaeoecology, it wa...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the role of autogenic and allogenic forces in determining the d...
The upland of Dartmoor, southwest England, is one of the flagship prehistoric landscapes within Brit...
The evolution of heathlands during the Holocene has been registered in various soil records. Paleoec...
The historic era, which in Cumbria begins with the Roman invasion of AD 71, is a frequently neglecte...
Pollen evidence has, to date, made little contribution to our understanding of the origins and devel...
The lowland heathlands of southern England comprise ca. 14% of the total area of this habitat in Eur...
There have been few Late Quaternary vegetation records from the acidic lithologies of south east Eng...
There have been few Late Quaternary vegetation records from the acidic lithologies of south east Eng...
Black Ridge Brook is an upland peat site in a high rainfall area of SW England. Pollen evidence has ...
An investigation was carried out into the role of human impact on natural vegetation development wit...
Pollen analyses of a peat profile collected from Butterburn Flow, northern England have been used to...
Palaeoenvironmental evidence for the character of lowland cultural landscapes during the last 2500 y...
Plant macrofossil analyses of five peat cores from undisturbed fens in the flood-plain of the Ant Va...
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from Brill via the DOI in thi...
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA In a recent discussion of research priorities for palaeoecology, it wa...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the role of autogenic and allogenic forces in determining the d...
The upland of Dartmoor, southwest England, is one of the flagship prehistoric landscapes within Brit...
The evolution of heathlands during the Holocene has been registered in various soil records. Paleoec...
The historic era, which in Cumbria begins with the Roman invasion of AD 71, is a frequently neglecte...
Pollen evidence has, to date, made little contribution to our understanding of the origins and devel...