The Dung File consists of a list of references dealing
with pollen, parasites,
and plant remains in coprolites and latrine fills from
archaeological and palaeoenvironmental
sites. The focus is on studies in North America. The Dung
File is subdivided into eleven sections: four
depend on the origin of the deposits being investigated (Part 1: Mostly Human,
Part 2: Mainly Mammal, Part 3:
Animal Middens, Part 4: Other
Critters), there are two
broader categories, Part 5: General and
Review Articles,
Part 6: Field and Laboratory Methods,
one focussed on theses, Part 7: Theses,
and two focussed on modern
comparative studies, Part 8: Comparative
Studies - Human and
Part 9: Comparative Studies - Mammal.
Finally, there are a number of
articles from news magazines and the popular
press (Part 10: Popular Press and
Commentary) and some less readily available items listed in
Part 11: Conference Abstracts and Grey
Literature.
The call numbers are for the library system at the University of
Alberta. The
remarks in green are my comments.
Part 11: Conference Abstracts and Grey
Literature
- Ambro, R. D., and R. D. Cowan 1966
- Coprolite Analysis for Lovelock Cave, Nevada, with
Comparisons
from the Archaeological and Ethnographic Data for the Area.
In Abstracts of Papers, 31st Annual Meeting of the Society
for
American Archaeology. Meeting held with Great Basin
Anthropological Conference. Reno, Nevada, USA
.
Cited by Fry (1977).
- Berg, G. 1997
- Stomach and Intestinal Contents in Skeletonized Burials from
Central Arizona: A Multidisciplinary Approach.
In 68th Annual Meeting of the American Association of
Physical
Anthropologists. St Louis, Kansas, USA
.
Cited in Berg (2002).
(13/05/2009).
- Betancourt, J. L., and T. R. Van Devender
1980
- Late Quaternary Vegetational History of Chaco Canyon, New
Mexico: The Packrat Midden Record.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Abstracts of the
Sixth Biennial Meeting. pp. 23-24. The Structure of an Ice
Age.
August 18-20, 1980, University of Maine, Orono, Maine
.
Reports on 23 middens spanning the late
Pleistocene to Holocene. Late Pleistocene middens include
abundant
arboreal taxa, several of which are not present today in the
local
area. Late Holocene middens may provide information relating to
the
impact of Anasazi occupation of Chaco Canyon on vegetation,
especially on pinyon pine (Pinus edulis) and juniper
(Juniperus monosperma). Trees may have been used both for
fuel and for construction. Radiocarbon dates on middens show that
pinyon and juniper were present in mid and late Holocene, but a
midden dated around 460 yr BP lacks these taxa. This could
indicate
impact of human occupation but needs more work to confirm.
(03/12/2007).
- Bryant Jr, V. M. 1982
-
Archaeological and Palynological Analysis of Specimens and
Materials Recovered from Two Historic Period Privies and a Well
in
the St Alice Revetment, St James Parish, Louisiana. Cultural
Resources Laboratory Report PD-RC-92-03. Texas A&M
University,
College Station, Texas, USA
.
Cited by Reinhard and Bryant
(1992).
- Cole, K. 1980
- Late Pleistocene and Holocene Vegetational Gradients in the
Grand Canyon, Arizona.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Abstracts of the
Sixth Biennial Meeting. p. 57. The Structure of an Ice Age.
August 18-20, 1980, University of Maine, Orono, Maine
.
Examined records from 46 packrat middens
spanning 950 m to 2200 m. 20 middens, constrained by
C14
dates between 19,000 and 12,100 yr BP, indicate full-glacial
vegetation, with an elevational lowering of between 600 and 700
m
for several tree taxa. Suggests cold and dry conditions. In early
Holocene, similar vegetation to present day became established,
though still about 300 m lower than present elevations. Concludes
that species behaving individualistically, rather than vegetation
communities moving en masse. (03/12/2007).
- Cole, K., J. McCorriston, and A. Miller 2001
- Holocene Paleoenvironments of the Southern Arabian Highlands
Reconstructed Using Fossil Hyrax Middens.
In 86th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America,
Scientific Program. p. 86
.
Rock hyrax (Procavia capensis)
midden
material dated between about 5200 - 2100 yr BP. Changes in
contents
may indicate a shift from early-mid Holocene aridity to late
Holocene moister conditions. Highlands may have been abandoned
by
people during interval of maximum aridity.
(03/08/2005).
- Cole, K. L. 1982
- Pleistocene Packrat Middens from the Western Sierra Nevada,
California.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Seventh Biennial Conference. p. 83.
Character
and Timing of Rapid Environmental and Climatic Changes. June
28-30,
1982, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
.
Reports on packrat middens from west side
of
Sierra Nevada, characterized by Mediterranean vegetation types.
Middens (four mentioned here) are in oak-chapparal and have
yielded
dates from more than 45,000 to 12,500 C14 yr BP.
Reports
on both pollen and macrofossil records. Evidence of a mixed
coniferous forest and perhaps more xeric than present conditions
through late Pleistocene. Some pollen can be identified as fro,
Giant Sequoia (Sequoiadendron gianteum) suggesting that
this
area may have been a refugium for the species in full-glacial
times. (04/12/2007).
- Cole, K. L., and T. R. Van Devender 1984
- Seasonality and the Summer Monsoon: Packrat Midden Sequences
from the Lower Colorado Valley.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Eighth Biennial Meeting. p. 24. Seasonal
Climatic Responses in the Quaternary. August 13-15, 1984,
University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
.
Examines packrat midden records spanning
Late Pleistocene through Holocene. Early Holocene macrofossils
from
these middens are indicative of higher summer moister than
present,
as well as higher temperature. This changes around 4000 yr BP,
with
indications of drier conditions. Frost-sensitive taxa first
appear
in mid to late Holocene. Interesting that plant migration into
the
area continues into the late Holocene. Suggests that some plants
are migrating from Pleistocene refugia in Mexico.
(05/12/2007).
- Cummings, L. S., and K. Puseman 1992
-
Pollen, Phytolith, Parasite, and Macrofloral Analysis of
Coprolites from Room 21 in Step House (5MV1285), Mesa Verde
National Park, Colorado. Mesa Verde National Park, Mesa
Verde,
Colorado, USA Manuscript on file with National Park Service, Mesa
Verde National Park
.
- Dittmar, K., and W. R. Teegen 2000
- Fasciola hepatica Eggs in a 4500 Year Old Skeleton
from
Germany.
In Paleopathology Association 27th Annual Meeting, San
Antonio,
Texas, pp. 6
.
Cited in Gonçalves et al. (2003).
(06/06/2008).
- Donald, C. R. 1984
- Examination of the Archaeological Samples Supplied by Barry
J.
Kemp from Tell el-Amarna Site.
In Amarna Reports I, edited by B. J. Kemp, pp. 56-58.
Egypt
Exploration Society, London, England, UK
.
Reported finding of parasite eggs of
Ascaris and Taenia in coprolites from animal pens
at
the Workmen's Village. Cited by Panagiotakopulu (1999).
- Elias, S. A. 1988
- Late Quaternary Insect Fossils from Packrat Middens in
Northern
Mexico: Preliminary Results from the Puerto de Vantanillas Site,
Coahuila.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Tenth Biennial Meeting. p. 67. June 6-8,
1988,
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts
.
Midden sites span 12,700 yr BP to present.
Reports on one site (of eighteen) examined for arthropods.
Recovered more than 60 taxa, mostly beetles, including ground
beetles and dung beetles. Research will focus on taphonomy of
subfossil insect remains in middens. (13/12/2007).
- Fry, G. F., and H. J. Hall 1973
-
The Analysis of Human Coprolites from Inscription House.
Report on file, Western Archaeological and Conservation Center,
National Park Service, Tucson, Arizona, USA
.
- Gardner, S. I., and K. Clary 1987
-
Helminth Parasites of Anasazi Period Coprolites from Bighorn
Sheep Ruin (42SA1563), Canyonlands National Park, Utah.
Unpublished manuscript on file. Midwest Archaeological Centre,
National Park Service, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA
.
- Goodman, J. D. 1990
- Human Coprolites from Archaeological Site CA-Riv-3793.
In Archaeological Investigations at CA-Riv-3793, Located
North
of Indio in Central Riverside County, California, edited by
J.
D. Goodman and B. S. Arkush, pp. ??-?? Report on file, Eastern
Archaeological Information Center, University of California,
Riverside, California, USA
.
Analysis of about half-a-dozen coprolite
specimens (Mark Sutton, pers. comm., 29/09/2000).
- Greig, J. 1988
- The Plant Remains.
In Excavations at 12 Watergate Street in 1985: Roman
Headquarters Building to Medieval Row, edited by S. Ward.
Grosvenor Museum Archaeological Excavation and Survey Reports 5.
City Council, Chester, UK
.
Cited in Greig (1994).
(17/04/2009).
- Hall, S. A. 1986
- Plant Macrofossils from Wood Rat Middens: Vegetation or
Flora?
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Ninth Biennial Meeting. p. 136. Processes
and
Environments at Past and Present Glacier Margins. June 2-4, 1986,
University of Illinois-Champaign, Urbana
.
Hall states that vegetation
reconstructions
based on vegetation remains from woodrat middens do not agree
with
those from pollen records and other palaeoenvironmental
indicators.
Points out that wood rats middens that have been preserved tend
to
be in areas (dry escarpments) that have vegetation markedly
different from surrounding areas. Wonders how far reconstructions
from these distinctively different sites can reflect the
surrounding regional vegetation pattern. Suggests that pollen
studies from midden material might help to resolve the question
of
the representativeness of the plant macroremains. These comments
elicited a response from Spaulding (1990).
- Harris, A. H. 1976
- Discussion: The Biota of the Hot Deserts of North America
During the Last Glaciation: The Packrat Midden Record.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Abstracts of the
Fourth Biennial Meeting. pp. 68-69. Hot and Cold Deserts
During
the Last Glaciation. October 9 and 10, 1976, Arizona State
University, Tempe
.
Points out some inconsistencies between
packrat midden records and faunal remain. Distribution of faunal
remains suggest much greater displacement in Ice Age conditions,
often by several hundred kilometers. Questions whether midden
records adequately capture spectrum of changes.
(02/12/2007).
- Hebda, R. J., and B. G. Warner 1988
- Pollen and Macroscopic Plant Remains from Fossil Woodrat
(Neotoma cinerea) Middens in Canada.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Tenth Biennial Meeting. p. 74. June 6-8,
1988,
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts
.
Reviews occurrence of woodrats in western
Canada. Preliminary report on midden studies, pollen and plant
macrofossils, at two sites in interior British Columbia: Oregon
Jack Creek and Bull Canyon. Midden at Oregon Jack Creek about a
thousand years old. At Bull Canyon, midden about 700 years old.
All
taxa identified appear to be expected for the area. Middens may
provide additional palaeocological information for dry interior
of
British Columbia. (13/12/2007).
- Heizer, R. F. 1966
- Analysis of Human Coprolites from a Dry Nevada Cave.
In Abstracts of Papers, 35th Annual Meeting of the American
Association of Physical Anthropologists. Berkeley,
California,
USA
.
- Jansen, J., and J. H. Boersma 1982
- Helminth Infection in Medieval Amsterdam and Utrecht.
Papers on Paleopathology, 4th European Members Meeting,
Middelburg, Antwerpen 2:6-7
.
Cited in Gonçalves et al. (2003)
(06/06/2008).
- Jansen Jr, J., and H. J. Over 1966
- Observations on Helminth Infection in a Roman Army-Camp.
Proceedings 1st International Congress of Parasitology, Roma,
Italy, 1964
.
Cited in Gonçalves et al. (2003)
(06/06/2008).
- Jones, A. K. G. 1982
- Recent Finds of Intestinal Parasite Ova at York, England.
In Papers on Paleopathology, 4th European Members Meeting,
Middelburg, Antwerpen, pp. 7
.
Cited in Gonçalves et al. (2003)
(06/06/2008).
- Kelso, G. K., and A. M. Solomon 1976
- Pollen Analysis of Human Coprolites: Implications of
Experimental Evidence From Modern Fecal Samples.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Abstracts of the
Fourth Biennial Meeting. p. 142. Hot and Cold Deserts During
the Last Glaciation. October 9 and 10, 1976, Arizona State
University, Tempe
.
Briefly report some experimental work,
based
on two people ingesting known amounts of specific pollen types
with
meals, and tracking the pollens' abundance and timing of
appearance
in feces. Cited by Kelso and Solomon (2006).
(02/12/2007).
- Kenward, H., and J. Carrott 2001
-
Technical Report: Invertebrate Remains from Two Samples from
Excavations at Broadgate, London (Sitecode: BGA90). Reports
from the Environmental Archaeology Unit, York 2001/32.
Environmental Archaeology Unit, Department of Biology, University
of York, York, England, UK 10 pp
.
Reports on analysis of two samples
(processed) and some unprocessed samples recovered from the
excavation of a pit dated to 16th to 17th century AD. Both
processed samples consisted predominantly of puparia of the fly
Thoracochaeta zosterae. Also found parasite eggs of
Trichuris (whipworm), and one sample yielded
Ascaris
(maw worm) eggs. Some plant remains, including apple and grape
pips. Samples, most likely of human origin, were faeces.
(05/04/2009).
- Lindsay, L. W. 1983
- Pollen Analysis of Antelope Cave Deposits and Coprolite
Samples.
In An Archaeological and Geological Assessment of Antelope
Cave
in Mojave County, Northwestern Arizona, edited by J. Janetski
and M. J. Hall. Special Report, Cultural Resource Management
Services Department Anthropology, Brigham Young University,
Provo,
Utah, USA
.
- Lindquist, C. A., and P. L. Fall 1987
- Fossil Hyrax Middens from the Middle East - A New Source of
Palaeobotanical Evidence.
In INQUA 12th International Congress, July 1987, Program with
Abstracts. p. 212. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
.
Cited in Scott and Bousman
(1990).
- Maher Jr, L. J. 1992
- Palynology of Bat Guano May Provide a Useful Climate Record.
In 8th International Palynological Congress, Aix-en-Provence,
France, Programs and Abstracts. p. 96
.
Cited by Leroy and Simms (2006).
(27/12/2007).
- McAndrews, J. H., and C. E. Turton 2005
- The Goosing of Crawford Lake with Prehistoric Corn Pollen.
CAP Newsletter 28(1):5-7
.
Reports the occurrence of nodules in
sediments of Crawford Lake, contemporaneous with the Iroquois
farming interval, beginning about 1280 AD. Nodules are thought
to
be pellets (dung) from Canada geese, that were feeding on the
cultivated fields. Consider that this is the likely source of the
corn pollen that has been identified in pollen analysis of the
lake
sediments. (29/12/2007).
- Mead, J. I. 1982
- Packrat Middens and Holocene Environments in the Pryor Mts,
Montana.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Seventh Biennial Conference. p. 137.
Character
and Timing of Rapid Environmental and Climatic Changes. June
28-30,
1982, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
.
Reports on Holocene-aged packrat middens.
Early Holocene assemblages include macrofossils of Juniperus
scopulorum (Rocky Mountain juniper) and dung from Ochotona
princeps (Pika). Neither taxon lives in Pryor Mountains
today.
Suggests that the assemblage may represent remnant Late
Pleistocene
community. (04/12/2007).
- Mead, J. I. 1986
- Quaternary Records of Pika, Ochotona, in North
America.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Ninth Biennial Meeting. p. 150. Processes
and
Environments at Past and Present Glacier Margins. June 2-4, 1986,
University of Illinois-Champaign, Urbana
.
In some situations, packrat middens can
preserve pika pellets too. Radiocarbon dates show that pika lived
a lower elevations than where now found until about 6800 yr BP.
Also found evidence east of continental divide in areas that do
not
contain talus slopes, supposedly required habitat for the species
today. Suggests that habitat preferences have changed. May have
been able to expand beyond boulder slopes during intervals of
cooler summer climates. (10/12/2007).
- Mead, J. I., and A. M. Phillips III 1978
- The Late Pleistocene Flora and Fauna From Vulture Cave, Grand
Canyon, Arizona.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Abstracts of the
Fifth Biennial Meeting. pp. 223. The Ice-Free Corridor and
Peopling the New World. September 2-4, 1978, University of
Alberta,
Edmonton, Alberta
.
Provides some preliminary results on the
work at this cave, based on analysis of packrat middens.
Radiocarbon dates show that juniper was in vicinity of cave
between
about 29,800 to 13,800 yr BP. Indicates a depression of the
woodland zone by about 900 m in late Pleistocene. Evidence is
consistent with other records from the area. Also reports the
occurrence of more than 20 species of animals identified from the
cave. (02/12/2007).
- Mitchell, P. D., and E. Stern 2001
- Parasitic Intestinal Helminth Ova from Latrines of the 13th
Century Crusader Hospital of St John in Acre, Israel.
In Procedings of the XIIIth European Meeting of the
Paeopathology Association, Edigraftal, Teramo, Chieti, Italy,
edited by M. La Verghetta and L. Capasso, pp. 207-213
.
Cited in Gonçalves et al. (2003)
(06/06/2008).
- Mitchell, P. D., and E. Stern 2000
- Parasitic Intestinal Helminth Ova from Latrines of the 13th
Century Crusader Hospital of St John in Acre, Israel.
In Paleopathology Association 13th Biennial European Members
Meeting, Chieti, pp. 21-22
.
Cited in Gonçalves et al. (2003)
(06/06/2008).
- Park, G. S. 1969
-
Chemical Analysis in Archaeology: with Special Reference to
the
Location of Material for Faecal Analysis. Unpublished
manuscript. Anthropology Department, University of Otago,
Dunedin,
New Zealand
.
Cited by Calder (1977).
- Phillips III, A. M. 1976
- Packrats, Plants, and the Pleistocene in the Lower Grand
Canyon
of Arizona.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Abstracts of the
Fourth Biennial Meeting. pp. 70-71. Hot and Cold Deserts
During
the Last Glaciation. October 9 and 10, 1976, Arizona State
University, Tempe
.
Reviews work in Rampart Cave area. Notes
occurrence of 48 packrat middens within 4 km of the cave. Middens
record about 1000 m elevational depression of juniper woodland
during late Pleistocene. Canyon was probably wetter and mostly
likely cooler in summer. Ground sloth (Nothrotheriops
shatense) was absent from Rampart Cave between about 24,000
and
14,000 yr BP, during which time packrat middens accumulated.
Middens were buried by sloth dung when the sloths returned. Four
vegetation regimes between 30,000 and 8,500 yr BP recorded in
middens, all characterised by woodland taxa.
(02/12/2007).
- Reinhard, K. J. 1983
-
Analysis of Human and Non-Human Coprolites from Antelope
House,
1983. Report on file. Western Archaeological and Conservation
Centre, National Park Service, Tucson, Arizona, USA
.
Cited by Reinhard (1988).
- Reinhard, K. J., and A. C. Aufderheide 1990
- Diphyllobothriasis in Prehistoric Chile and Peru: Adaptive
Radiation of a Helminth Species to Native American Populations.
In Papers on Paleopathology, 8th European Members Meeting,
Cambridge, pp. 18
.
Cited in Gonçalves et al. (2003)
(06/06/2008).
- Reinhard, K. J., and S. V. Barnum 1991
- Ancient Parasitology of Coastal Peru. Paper presented at the
90th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association,
Chicago.
.
Cited by Reinhard and Bryant
(1992).
- Reinhard, K. J., K. Sandness, M. Ghazi, and
J.
Dendy n.d.
-
Dietary Analysis of Corporeal Remains: Coprolites and Bone
Chemistry. Unpublished report of dietary analyses of
Chiribaya
Culture mummies from the Moquegua Valley, Peru
.
Cited in Reinhard et al. (2007).
States there that the manuscript is available on request from
Reinhard. (24/03/2007).
- Renfrew, J. 1984
- Botanical Report.
In Amarna Reports I, edited by B. J. Kemp, pp. 182. Egypt
Exploration Society, London, England, UK
.
Reported finding of plant remains, mainly
of
grains and cereals, in coprolites from animal pens at the
Workmen's
Village. Cited by Panagiotakopulu (1999).
- Rhode, D. 1998
- Terminal Wisconsin Vegetation in the Central Baja California
Peninsula: A Record of California Juniper and Chaparral Taxa.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Fifteenth Biennial Meeting. p. 146. Northern
Hemisphere-Southern Hemisphere Interconnections. September 5-7,
1998, Puerto Vallarta, México
.
Packrat midden dated about 10,200
C14 yr BP and yielded remains of California juniper
(Juniperus californica), a plant that does not occur in
this
mountain area today. Shows a southern range extension of this
taxon
in the late Pleistocene (17/12/2007).
- Scott, L. 1989
- Pollen Analysis and Palaeoenvironmental Significance of
Quaternary Faecal Deposits in Africa.
Paper presented at the 4th International Conference on
Environmental Quality and Ecosystem Stability, Jerusalem
.
Cited by Scott and Bousman
(1990).
- Spaulding, W. G. 1982
- Processes and Rates of Change in the Arid West.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Seventh Biennial Conference. pp. 22-24.
Character and Timing of Rapid Environmental and Climatic Changes.
June 28-30, 1982, University of Washington, Seattle,
Washington
.
Notes that small changes in precipitation
especially may have great impacts on vegetation in desert areas.
Points out that many packrat middens have now been examined,
enough
to form a temporal sequence for areas of arid SW US, rather than
simply "point" records. Notes discrepancies between pollen
records
from alluvial sequences and macros records from packrat middens.
Packrat middens indicate reduction in pinyon-juniper woodland in
late Holocene, possibly related to Anasazi occupation, whereas
pollen records show no significant changes over last 7,000 years.
Attempts now being made to quantify occurrences of taxa in midden
records, rather than simple presence/absence data. Notes that
macrofossil records indicate that most vegetation shifts are time
transgressive in arid SW US. Present ecotonal areas may provide
especially sensitive records of change. (03/12/2007).
- Spaulding, W. G. 1984
- Paleoecological Indicators of Seasonal Climatic Variations
in
the American West Since 18,000 B.P.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Eighth Biennial Meeting. pp. 121-123.
Seasonal
Climatic Responses in the Quaternary. August 13-15, 1984,
University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
.
Summarizes the present characteristics
(vegetation and climate) of modern deserts, especially with
respect
to seasonality. Pollen and macrofossils from packrat middens
provide information on climate conditions of the past. Summarizes
some of the findings from this research, showing the regional
differences, especially in terms of precipitation in the early
Holocene. Notes the differencies in the records from the Colorado
River valley, such as the persisence of woodland in the valley
when
the surrounding uplands, notably the Mojave Desert, was already
desert scrub by about 11,000 yr BP. Valley acts to channel or
funnel moister maritime air to the interior.
(05/12/2007).
- Stapleton, A. M. 1969
-
The Survival of Organic Residues After Human Consumption.
Unpublished manuscript. Anthropology Department, University of
Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
.
Cited by Calder (1977) and Horrocks et
al. (2003).
- St John Sweeting, R. S., and K. A. Morris
1990
- Seed Transmission Through the Digestive Tract of the Horse.
In Proceedings of the 9th Australian Weeds Conference, 6-10
August 1990, pp. 137-139. Weed Management Society of
Australia,
Adelaide, Australia
.
Cited in Wells and Lauenroth (2007).
(23/12/2007).
- Van Devender, T. R. 1976
- The Biota of the Hot Deserts of North America During the Last
Glaciation: The Packrat Midden Record.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Abstracts of the
Fourth Biennial Meeting. pp. 62-67. Hot and Cold Deserts
During
the Last Glaciation. October 9 and 10, 1976, Arizona State
University, Tempe
.
Reviews packrat midden studies to date.
Notes that records indicate that many hot desert areas formerly
supported woodland, up until early Holocene and show lowering of
vegetation zones in mountain areas in Ice Ages. Suggests that
vegetation changes recorded by packrat middens do not necessarily
indicate major climate shifts or major displacement of plant
species. (02/12/2007).
- Van Devender, T. R. 1982
- Rates of Late Quaternary Vegetation Changes.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Seventh Biennial Conference. pp. 26-27.
Character and Timing of Rapid Environmental and Climatic Changes.
June 28-30, 1982, University of Washington, Seattle,
Washington
.
Packrat middens provide evidence of
vegetation changes. At the end of Pleistocene and early-mid
Holocene, these changes seem to have been relatively rapid,
though
perhaps lagged until after ice-sheet melting further north
allowed
modification of circulation patterns, especially storm tracks
emanating from the Pacific. In southwest, plants didn't have to
migrate such long distances as, for instance, in central and
eastern US. Shifts were more with respect to elevation than
distance. (04/12/2007).
- Van Devender, T. R. 1984
- Seasonality and the Summer Monsoon: Packrat Midden Sequences
from the Chihuahuan Desert.
In American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) Program and
Abstracts of the Eighth Biennial Meeting. p. 132. Seasonal
Climatic Responses in the Quaternary. August 13-15, 1984,
University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
.
Reports results from a study of middens
in
a latitudinal transect in the northen Chihuahuan Desert. Full-
glacial vegetation was characterized by pinyon-juniper-oak
woodland. Postglacial shows latitudinal variation in effects of
summer monsoonal precipitation, reflecting position of storm
tracks. Maximum warmth and dryness in mid-Holocene (8,000 to
4,000
yr BP), with modern desert communities established thereafter.
Notes that maximum extent of deserts was in late Holocene.
(10/12/2007).
- Warnock, P., K. Reinhard, and M. Pendleton
1990
-
Analysis of Deep Feature Soils, the Meadows Site,
Philadelphia,
PA. Contract report on file. Louis Berger and Associates Ltd,
East Orange, New Jersey, USA
.
Cited by Warnock and Reinhard
(1992).
- Williams-Dean, G. 1975
-
Preliminary Parasitological Examination of Coprolites from
Hinds Cave, Texas. Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M
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