The impact of man on the vegetation of the Mt Hagen region, New Guinea
Abstract
Vegetation changes now being reported in pollen
analytical studies from many tropical and subtropical
areas are considered predominantly in terms of climate
change, little attention being paid to the history o:f
human influence$-On the vegetation there, despite the
evidences provided by archaeology and ecological studies.
The European situation has been used as a theoretical
basis for correlation of climatic changes on a world wide
scale, while the available evidence, especially from
British diagrams, of human influences more often than
not overriding those of climate, has hardly been
considered.
The present study was undertaken to fill a gap in
this knowledge and to try to show that the palynological
method could provide objective evidence of human
influence on vegetation in a tropical region, readily
distinguishable from climatic influences. The
investigation involved stratigraphic and palynological
studies of lake and swamp sites in a highland region o:f
New Guinea together with a local survey of present day
vegetation and modern pollen rain. Combined with
radiocarbon dating and archaeological correlations the
study allows some conclusions to be drawn about early
human influences in the area, as well as their relation
to possible vegetation changes induced by climate or
other factors.
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