Pollen-based summer temperature reconstructions for the eastern Canadian boreal forest, subarctic, and Arctic

2004 
Abstract Pollen-based paleoclimate reconstructions using response surface and modern analog methods reveal an 8000-year record of July temperature fluctuations for 25 eastern Canadian lake sites located from the forest–tundra to the high Canadian Arctic. Postglacial conditions, characterized by warmer than present summer temperatures, prevailed in Baffin Island and NE Labrador beginning about 7500 and 7000 14 C yr BP, respectively, resulting in warmer than present conditions throughout the region by 6000 14 C yr BP (+0.5°C to 1°C). Further south, in Quebec and W Labrador, July temperatures were 1–2°C colder than present until after 6000 14 C yr BP, and only reached modern values after all residual Laurentide ice had melted. Increased summertime insolation and the final disappearance of Laurentide Ice during the middle Holocene probably caused July temperatures throughout eastern Canada to peak between approximately 5000 and 3500 14 C yr BP. Mid-Holocene warming relative to today was more pronounced in Baffin Island and NE Labrador (+1°C to 2°C) compared to the boreal and subarctic regions of Quebec and W Labrador (
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