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Packrat Middens: The last 40,000 Years of Biotic Change

Citation

Van Devender, Thomas R, Martin, Paul S, and Betancourt, Julio L, Packrat Middens: The last 40,000 Years of Biotic Change: .

Summary

Over the past thirty years, late Quaternary environments in the arid interior of western North America have been revealed by a unique source of fossils: well-preserved fragments of plants and animals accumulated locally by packrats and quite often encased, amberlike, in large masses of crystallized urine. These packrat middens are ubiquitous in caves and rock crevices throughout the arid West, where they can lie preserved for tens of thousands of years. More than a thousand of these deposits have been dated and analyzed, and middens have supplanted pollen records as a touchstone for studying vegetation dynamics and climatic change in radiocarbon time (the last 40,000 years). Now, similar deposits made by other mammals like hyraxes [...]

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  • Upper Colorado River Basin

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From Source - Mendeley RIS Export <br> On - Wed Sep 19 08:03:42 MDT 2012

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UniqueIdentifier ISBN 978-0-8165-1115-0

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