Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-m9pkr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T00:33:24.090Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Lower Colorado River Valley: A Pleistocene Desert

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Kenneth L. Cole*
Affiliation:
Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, 1100 North Mineral Springs Road, Porter, Indiana 46304 USA

Abstract

A chronological sequence of plant macrofossil assemblages from twenty-five pack rat middens provides a record of desert scrub vegetation for most of the last 13,380 yr B.P. from a hyperarid portion of the lower Colorado River Valley. At the end of the late Wisconsin, and probably during much of the Quaternary, the Picacho Peak area, Imperial County, California, supported a typical Mohave Desert association of Larrea divaricata (creosote bush), Coleogyne ramosissima (blackbrush), Yucca brevifolia (Joshua tree), and Y. whipplei (Whipple yucca). Recent arrivals of Sonoran Desert plants such as Olneya tesota (ironwood) and Fouquieria splendens (ocotillo) suggest that the area supported relatively modern Sonoran desert scrub species for relatively short periods during interglaciations.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Axelrod, D. I. 1979 Age and Origin of Sonoran Desert Vegetation, California Academy of Sciences Occasional PapersGoogle Scholar
Bloom, A. L. 1983 Sea level and coastal morphology of the United States through the late Wisconsin glacial maximum Porter, S. C. Late-Quaternary Environments of the United States, Vol. 1 Univ. of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis 215229 “The Late Pleistocene”Google Scholar
Cole, K. L. 1985 Past rates of change, species richness, and a model of vegetational inertia in the Grand Canyon, Arizona. American Naturalist, 125 289303 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cole, K. L. Webb, R. H. 1985 Late Holocene vegetation changes in Greenwater Valley, Mojave Desert, CA. Quaternary Research, 23 227235 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laudermilk, J. P. Munz, P. A. 1934 Plants in the Dung of Nothrotherium from Gypsum Cave, Nevada, Vol. IV Carnegie Inst, Washington 3137 Contributions to PaleontologyGoogle Scholar
Mead, I. Phillips, A. M. 1981 The late Pleistocene and Holocene fauna and flora of Vulture Cave, Grand Canyon, Arizona. Southwestern Naturalist, 26 257288 Google Scholar
Munz, P. A. 1974 A Flora of Southern California, University of California, Berkeley Google Scholar
Phillips, A. M. 1977 Packrats, Plants and the Pleistocene in the Lower Grand Canyon. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Arizona Google Scholar
Shreve, F. 1964 Vegetation of the Sonoran Desert Shreve, F. Wiggins, I. L. Vegetation and Flora of the Sonoran Desert, Stanford Univ. Press, Stanford 9186 Google Scholar
Spaulding, W. G. 1983 Late Wisconsin macrofossil records of desert vegetation in the American Southwest. Quaternary Research, 19 256264 Google Scholar
Spaulding, W. G. Leopold, E. B. Van Devender, T. R. 1983 Late Wisconsin paleoecooogy of the American southwest Porter, S. C. The Late Wisconsin of the United States, Univ. of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis 259293 Google Scholar
Thompson, R. S. Van Devender, T. R. 1982 Late Pleistocene vegetational records from desert grassland in the Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona. American Quaternary Association Abstracts, 7 167 Google Scholar
U.S. Geological Survey, 1977 Holocene woodlands in the southwestern deserts. Science, 198 189192 Google Scholar
Van Devender, T. R. Martin, P. S. Thompson, R. S. Cole, K. L. Jull, A. J. T. Long, A. Toolin, L. J. Donahue, D. J. 1985 Fossil packrat middens and the tandem accelerator mass spectrometer. Nature, 317 610613 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Devender, T. R. Spaulding, W. G. 1979 The development of vegetation and climate in the southwestern United States. Science, 204 701710 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wells, P. V. 1976 Macrofossil analysis of wood rat (Neotoma) middens as a key to the Quaternary vegetation of arid America. Quaternary Research, 6 223248 Google Scholar
Wells, P. V. 1983 Paleobiogeography of montane islands in the Great Basin since the last glaciopluvial. Ecological Monographs, 53 341382 Google Scholar
Wells, P. V. Hunziker, J. H. 1976 Origin of the creosote bush (Larrea) in the deserts of southwestern North America. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Gardens, 63 843861 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wells, P. V. Woodcock, D. 1985 Full-glacial vegetation of Death Valley, California: Juniper woodland opening to Yucca semidesert. Madrono, 32 1123 Google Scholar
Yeager, E. C. 1957 The North American Deserts, Stanford Univ. Press, Stanford Google Scholar