Marie-Claude Bal
Autonomous University of Barcelona
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Featured researches published by Marie-Claude Bal.
The Holocene | 2011
Albert Pèlachs; Ramon Julià; Ramon Pérez-Obiol; Joan Manuel Soriano; Marie-Claude Bal; Raquel Cunill; Jordi Catalan
Superimposed on the long-term climate variability attributed to orbital forcing, there are other modes of variability covering timescales from interannual to millennial throughout the Holocene. Their signatures in climate proxy archives can differ substantially because of their lower magnitude and regional diversity. However, if identified they can yield better understanding of the physical mechanisms regionally linking causes and effects. Here we describe a high-resolution record of organic matter accumulation in the sediments of Burg lake (Pyrenees, NE Iberian Peninsula), as assessed using loss on ignition (LOI), and compare it with the ice rafted debris (IRD) indexes from the North Atlantic. The LOI record indicates two main phases in the water body, a lacustrine phase as a shallow lake and a palustrine phase as a fen. The latter covers the period 2600—7200 cal. yr BP and within it there is a high coherence between LOI and IRD, which indicates submillennial climate fluctuations in the Pyrenees that can be related to the North Atlantic influence. The Burg’s LOI record suggests wetter (and occasionally colder) situations in the Pyrenees during high IRD in the Atlantic (Bond oscillations). These fluctuations would likely affect the snow covered period in the mountains (winter and spring seasons) the most, the period in which Atlantic westerlies currently have higher influence on precipitation over the Pyrenees. These climatic oscillations could have favoured Abies penetration during the mid Holocene, as evidenced by increased pollen percentages of this taxon during low IRD values (drier conditions). The pollen record also suggests potential relationships between climate and human activity as early as at mid Holocene, as human-related cereals increase during all the low IRD periods. The human signature (charcoal, cereals) becomes particularly evident at around 2800 cal. yr BP; in this oscillation Pinus overtake Abies in the conifer response to low IRD.
The Holocene | 2018
Vincent Robin; Oliver Nelle; Brigitte Talon; Peter Poschlod; Dominique Schwartz; Marie-Claude Bal; Philippe Allée; Jean-Louis Vernet; Thierry Dutoit
The nutrient-poor grasslands of Western Europe are of major conservation concern because land use changes threaten their high biodiversity. Studies assessing their characteristics show that their past and on-going dynamics are strongly related to human activities. Yet, the initial development patterns of this specific ecosystem remain unclear. Here, we examine findings from previous paleoecological investigations performed at local level on European grassland areas ranging from several hundred square meters to several square kilometers. Comparing data from these locally relevant studies at a regional scale, we investigate these grasslands’ spatiotemporal patterns of origin and long-term dynamics. The study is based on taxonomic identification and radiocarbon AMS dating of charcoal pieces from soil/soil sediment archives of nutrient-poor grasslands in Mediterranean and temperate Western Europe (La Crau plain, Mont Lozère, Grands Causses, Vosges Mountains, Franconian Alb, and Upper-Normandy region). We address the following questions: (1) What are the key determinants of the establishment of these nutrient-poor grasslands? (2) What temporal synchronicities might there be? and (3) What is the spatial scale of these grasslands’ past dynamics? The nutrient-poor grasslands in temperate Western Europe are found to result from the first anthropogenic woodland clearings during the late Neolithic, revealed by fire events in mesophilious mature forests. In contrast, the sites with Mediterranean affinities appear to have developed at earlier plant successional stages (pine forest, matorral), established before the first human impacts in the same period. However, no general pattern of establishment and dynamics of the nutrient-poor grasslands could be identified. Local mechanisms appear to be the key determinants of the dynamics of these ecosystems. Nevertheless, this paleoecological synthesis provides insights into past climate or human impacts on present-day vegetation.
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2012
Raquel Cunill; Joan-Manuel Soriano; Marie-Claude Bal; Albert Pèlachs; Ramon Pérez-Obiol
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2010
Marie-Claude Bal; Christine Rendu; Marie-Pierre Ruas; Pierre Campmajo
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2012
Ramon Pérez-Obiol; Marie-Claude Bal; Albert Pèlachs; Raquel Cunill; Joan Manuel Soriano
Aquitania | 2013
Christine Rendu; Carine Calastrenc; Mélanie Le Couédic; Didier Galop; Damien Rius; Carole Cugny; Marie-Claude Bal
Eclipse 2 "emprises et déprises agricoles, expension et régression des sociétés entre 3500 et 2500 BP) | 2004
Didier Galop; Laurent Carozza; Fabrice Marembert; Marie-Claude Bal
Sylva et Saltus en Gaule romaine : dynamique et gestion des forêts et des zones rurales marginales (friches, landes, marais...) | 2004
Romana Harfouche; Pierre Poupet; Marie-Pierre Ruas; Pierre Campmajo; Christine Rendu; Marie-Claude Bal
Bal, Marie-Claude ; Julia, Ramon ; Liard, Morgane ; Allée, Philippe ; Paradis-Grenouillet, Sandrine ; Vives, Gabriel Servera ; Miras, Yannick ; Riera, Santiago. Soil, charcoal, vegetation dynamics and agro-pastoral activities since Neolithic in the medium mountain of Mont Lozère (France). SAGVNTVM Extra; Vol 11 (2011): 5th International Meeting of Charcoal Analysis: Charcoal as Cultural and Biological Heritage; 71-72. | 2011
Marie-Claude Bal; Ramon Julià; Morgane Liard; Philippe Allée; Sandrine Paradis-Grenouillet; Gabriel Servera Vives; Yannick Miras; Santiago Riera
Archive | 2006
Christine Rendu; Carine Calastrenc; Mélanie Le Couédic; Olivier Barge; Marie-Claude Bal