Martin Finné
Stockholm University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Finné.
The Holocene | 2010
Martin Finné; Elin Norström; Jan Risberg; Louis Scott
A peat-sequence covering the last 16 ka (16 000 cal. yr BP) from Braamhoek wetland, eastern South Africa, was analysed in terms of phytolith and diatom composition. The fossil peat was rich in phytoliths, while diatoms were less prominent, probably as a result of degradation during wetland plant growth associated with silica uptake. With this study we present the first continuous phytolith and diatom record from South Africa covering the Late Pleistocene and Holocene period. The phytolith assemblages indicate a clear dominance of C3-grasses within the wetland throughout the sequence. The fossil diatom record infer changes in past moisture conditions. Unlike the modern wetland, which is dominated by benthic and aerophilic diatoms, the Late Pleistocene—early Holocene wetland favoured growth of planktonic species. Abundance of planktonic diatoms suggests three main phases when water depth was deeper than today; at c.13.6 ka, 11.3 ka and 10.4—10.0 ka. These indications of past fluctuations in humidity mostly provide confirmation of previously published indications of pollen, charcoal fragments and isotopes in the same core, but the siliceous microfossil data also help to refine the paleo-environmental interpretation of the sequence.
International Journal of Speleology | 2015
Martin Finné; Malin E. Kylander; Meighan Boyd; Hanna S. Sundqvist; Ludvig Löwemark
We have developed a novel, quick and non-destructive method for tracing flood events in caves through the analysis of a stalagmite thick section with an XRF core scanner. The analyzed stalagmite ha ...
PLOS ONE | 2017
Martin Finné; Karin Holmgren; Chuan-Chou Shen; Hsun-Ming Hu; Meighan Boyd; Sharon R. Stocker
This paper offers new high-resolution oxygen and carbon isotope data from Stalagmite S1 from Mavri Trypa Cave, SW Peloponnese. Our data provide the climate background to the destruction of the nearby Mycenaean Palace of Nestor at Pylos at the transition from Late Helladic (LH) IIIB to LH IIIC, ~3150–3130 years before present (before AD 1950, hereafter yrs BP) and the subsequent period. S1 is dated by 24 U-Th dates with an averaged precision of ±26 yrs (2σ), providing one of the most robust paleoclimate records from the eastern Mediterranean for the end of the Late Bronze Age (LBA). The δ18O record shows generally wetter conditions at the time when the Palace of Nestor at Pylos was destroyed, but a brief period of drier conditions around 3200 yrs BP may have disrupted the Mycenaean agricultural system that at the time was likely operating close to its limit. Gradually developing aridity after 3150 yrs BP, i.e. subsequent to the destruction, probably reduced crop yields and helped to erode the basis for the reinstitution of a central authority and the Palace itself.
Late Antique Archaeology | 2016
Inga Labuhn; Martin Finné; Adam Izdebski; Neil Roberts; Jessie Woodbridge
Many events and developments in human history have been suspected to be, at least partly, influenced by climate and environmental changes. In order to investigate climate impacts on societies, reli ...
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2011
Martin Finné; Karin Holmgren; Hanna S. Sundqvist; Erika Weiberg; Michael Lindblom
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016
Erika Weiberg; Ingmar Unkel; Katerina Kouli; Karin Holmgren; Pavlos Avramidis; Anton Bonnier; Flint Dibble; Martin Finné; Adam Izdebski; Christos Katrantsiotis; Sharon R. Stocker; Maria Andwinge; Kalliopi Baika; Meighan Boyd; Christian Heymann
Quaternary Research | 2014
Martin Finné; Miryam Bar-Matthews; Karin Holmgren; Hanna S. Sundqvist; Ilias Liakopoulos; Qiong Zhang
American Journal of Archaeology | 2013
Erika Weiberg; Martin Finné
Archive | 2014
Martin Finné
Land | 2018
Ryan E. Hughes; Erika Weiberg; Anton Bonnier; Martin Finné; Jed O. Kaplan