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      Signals of watershed change preserved in organic carbon buried on the continental margin seaward of the Waipaoa River, New Zealand

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          Organic geochemical proxies of paleoceanographic, paleolimnologic, and paleoclimatic processes

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            Shcal04 Southern Hemisphere Calibration, 0–11.0 Cal Kyr BP

            Recent measurements on dendrochronologically-dated wood from the Southern Hemisphere have shown that there are differences between the structural form of the radiocarbon calibration curves from each hemisphere. Thus, it is desirable, when possible, to use calibration data obtained from secure dendrochronologically-dated wood from the corresponding hemisphere. In this paper, we outline the recent work and point the reader to the internationally recommended data set that should be used for future calibration of Southern Hemisphere 14 C dates.
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              Dating the late prehistoric dispersal of Polynesians to New Zealand using the commensal Pacific rat.

              The pristine island ecosystems of East Polynesia were among the last places on Earth settled by prehistoric people, and their colonization triggered a devastating transformation. Overhunting contributed to widespread faunal extinctions and the decline of marine megafauna, fires destroyed lowland forests, and the introduction of the omnivorous Pacific rat (Rattus exulans) led to a new wave of predation on the biota. East Polynesian islands preserve exceptionally detailed records of the initial prehistoric impacts on highly vulnerable ecosystems, but nearly all such studies are clouded by persistent controversies over the timing of initial human colonization, which has resulted in proposed settlement chronologies varying from approximately 200 B.C. to 1000 A.D. or younger. Such differences underpin radically divergent interpretations of human dispersal from West Polynesia and of ecological and social transformation in East Polynesia and ultimately obfuscate the timing and patterns of this process. Using New Zealand as an example, we provide a reliable approach for accurately dating initial human colonization on Pacific islands by radiocarbon dating the arrival of the Pacific rat. Radiocarbon dates on distinctive rat-gnawed seeds and rat bones show that the Pacific rat was introduced to both main islands of New Zealand approximately 1280 A.D., a millennium later than previously assumed. This matches with the earliest-dated archaeological sites, human-induced faunal extinctions, and deforestation, implying there was no long period of invisibility in either the archaeological or palaeoecological records.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Marine Geology
                Marine Geology
                Elsevier BV
                00253227
                December 2013
                December 2013
                : 346
                :
                : 355-365
                Article
                10.1016/j.margeo.2013.10.007
                146be7ac-17c5-4b4e-b0aa-f3afed712026
                © 2013
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