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  • Ancient DNA and osteologica...
    Boilard, Aurélie; Walker, Samuel J; Lødøen, Trond Klungseth; Henriksen, Mona; Takken Beijersbergen, Liselotte M; Star, Bastiaan; Robu, Marius; Tøssebro, Christine; Albrektsen, Cornelia Marie; Soleng, Yvonne; Aksnes, Sverre; Jørgensen, Roger; Hufthammer, Anne Karin; van Kolfschoten, Thijs; Lauritzen, Stein-Erik; Boessenkool, Sanne

    Science advances, 2024-Mar-29, 2024-03-29, 20240329, Letnik: 10, Številka: 13
    Journal Article

    Paleo-archives are essential for our understanding of species responses to climate warming, yet such archives are extremely rare in the Arctic. Here, we combine morphological analyses and bulk-bone metabarcoding to investigate a unique chronology of bone deposits sealed in the high-latitude Storsteinhola cave system (68°50' N 16°22' E) in Norway. This deposit dates to a period of climate warming from the end of the Late Glacial ~13 thousand calibrated years before the present (ka cal B.P.) to the Holocene thermal maximum (~5.6 ka cal B.P.). Paleogenetic analyses allow us to exploit the 1000s of morphologically unidentifiable bone fragments resulting in a high-resolution sequence with 40 different taxa, including species not previously found here. Our record reveals borealization in both the marine and terrestrial environments above the Arctic Circle as a naturally recurring phenomenon in past periods of warming, providing fundamental insights into the ecosystem-wide responses that are ongoing today.