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The Holocene
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Extension of the New Zealand kauri (Agathis australis) chronology to 1724 BC

Gretel Boswijk

School of Geography and Environmental Science, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand; g.boswijk{at}auckland.ac.nz

Anthony Fowler

Andrew Lorrey

School of Geography and Environmental Science, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand

Jonathan Palmer

P. O. Box 64 Tai Tapu, Canterbury, New Zealand

John Ogden

School of Geography and Environmental Science, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand

Long tree-ring chronologies have been constructed in the Northern Hemisphere for dendroclimatology and palaeoenvironmental studies, radiocarbon calibration and archaeological dating. Numerous tree-ring chronologies have also been built in the Southern Hemisphere, primarily for dendroclimatology, but multimillennial chronologies are rare. Development of long chronologies from the Southern Hemisphere is therefore important to provide a long-term perspective on environmental change at local, regional and global scales. This paper describes the extension of the New Zealand Agathis australis (kauri) chronology from AD 911 to 1724 BC. Subfossil (swamp) kauri was collected from 17 swamp sites in the upper North Island. Kauri timbers were also obtained from an early twentieth century house on the University of Auckland campus. Twelve site chronologies and 11 independent tree-sequences were constructed and crossmatched to produce a 3631-yr record, which was calendar dated to 1724 BC-AD 1907 against the modern kauri master chronology. A new long chronology, AGAUc04a, was built by combining the modern kauri data with house timbers and subfossil kauri. This new chronology spans 1724 BC-AD 1998. It is of similar length to chronologies from Tasmania and South America and is the longest tree-ring chronology yet built in New Zealand. The greatest significance of the long kauri chronology lies in its potential as a high-quality palaeoclimate proxy, especially with regard to investigation of the El Ninio-Southern Oscillation phenomenon. The chronology also has application to investigation of extreme environmental events, dendroecology, archaeology and radiocarbon calibration.

Key Words: Dendrochronology • tree-ring • long chronology • kauri • Agathis australis • New Zealand • late Holocene

The Holocene, Vol. 16, No. 2, 188-199 (2006)
DOI: 10.1191/0959683606hl919rp


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D. D'Costa, G. Boswijk, and J. Ogden
Holocene vegetation and environmental reconstructions from swamp deposits in the Dargaville region of the North Island, New Zealand: implications for the history of kauri (Agathis australis)
The Holocene, June 1, 2009; 19(4): 559 - 574.
[Abstract] [PDF]