West Micronesia (7,821 – 6,094 BCE): Early …

Years: 7821BCE - 6094BCE

West Micronesia (7,821 – 6,094 BCE): Early Holocene — Freshwater Lens Growth, Reef–Mangrove Coupling (No Human Presence)

Geographic and Environmental Context

West Micronesia includes the Mariana Islands (Guam, Saipan, Tinian, Rota, and the northern chain), Palau (Babeldaob, Koror, Rock Islands), and Yap (Yap proper and its outer atolls).

  • Anchors: Guam–Saipan–Tinian–Rota (limestone platforms with fringing reefs), Babeldaob–Koror (Palau’s volcanic/limestone high islands and the Rock Islands lagoon), Yap proper (raised reef islands) and the outer Yap atolls (Ulithi–Woleai arc).

  • Marianas and Yap developed perched freshwater lenses beneath their carbonate tables; Palau’s volcanic catchments delivered steady streamflow to fringing reefs.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Thermal optimum: stable trades, reliable rainfall; occasional storm tracks reworked beach ridges into back-ponds.

Baseline Ecology

  • Lens-fed wetlands formed on larger islands; mangrove detritus fueled lagoon food webs; reef crests diversified spur-and-groove habitats.

Long-Term Significance

Emergent wetlands and freshwater lenses became the substrate for taro pits, wells, and garden groves in the settlement era.

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