I found this research paper for Q. It is a follow up on other reports I read some years ago.:
http://pgosselin.wordpress.com/2010/04/ ... m-periods/
I do not speak the original language so will rely on this translation until it is published in English.
Excerpt:
Christian Schlüchter, Professor of Geology, and his team of researchers are studying remnants of ancient trees and peat that have been exposed by melting glaciers high in the Swiss Alps. At first sight, these pieces of wood may not look spectacular, but they are up to 10,000 years old and have a story to tell.
These tree remnants include complete tree trunks that were scraped and twisted by the massive ice sheets that once covered them. Over time these chunks of wood were transported by the glaciers partway down the Alps, and it was not exactly sure from what elevation they originated. But the wood chunks and peat prove one thing: Today, where one now only finds bare rock and gravel, and even where there is still ice, trees once grew there thousands of years ago.
In fact, entire forests must have existed there because in some places the wood remnants were found in piles. By looking at flow and glacial movement patterns of the individual glaciers, Prof Schlüchter and his team have been able to reconstruct the path the wood chunks and peat must have taken, and thus they were able to pinpoint their original location of growth