High resolution pollen stratigraphy from three peat cores located within 20 km of Lateglacial moraines in south Westland, New Zealand provide detailed records of climate change during the Last Glacial-Interglacial Transition (LGIT). The pollen record shows the replacement of grassland by shrubland prior to ca 15,300 C-14 yr BP (18,300 cal. yr BP) followed by the progressive development of broadleaf shrubland and scattered forest prior to ca 12,000 C-14 yr BP (14,400 cal. yr BP). Local vegetation changes around the time of the Younger Dryas chronozone (11-10ka C-14 BP) are evident, but are not necessarily a result of regional climate cooling. Vegetation changes between ca 12,000 and 10,000 C-14 yr BP (14,400 and 11,400 cal. yr BP) indicate a period of increased precipitation. Tall podocarp forest, similar to that of the contemporary forest, was well established by ca 10,000 C-14 yr BP (11,400 cal. yr BP). A period of increased westerly circulation over southern New Zealand is considered to be the most likely mechanism for causing the increased precipitation between ca 12,000 and 10,000 C-14 yr BP (14,300 and 11,400 cal. yr BP). Increased precipitation would also provide a mechanism for initiating LGIT ice advance in the area. Data from these records show some support for global climate change models that propose inter-hemispheric linkage, but may be more supportive of a climate change model that incorporates an increased westerly circulation over southern New Zealand during the LGIT. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.