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Climate in Medieval Central EurasiaMisa, Henry R. 06 October 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Late Holocene Environmental Change Across the Canadian ArcticTamo, Camille 21 February 2019 (has links)
Lake sediment cores spanning the last 2000 years from four sites across the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA) document the responses of terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems to regional climate variability. Biogenic silica (BSi) records in cores from Banks Island, NWT (Lake B503; 72.3245, -123.4036, 84 masl), Bathurst Island, Nunavut (PR01; 75.6497, -99.1144, 30 masl), Prince of Wales Island, Nunavut (SW08; 72.3177, -97.2678, 104 masl), and Ellesmere Island, Nunavut (CV03; 79.9211, -82.9348, 363 masl) were used to examine the relationship between diatom production and climate. A pollen record from Prince of Wales Island provided the first high-resolution July temperature reconstruction for the last 1000 years for the central CAA.
Dissolution was evident in three out of the four lakes; core SW08 contained no BSi above detection and cores CV03 and PR01 only contained values above detection in the uppermost sediments, suggesting that the preservation of biogenic silica (BSi) in the sediment is likely influenced by sedimentary carbonates. A BSi sequence from core B503 showed that diatom production was affected by climate changes such as the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age.
The vegetation on southern Prince of Wales Island underwent marked transitions during the Little Ice Age and Medieval Climate Anomaly, which was mainly observed in the proportion of Cyperaceae and Poaceae. The mean July temperature reconstruction showed a long-term cooling from 1080-1915 CE with a sustained cold period from 1800-1915 CE prior to 20th-century warming. A synthesis of paleoclimate records from across the Arctic demonstrated that pollen-based reconstructions record both high and low frequency climate variability, when sampling resolution is sufficient, and can improve regional climate reconstructions.
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Holocene Climate Change in the Subtropical Eastern North Atlantic: Integrating High-resolution Sclerochronology and Shell Midden Archaeology in the Canary Islands, SpainParker, Wesley G. 02 June 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Holocene Climate and Environmental Change in the Great Basin of the Western United States: A Paleolimnological ApproachReinemann, Scott A. 29 August 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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