Pollen-based temperature and precipitation records of the past 14,600 years in northern New Zealand (37°S) and their linkages with the Southern Hemisphere atmospheric circulation
出版年份 2017 全文链接
标题
Pollen-based temperature and precipitation records of the past 14,600 years in northern New Zealand (37°S) and their linkages with the Southern Hemisphere atmospheric circulation
作者
关键词
-
出版物
HOLOCENE
Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages 1756-1768
出版商
SAGE Publications
发表日期
2017-06-01
DOI
10.1177/0959683617708444
参考文献
相关参考文献
注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。- Holocene history of a raised bog, northern New Zealand, based on plant cuticles
- (2016) Carolin Haenfling et al. HOLOCENE
- Coherent rainfall response to middle- and late-Holocene climate variability across the mid-latitude South Pacific
- (2013) Basil Gomez et al. HOLOCENE
- Ages of 24 widespread tephras erupted since 30,000 years ago in New Zealand, with re-evaluation of the timing and palaeoclimatic implications of the Lateglacial cool episode recorded at Kaipo bog
- (2013) David J. Lowe et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- A composite pollen-based stratotype for inter-regional evaluation of climatic events in New Zealand over the past 30,000 years (NZ-INTIMATE project)
- (2013) David J.A. Barrell et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- Seasonal variations in aridity and temperature characterize changing climate during the last deglaciation in New Zealand
- (2013) Elisabeth L. Sikes et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- SHCal13 Southern Hemisphere Calibration, 0–50,000 Years cal BP
- (2013) Alan G Hogg et al. RADIOCARBON
- Age frequency distribution and revised stable isotope curves for New Zealand speleothems: palaeoclimatic implications
- (2012) Paul Williams et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPELEOLOGY
- The vegetation cover of New Zealand at the Last Glacial Maximum
- (2012) Rewi Newnham et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- A review of the Australian–New Zealand sector of the Southern Ocean over the last 30 ka (Aus-INTIMATE project)
- (2012) H.C. Bostock et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- A multi-proxy record of changing environments from ca. 30 000 to 9000 cal. a BP: Onepoto maar palaeolake, Auckland, New Zealand
- (2011) Paul Augustinus et al. JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
- Signatures of the Antarctic ozone hole in Southern Hemisphere surface climate change
- (2011) David W. J. Thompson et al. Nature Geoscience
- Have the Southern Westerlies changed in a zonally symmetric manner over the last 14,000 years? A hemisphere-wide take on a controversial problem
- (2011) Michael-Shawn Fletcher et al. QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL
- Late Quaternary paleolimnology of Onepoto maar, Auckland, New Zealand: Implications for the drivers of regional paleoclimate
- (2011) Paul Augustinus et al. QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL
- Does the bipolar seesaw extend to the terrestrial southern mid-latitudes?
- (2011) Rewi M. Newnham et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- Seasonality in the early Holocene: Extending fossil-based estimates with a forest ecosystem process model
- (2010) Matt S. McGlone et al. HOLOCENE
- Divergent trends in land and ocean temperature in the Southern Ocean over the past 18,000 years
- (2010) Matt S. McGlone et al. Nature Geoscience
- Holocene changes in the position and intensity of the southern westerly wind belt
- (2010) Frank Lamy et al. Nature Geoscience
- Hemispheric-Scale Seasonality of the Southern Annular Mode and Impacts on the Climate of New Zealand
- (2009) J. Kidston et al. JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
- Holocene changes in eastern tropical Pacific climate inferred from a Galápagos lake sediment record
- (2008) Jessica L. Conroy et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- Southwest Pacific modulation of abrupt climate change during the Antarctic Cold Reversal–Younger Dryas
- (2007) Lionel Carter et al. PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
Find the ideal target journal for your manuscript
Explore over 38,000 international journals covering a vast array of academic fields.
SearchBecome a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get Started