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Quaternary Environmental Change in the Tropics

Langbeschreibung
The global climate changes that led to the expansion and contraction of high latitude ice sheets during the Quaternary period were associated with equally dramatic changes in tropical environments. These included shifts in vegetation zones, changes in the hydrology and ecology of lakes and rivers, and fluctuations in the size of mountain glaciers and sandy deserts. Until recently it was thought that such changes were triggered by fluctuations in the distribution of polar ice cover. Now there is increasing recognition that the tropics themselves have acted as drivers of global climate change over a range of timescales.The aim of Quaternary Environmental Change in the Tropics is to provide a synthesis of the changes that occurred in tropical terrestrial and marine systems during the Pleistocene and Holocene, complementing data-derived reconstructions with output from state-of-the-art climate models. It is targeted at final-year undergraduate students and research specialists, but will provide an introduction to tropical Quaternary research for a variety of other readers.
Sarah Metcalfe is Professor of Earth and EnvironmentalDynamics at the University of Nottingham, UK. She haspublished extensively on environmental change in Latin America,with a particular focus on Mexico. Although primarily apalaeolimnologist, her approach is very much multi-proxy, includingthe use of historical and instrumental records to help to improveour understanding of recent change.David Nash is Professor of Physical Geography at theUniversity of Brighton, UK. He is widely known for his publicationson the reconstruction of historical climate changes in southernAfrica, as well as his broader research into the contemporary andQuaternary geomorphology of dryland regions including the Kalahari,Atacama and southern Europe. His research uses methods ranging fromscanning electron microscopy and thin-section analysis to theinterpretation of historical documents.
ISBN-13:
9781118336175
Veröffentl:
2012
Seiten:
296
Autor:
Sarah E. Metcalfe
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
Reflowable
Kopierschutz:
2 - DRM Adobe
Sprache:
Englisch

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