Authors
Dan J Charman, Keith E Barber, Maarten Blaauw, Pete G Langdon, Dmitri Mauquoy, Tim J Daley, Paul DM Hughes, Edgar Karofeld
Publication date
2009/9/30
Journal
Quaternary Science Reviews
Volume
28
Issue
19
Pages
1811-1819
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Reconstruction of hydroclimate variability is an important part of understanding natural climate change on decadal to millennial timescales. Peatland records reconstruct ‘bog surface wetness’ (BSW) changes, but it is unclear whether it is a relative dominance of precipitation or temperature that has driven these variations over Holocene timescales. Previously, correlations with instrumental climate data implied that precipitation is the dominant control. However, a recent chironomid inferred July temperature record suggested temperature changes were synchronous with BSW over the mid-late Holocene. This paper provides new analyses of these data to test competing hypotheses of climate controls on bog surface wetness and discusses some of the distal drivers of large-scale spatial patterns of BSW change. Using statistically based estimates of uncertainty in chronologies and proxy records, we show a correlation …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DJ Charman, KE Barber, M Blaauw, PG Langdon… - Quaternary Science Reviews, 2009