Authors
Jordi Catalan, Sergi Pla-Rabés, Alexander P Wolfe, John P Smol, Kathleen M Rühland, N John Anderson, Jiři Kopáček, Evžen Stuchlík, Roland Schmidt, Karin A Koinig, Lluís Camarero, Roger J Flower, Oliver Heiri, Christian Kamenik, Atte Korhola, Peter R Leavitt, Roland Psenner, Ingemar Renberg
Publication date
2013/3
Source
Journal of Paleolimnology
Volume
49
Pages
513-535
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
Over recent decades, palaeolimnological records from remote sites have provided convincing evidence for the onset and development of several facets of global environmental change. Remote lakes, defined here as those occurring in high latitude or high altitude regions, have the advantage of not being overprinted by local anthropogenic processes. As such, many of these sites record broad-scale environmental changes, frequently driven by regime shifts in the Earth system. Here, we review a selection of studies from North America and Europe and discuss their broader implications. The history of investigation has evolved synchronously with the scope and awareness of environmental problems. An initial focus on acid deposition switched to metal and other types of pollutants, then climate change and eventually to atmospheric deposition-fertilising effects. However, none of these topics is independent of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Catalan, S Pla-Rabés, AP Wolfe, JP Smol… - Journal of Paleolimnology, 2013