Although human land use in the industrial and post-industrial world has had demonstrable impacts on global climate, human land use may also improve or reduce the resilience of ecosystems to anthropogenic and natural climate change. This dissertation tests the hypothesis that low severity anthropogenic burning by prehistoric and protohistoric indigenous societies in the ponderosa pine forests of east-central Arizona improved the resilience of these forests to low frequency climate change. I use sedimentary charcoal, phosphorus, stable carbon isotopes, and palynology to reconstruct changes in fire regimes over the last 1000 years from seven radiocarbon dated alluvial sequences in five watersheds across a gradient of indigenous land use and oc...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
In the past few decades, wildfires have increased in size and severity in the Southwest and across t...
Abstract: Fire is well recognized as a key Earth system process, but its causes and influences vary ...
Humans have altered landscapes across North America for millennia, changing vegetation composition a...
Unraveling the effects of climate and land use on historical fire regimes provides important insight...
Fire use has played an important role in human evolution and subsequent dispersals across the globe,...
As an ecological disturbance agent, wildfire is highly responsive to spatial and temporal variables....
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002Modern ecological studies are unable to examine long-...
Fire is an important part of the disturbance regimes of northwestern U.S. forests and its role in ma...
My dissertation weaves together paleo-ecological data, archival records, historical evidence, and mo...
dissertationThe future of the American southwest is of interest to those concerned with water availa...
Paleoecology is a valuable tool for understanding the long-term ecosystem dynamics that underlie pre...
xvii, 382 p. : ill. (some col.), maps. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libr...
Large wildfires in California cause significant socioecological impacts, and half of the federal fun...
In fire-prone areas, the geomorphic effects of fire are influenced by fire frequency and severity (i...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
In the past few decades, wildfires have increased in size and severity in the Southwest and across t...
Abstract: Fire is well recognized as a key Earth system process, but its causes and influences vary ...
Humans have altered landscapes across North America for millennia, changing vegetation composition a...
Unraveling the effects of climate and land use on historical fire regimes provides important insight...
Fire use has played an important role in human evolution and subsequent dispersals across the globe,...
As an ecological disturbance agent, wildfire is highly responsive to spatial and temporal variables....
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002Modern ecological studies are unable to examine long-...
Fire is an important part of the disturbance regimes of northwestern U.S. forests and its role in ma...
My dissertation weaves together paleo-ecological data, archival records, historical evidence, and mo...
dissertationThe future of the American southwest is of interest to those concerned with water availa...
Paleoecology is a valuable tool for understanding the long-term ecosystem dynamics that underlie pre...
xvii, 382 p. : ill. (some col.), maps. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libr...
Large wildfires in California cause significant socioecological impacts, and half of the federal fun...
In fire-prone areas, the geomorphic effects of fire are influenced by fire frequency and severity (i...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
In the past few decades, wildfires have increased in size and severity in the Southwest and across t...
Abstract: Fire is well recognized as a key Earth system process, but its causes and influences vary ...