The St. Elias Mountain region has occupied an important place in the study of the Quaternary because it presents a relatively accessible non-polar icefield and an array of environments from tundra to boreal forest. Paleoenvironmental studies in southwestern Yukon have documented the broad-scale climatic changes of the past 20 000 years, although few studies exist with well-dated sequences at high temporal resolution. Picea glauca arrived across the entire region around 10 000 years ago; however, the details regarding its migration pathways are not well known. Available records indicate few major changes in the composition of the boreal forest vegetation since that time. A slightly more intense fire regime in the early to mid Holocene has be...
Summer climatic moisture balances (precipitation vs. potential evapotranspiration) for topographic s...
In 1997, the first author noted a large concentration of caribou (Rangifer sp.) fecal pellets and a ...
In northwestern North America, glaciers figure prominently in both indigenous oral traditions and na...
Paleoecological studies based on the analysis of pollen in lake sediments offer the potential for hi...
Since the discovery of dung-rich alpine ice patches in southwest Yukon in 1997, continuing multidisc...
The evolution of the Holocene paraglacial environment of the St. Elias Mountains has been dominated ...
New radiocarbon-dated plant macrofossils provide evidence for black spruce (Picea mariana) and white...
This study documents the Holocene evolution of lakes located in the Bluefish Basin, northern Yukon, ...
Sediment cores from three lakes located in the northernmost region of Ungava, Québec (Canada) were e...
The eastern lobe of the Alaskan White River Ash volcanic event of AD 846 – 848 blanketed portions of...
Small-scale vertical aerial photographs taken in 1947 and 1948 covering 200 km2 of the Kluane Ranges...
A major achievement in research supported by the Kluane Lake Research Station was the recovery, in 2...
Late Quaternary pollen, plant macrofossils, and insect fossils were studied from sites along three r...
High-latitude (61.9˚ – 62.8˚ N) graminoid plant communities located near the northern limit of borea...
Glaciological exploration of the Yukon for scientific purposes began in 1935, with the National Geog...
Summer climatic moisture balances (precipitation vs. potential evapotranspiration) for topographic s...
In 1997, the first author noted a large concentration of caribou (Rangifer sp.) fecal pellets and a ...
In northwestern North America, glaciers figure prominently in both indigenous oral traditions and na...
Paleoecological studies based on the analysis of pollen in lake sediments offer the potential for hi...
Since the discovery of dung-rich alpine ice patches in southwest Yukon in 1997, continuing multidisc...
The evolution of the Holocene paraglacial environment of the St. Elias Mountains has been dominated ...
New radiocarbon-dated plant macrofossils provide evidence for black spruce (Picea mariana) and white...
This study documents the Holocene evolution of lakes located in the Bluefish Basin, northern Yukon, ...
Sediment cores from three lakes located in the northernmost region of Ungava, Québec (Canada) were e...
The eastern lobe of the Alaskan White River Ash volcanic event of AD 846 – 848 blanketed portions of...
Small-scale vertical aerial photographs taken in 1947 and 1948 covering 200 km2 of the Kluane Ranges...
A major achievement in research supported by the Kluane Lake Research Station was the recovery, in 2...
Late Quaternary pollen, plant macrofossils, and insect fossils were studied from sites along three r...
High-latitude (61.9˚ – 62.8˚ N) graminoid plant communities located near the northern limit of borea...
Glaciological exploration of the Yukon for scientific purposes began in 1935, with the National Geog...
Summer climatic moisture balances (precipitation vs. potential evapotranspiration) for topographic s...
In 1997, the first author noted a large concentration of caribou (Rangifer sp.) fecal pellets and a ...
In northwestern North America, glaciers figure prominently in both indigenous oral traditions and na...