Recent changes in global fire activity and future projections can be attributed to a combination of direct human impacts and indirect effects of anthropogenic climate change. To understand how and why these shifts might occur, we need to understand the pre-human history of fires during past climatic changes. This is commonly looked at through charcoal preserved in lake sediment records. These paleorecords assume that a certain charcoal particle size class was derived from proximal fires. There are few tests, however, to assess how far charcoal particles can travel from the original fire source. This kinematic model shows that charcoal particle distribution and deposition is strongly influenced not only by the energy release rate and subsequ...
An earth system model of intermediate complexity (CLIMate and BiosphERe – CLIMBER-2) and a land surf...
Fire is a key Earth system process, with 80% of annual fire activity taking place in grassland areas...
<div><p>Variations in the abundance of fossil charcoals between rocks and sediments are assumed to r...
Fire reconstructions provide context for modern rates of burning and inform predictions of fire regi...
Microscopic charcoal particles are fire-specific tracers, which are ubiquitous in natural archives s...
International audienceKnowledge on processes of charcoal transportation is crucial for fire reconstr...
Abstract: Production and size of charred particles determine transport and deposition in lakes. Lack...
Microscopic charcoal particles are fire-specific tracers, which are ubiquitous in natural archives ...
Sedimentary charcoal records provide useful perspectives on the long-term controls and behavior of f...
International audienceAlthough lacustrine sedimentary charcoal has long been used to infer paleofire...
International audienceThe location, timing, spatial extent, and frequency of wildfires are changing ...
The location, timing, spatial extent, and frequency of wildfires are changing rapidly in many parts ...
The location, timing, spatial extent, and frequency of wildfires are changing rapidly in many parts ...
Fire-history reconstructions inferred from sedimentary charcoal records are based on measuring sieve...
An earth system model of intermediate complexity (CLIMate and BiosphERe – CLIMBER-2) and a land surf...
Fire is a key Earth system process, with 80% of annual fire activity taking place in grassland areas...
<div><p>Variations in the abundance of fossil charcoals between rocks and sediments are assumed to r...
Fire reconstructions provide context for modern rates of burning and inform predictions of fire regi...
Microscopic charcoal particles are fire-specific tracers, which are ubiquitous in natural archives s...
International audienceKnowledge on processes of charcoal transportation is crucial for fire reconstr...
Abstract: Production and size of charred particles determine transport and deposition in lakes. Lack...
Microscopic charcoal particles are fire-specific tracers, which are ubiquitous in natural archives ...
Sedimentary charcoal records provide useful perspectives on the long-term controls and behavior of f...
International audienceAlthough lacustrine sedimentary charcoal has long been used to infer paleofire...
International audienceThe location, timing, spatial extent, and frequency of wildfires are changing ...
The location, timing, spatial extent, and frequency of wildfires are changing rapidly in many parts ...
The location, timing, spatial extent, and frequency of wildfires are changing rapidly in many parts ...
Fire-history reconstructions inferred from sedimentary charcoal records are based on measuring sieve...
An earth system model of intermediate complexity (CLIMate and BiosphERe – CLIMBER-2) and a land surf...
Fire is a key Earth system process, with 80% of annual fire activity taking place in grassland areas...
<div><p>Variations in the abundance of fossil charcoals between rocks and sediments are assumed to r...