Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia region and suggested occurrences of widespread fires during the Middle Holocene. However, the available records do not indicate the changes in fire regime with enough time resolution. We quantified charcoal fragments in lacustrine sediments in a lake of North Carajas plateau in East Amazonia (5 degrees 50`-6 degrees 35`S and 49 degrees 30`-52 degrees 00`W). The charcoal quantification was compared to other sediment proxies, allowing a connection between paleofires and climate changes. Large variations in sediment characteristics led to distinct stages of sedimentation. From 11,800 (base of CSN 93/4) to 4750 cal yr B.P., low accumulation rates ...
International audienceTwo sediment cores were studied from Comprido Lake, a black water floodplain l...
Anthropogenic climate change—combined with increased human-caused ignitions—is leading to increased ...
A soil charcoal survey was undertaken across 60,000 ha of closed-canopy tropical forest in central G...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Although human influence dominates present-day Amazonian rainforest fires, old charcoal fragments, b...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
A sedimentary record from the Peruvian Amazon provided evidence of climate and vegetation change for...
Aim: The aim of this study was to assess the effect of Holocene fire activity and drought on the me...
Fire has a historical role in tropical forests related to past climate and ancient land use spanning...
Anthropogenic climate change driven by increased carbon emissions is leading to more severe fire sea...
Fire has a historical role in tropical forests related to past climate and ancient land use spanning...
International audienceTwo sediment cores were studied from Comprido Lake, a black water floodplain l...
International audienceTwo sediment cores were studied from Comprido Lake, a black water floodplain l...
Anthropogenic climate change—combined with increased human-caused ignitions—is leading to increased ...
A soil charcoal survey was undertaken across 60,000 ha of closed-canopy tropical forest in central G...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Although human influence dominates present-day Amazonian rainforest fires, old charcoal fragments, b...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
A sedimentary record from the Peruvian Amazon provided evidence of climate and vegetation change for...
Aim: The aim of this study was to assess the effect of Holocene fire activity and drought on the me...
Fire has a historical role in tropical forests related to past climate and ancient land use spanning...
Anthropogenic climate change driven by increased carbon emissions is leading to more severe fire sea...
Fire has a historical role in tropical forests related to past climate and ancient land use spanning...
International audienceTwo sediment cores were studied from Comprido Lake, a black water floodplain l...
International audienceTwo sediment cores were studied from Comprido Lake, a black water floodplain l...
Anthropogenic climate change—combined with increased human-caused ignitions—is leading to increased ...
A soil charcoal survey was undertaken across 60,000 ha of closed-canopy tropical forest in central G...