Anthropogenic climate change—combined with increased human-caused ignitions—is leading to increased wildfire frequency, carbon dioxide emissions, and refractory black carbon (rBC) aerosol emissions. This is particularly evident in the Amazon rainforest, where fire activity has been complicated by the synchronicity of natural and anthropogenic drivers of ecological change, coupled with spatial and temporal heterogeneity in past and present land use. One approach to elucidating these factors is through long-term regional fire histories. Using a novel method for rBC determinations, we measured an approximately 3500-year sediment core record from Lake Caranã in the eastern Amazon for rBC influx, a proxy of biomass burning and fossil fuel combus...
International audience"The nature and scale of pre-Columbian land use and the consequences of the 14...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Despite the consensus on the overall downward trend in Amazon forest loss in the previous decade, es...
Anthropogenic climate change driven by increased carbon emissions is leading to more severe fire sea...
The Amazon Basin is one of the major contributors to global biomass burning emissions. However, regi...
Although human influence dominates present-day Amazonian rainforest fires, old charcoal fragments, b...
Consistent long-term estimates of fire emissions are important to understand the changing role of fi...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
Fire has a historical role in tropical forests related to past climate and ancient land use spanning...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
A 50,000-year-old sediment core record from Laguna Chaplin is reanalyzed to explore potential paleoe...
Fire regimes have changed during the Holocene due to changes in climate, vegetation, and in human pr...
A sedimentary record from the Peruvian Amazon provided evidence of climate and vegetation change for...
<p>Anthropogenic climate change driven by increased carbon emissions is leading to more severe fire ...
International audience"The nature and scale of pre-Columbian land use and the consequences of the 14...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Despite the consensus on the overall downward trend in Amazon forest loss in the previous decade, es...
Anthropogenic climate change driven by increased carbon emissions is leading to more severe fire sea...
The Amazon Basin is one of the major contributors to global biomass burning emissions. However, regi...
Although human influence dominates present-day Amazonian rainforest fires, old charcoal fragments, b...
Consistent long-term estimates of fire emissions are important to understand the changing role of fi...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
Fire has a historical role in tropical forests related to past climate and ancient land use spanning...
Past studies have evidenced the presence of charcoal in soils and lacustrine sediments of Amazonia r...
A 50,000-year-old sediment core record from Laguna Chaplin is reanalyzed to explore potential paleoe...
Fire regimes have changed during the Holocene due to changes in climate, vegetation, and in human pr...
A sedimentary record from the Peruvian Amazon provided evidence of climate and vegetation change for...
<p>Anthropogenic climate change driven by increased carbon emissions is leading to more severe fire ...
International audience"The nature and scale of pre-Columbian land use and the consequences of the 14...
Interpreting the geological record of Amazon biomass combustion requires comparing charcoal accumula...
Despite the consensus on the overall downward trend in Amazon forest loss in the previous decade, es...