Wallachian (shepherd) colonisation of the upper parts of Carpathians, the second largest mountain range in Europe, provides a unique opportunity to study human-induced ecological changes and subsequent sediment mobilisation within slope and fluvial systems. The Wallachians came to the nearly pristine landscape in the Czech part of the Western Carpathians during the 16–17th Century bringing large scale deforestation and grazing to the upper parts of its ridges. Despite the importance of this event, there is a lack of high-resolution multi-proxy reconstructions to help to decipher the relative influence of anthropogenic and climate factors on this landscape. Here we provide a ca. 2.1 kyr record obtained from a peat bog where, using chronologi...
A high-altitude lake sediment sequence (Buhăiescu Mare, 1918 m a.s.l.) in the subalpine zone of the ...
A peat core from the Barschpfuhl kettlehole mire in north-east Germany was analysed for multiproxy i...
In general, mires develop by autogenic succession from more groundwater-fed to more rainwater-fed. T...
Wallachian (shepherd) colonisation of the upper parts of Carpathians, the second largest mountain ra...
The Central European area has been extensively studied using qualitative reconstruction techniques f...
Geo-ecological and landscape change studies at a local scale are scarce in Central-Eastern Europe an...
The Romanian Carpathians are located at the confluence of three major atmospheric pressure fields: t...
Coeval changes in the reconstructed bog surface wetness and the pollen record of a peat sequence ext...
The area of Ukrainian Carpathians is still poorly investigated in the context of vegetation history ...
High altitude environments are experiencing more rapid changes in temperature than the global averag...
<p>High altitude environments (treeline and alpine communities) are particularly sensitive to climat...
While on the continental or global level and across the long time-scales, erosion and accumulation p...
Mass wasting events, including landslides, avalanches and flooding related to heavy rains can have a...
This paper presents a high resolution, multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental reconstruction (pollen, dung ...
In general, mires develop by autogenic succession from more groundwater-fed to more rainwater-fed. T...
A high-altitude lake sediment sequence (Buhăiescu Mare, 1918 m a.s.l.) in the subalpine zone of the ...
A peat core from the Barschpfuhl kettlehole mire in north-east Germany was analysed for multiproxy i...
In general, mires develop by autogenic succession from more groundwater-fed to more rainwater-fed. T...
Wallachian (shepherd) colonisation of the upper parts of Carpathians, the second largest mountain ra...
The Central European area has been extensively studied using qualitative reconstruction techniques f...
Geo-ecological and landscape change studies at a local scale are scarce in Central-Eastern Europe an...
The Romanian Carpathians are located at the confluence of three major atmospheric pressure fields: t...
Coeval changes in the reconstructed bog surface wetness and the pollen record of a peat sequence ext...
The area of Ukrainian Carpathians is still poorly investigated in the context of vegetation history ...
High altitude environments are experiencing more rapid changes in temperature than the global averag...
<p>High altitude environments (treeline and alpine communities) are particularly sensitive to climat...
While on the continental or global level and across the long time-scales, erosion and accumulation p...
Mass wasting events, including landslides, avalanches and flooding related to heavy rains can have a...
This paper presents a high resolution, multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental reconstruction (pollen, dung ...
In general, mires develop by autogenic succession from more groundwater-fed to more rainwater-fed. T...
A high-altitude lake sediment sequence (Buhăiescu Mare, 1918 m a.s.l.) in the subalpine zone of the ...
A peat core from the Barschpfuhl kettlehole mire in north-east Germany was analysed for multiproxy i...
In general, mires develop by autogenic succession from more groundwater-fed to more rainwater-fed. T...