AbstractLake systems are essential for the environment, the biosphere, and humans but are highly impacted by anthropogenic activities accentuated by climate change. Understanding how lake ecosystems change due to human impacts and natural forces is crucial to managing their current state and possible future restoration. The high sensitivity of shallow closed lakes to natural and anthropogenic forcing makes these lacustrine ecosystems highly prone to variations in precipitation and sedimentation processes. These variation processes, occurring in the water column, produce geochemical markers or proxies recorded in lake sedimentary archives. This study investigated specific proxies on high-resolution sedimentary archives (2–3 years resolution)...
Lake Neusiedl, the largest steppe lake in Europe, is particularly sensitive to climate variations du...
The exploitation of lakes has led to large-scale contemporary impacts on freshwater systems, largely...
From the high alpine Sagistalsee (1935 m a.s.l.), 13.50 m of continuously laminated sediments compri...
A comparative study of independent geochemical and biological proxies was carried out on a 83 cm lo...
A 9000 cal. year record of geochemistry was analysed in a sediment core obtained from a Swiss alpine...
International audienceThe sedimentation record of Lago Grande di Monticchio (LGM) is one of the most...
Although lake sediments are globally important organic carbon sinks and therefore important habitats...
The long-term terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem dynamics spanning between approximately 6200 and 480...
Sediment records of two Italian subalpine lakes (Lake Garda and Lake Ledro) were analyzed in order t...
Lake Garda, the largest Italian lake (368 km2), is a key resource for drinking water supply and irri...
The study of lake sediments allows to place limnological investigations within a secular temporal pe...
Sediment records of two Italian subalpine lakes (Lake Garda and Lake Ledro) were analyzed in order ...
Lake Steisslingen is a small hardwater lake 20 kms west of Lake Constance, mostly fed by ...
High-resolution geochemical analysis of a 6-m-long sediment core from Zoar Lake, southern Spain, pro...
Lake sediments act as high-resolution archives of past climate and environments, able to record natu...
Lake Neusiedl, the largest steppe lake in Europe, is particularly sensitive to climate variations du...
The exploitation of lakes has led to large-scale contemporary impacts on freshwater systems, largely...
From the high alpine Sagistalsee (1935 m a.s.l.), 13.50 m of continuously laminated sediments compri...
A comparative study of independent geochemical and biological proxies was carried out on a 83 cm lo...
A 9000 cal. year record of geochemistry was analysed in a sediment core obtained from a Swiss alpine...
International audienceThe sedimentation record of Lago Grande di Monticchio (LGM) is one of the most...
Although lake sediments are globally important organic carbon sinks and therefore important habitats...
The long-term terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem dynamics spanning between approximately 6200 and 480...
Sediment records of two Italian subalpine lakes (Lake Garda and Lake Ledro) were analyzed in order t...
Lake Garda, the largest Italian lake (368 km2), is a key resource for drinking water supply and irri...
The study of lake sediments allows to place limnological investigations within a secular temporal pe...
Sediment records of two Italian subalpine lakes (Lake Garda and Lake Ledro) were analyzed in order ...
Lake Steisslingen is a small hardwater lake 20 kms west of Lake Constance, mostly fed by ...
High-resolution geochemical analysis of a 6-m-long sediment core from Zoar Lake, southern Spain, pro...
Lake sediments act as high-resolution archives of past climate and environments, able to record natu...
Lake Neusiedl, the largest steppe lake in Europe, is particularly sensitive to climate variations du...
The exploitation of lakes has led to large-scale contemporary impacts on freshwater systems, largely...
From the high alpine Sagistalsee (1935 m a.s.l.), 13.50 m of continuously laminated sediments compri...