Globally, fire is a primary agent for modifying environments through the long-term coupling of human and natural systems. In southern Africa, control of fire by humans has been documented since the late Middle Pleistocene, though it is unclear when or if anthropogenic burning led to fundamental shifts in the region's fire regimes. To identify potential periods of broad-scale anthropogenic burning, we analyze aggregated Holocene charcoal sequences across southern Africa, which we compare to paleoclimate records and archaeological data. We show climate-concordant variability in mid-Holocene fire across much of the subcontinent. However, increased regional fire activity during the late Holocene (∼2000 BP) coincides with archaeological change, ...
Biomass burning on the African continent is widespread, and interactions with climate, vegetation dy...
Fire regimes have changed during the Holocene due to changes in climate, vegetation, and in human pr...
Fire is a natural component of global biogeochemical cycles and closely related to changes in human ...
Globally, fire is a primary agent for modifying environments through the long-term coupling of human...
North Africa features some of the most frequently burnt biomes on Earth, including the semi-arid gra...
Fire in the Earth’s ecosystems is a significant driver of ecological change, fires remove dead bioma...
We synthesize existing sedimentary charcoal records to reconstruct Holocene fire history at regional...
We synthesize existing sedimentary charcoal records to reconstruct Holocene fire history at regional...
We synthesize existing sedimentary charcoal records to reconstruct Holocene fire history at regional...
Fires have burned in African landscapes for more than a hundred million years, long before vertebrat...
We analyze sedimentary charcoal records to show that the changes in fire regime over the past 21,000...
Publicación ISIHolocene fire-climate-vegetation linkages are mostly understood at individual sites b...
Fires burning the vast grasslands and savannas of Africa significantly influence the global carbon c...
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd A multi-proxy approach conducted on a sediment core from a small lake in the Cap...
Modern Homo sapiens engage in substantial ecosystem modification, but it is difficult to detect the ...
Biomass burning on the African continent is widespread, and interactions with climate, vegetation dy...
Fire regimes have changed during the Holocene due to changes in climate, vegetation, and in human pr...
Fire is a natural component of global biogeochemical cycles and closely related to changes in human ...
Globally, fire is a primary agent for modifying environments through the long-term coupling of human...
North Africa features some of the most frequently burnt biomes on Earth, including the semi-arid gra...
Fire in the Earth’s ecosystems is a significant driver of ecological change, fires remove dead bioma...
We synthesize existing sedimentary charcoal records to reconstruct Holocene fire history at regional...
We synthesize existing sedimentary charcoal records to reconstruct Holocene fire history at regional...
We synthesize existing sedimentary charcoal records to reconstruct Holocene fire history at regional...
Fires have burned in African landscapes for more than a hundred million years, long before vertebrat...
We analyze sedimentary charcoal records to show that the changes in fire regime over the past 21,000...
Publicación ISIHolocene fire-climate-vegetation linkages are mostly understood at individual sites b...
Fires burning the vast grasslands and savannas of Africa significantly influence the global carbon c...
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd A multi-proxy approach conducted on a sediment core from a small lake in the Cap...
Modern Homo sapiens engage in substantial ecosystem modification, but it is difficult to detect the ...
Biomass burning on the African continent is widespread, and interactions with climate, vegetation dy...
Fire regimes have changed during the Holocene due to changes in climate, vegetation, and in human pr...
Fire is a natural component of global biogeochemical cycles and closely related to changes in human ...