International audienceThis paper addresses the quantification of combustion-derived products in oceanic and continental sediments by optical and chemical approaches, and the interest of combining such methods for reconstructing past biomass burning activity and the pyrogenic carbon cycle. In such context, the dark particles >0.2 mu m2 remaining after the partial digestion of organic matter are optically counted by automated image analysis and defined as charcoal, while the elemental carbon remaining after thermal and chemical oxidative treatments is quantified as black carbon (BC). The obtained pyrogenic carbon records from three sediment core-based case studies, (i) the Late Pleistocene equatorial Pacific Ocean. (ii) the mid-Holocene Europ...
The pyrogenic particles formed from incomplete combustion of organic matter are often termed black c...
Behavior of black carbon (BC) is crucial for the earth’s surface environment because it could cause ...
Progresses in reconstructing Earth's history of biomass burning has motivated the development of a m...
International audienceThis paper addresses the quantification of combustion-derived products in ocea...
Biomass burning in the tropics release about 25% of annual anthropogenic CO2 emissions, and large am...
Fire a global process that depends on climate volcanic activity vegetation and human practices is no...
Black or elemental carbon (EC), including soot and char, are byproducts of anthropogenic fossil-fuel...
Abstract The burning of trees and grasses produces charred particles, such as charcoal and soot, tha...
Fire regimes have changed during the Holocene due to changes in climate, vegetation, and in human pr...
To examine fire patterns and landscape evolution in the Xiangjiang River Basin over the past 1300 ye...
International audienceTo reconstruct past fire activity in the West Pacific-East Asian region, we in...
The pyrogenic particles formed from incomplete combustion of organic matter are often termed black c...
Behavior of black carbon (BC) is crucial for the earth’s surface environment because it could cause ...
Progresses in reconstructing Earth's history of biomass burning has motivated the development of a m...
International audienceThis paper addresses the quantification of combustion-derived products in ocea...
Biomass burning in the tropics release about 25% of annual anthropogenic CO2 emissions, and large am...
Fire a global process that depends on climate volcanic activity vegetation and human practices is no...
Black or elemental carbon (EC), including soot and char, are byproducts of anthropogenic fossil-fuel...
Abstract The burning of trees and grasses produces charred particles, such as charcoal and soot, tha...
Fire regimes have changed during the Holocene due to changes in climate, vegetation, and in human pr...
To examine fire patterns and landscape evolution in the Xiangjiang River Basin over the past 1300 ye...
International audienceTo reconstruct past fire activity in the West Pacific-East Asian region, we in...
The pyrogenic particles formed from incomplete combustion of organic matter are often termed black c...
Behavior of black carbon (BC) is crucial for the earth’s surface environment because it could cause ...
Progresses in reconstructing Earth's history of biomass burning has motivated the development of a m...