Journal articles
Reconstruction of past land cover is necessary for the study of past climate–land cover interactions and the evaluation of climate models and land-use scenarios. The authors used 1128 available pollen records from across Europe covering the last 11 700 years in the REVEALS model to calculate percentage cover and associated standard errors for 31 taxa, 12 plant functional types and 3 land-cover types. REVEALS results are reliant on the quality of the input datasets.
This paper is a contribution to the PAGES Working Group on Quaternary Interglacials (QUIGS).
The WALIS database was developed by the ERC Starting Grant “Warmcoasts” (ERC-StG-802414) and PALSEA. PALSEA is a working group of the International Union for Quaternary Sciences (INQUA) and Past Global Changes (PAGES), which in turn received support from the Swiss Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
The work profited from discussions at the CVAS working group of the Past Global Changes (PAGES) programme.
The work profited from discussions at the CVAS working group of the Past Global Changes (PAGES) programme.
Additional funding for travel and workshop collaboration was provided to Jacob Jones by a Past Global Changes (PAGES) grant (grant no. C-SIDE WS_163) to the Cycles of Sea Ice Dynamics in the Earth System (C-SIDE) working group.
This paper is a contribution to the NZ SeaRise Programme (RTUV1705), funded by the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment; to IGCP Project 725 ‘Forecasting Coastal Change’; and to PALSEA, a working group of the International Union for Quaternary Sciences (INQUA) and Past Global Changes (PAGES).
This is a contribution to the strategic research areas MERGE (ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system) and the Past Global Change (PAGES) project and its working group LandCover6k (http://pastglobalchanges.org/landcover6k), which is funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation, the Swiss Academy of Sciences, the US National Science Foundation, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
This is a contribution to the strategic research areas MERGE (ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system), the Bolin Centre for Climate Research, and the PAGES LandCover6k working group that, in turn, received support from the Swiss National Science Foundation, US National Science Foundation, Swiss Academy of Sciences, and Chinese Academy of Sciences.
PALSEA is a PAGES and INQUA working group focused on using past changes in sea level and Earth’s cryosphere to constrain future sea-level rise in response to climate change.