2009
DOI: 10.5194/cpd-5-1521-2009
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Last nine-thousand years of temperature variability in Northern Europe

Abstract: Abstract. The threat of future global warming has generated a major interest in quantifying past climate variability on centennial and millennial time-scales. However, palaeoclimatological records are often noisy and arguments about past variability are only possible if they are based on reproducible features in several reliably dated datasets. Here we focus on the last 9000 years, explore the results of 35 Holocene pollen-based July mean and annual mean temperature reconstructions from Northern Europe by stac… Show more

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Cited by 117 publications
(211 citation statements)
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“…This approach appears to be justified, because the comparison of the recent peatland distribution with the ice coverage 8.2 kyr ago (Peltier, 2004) shows that only very small areas of present day peatlands were covered by land ice at that time. Warm Holocene climate conditions prevailed already for more than 1000 yr at that time allowing for an initiation of peat expansion to interglacial conditions (Renssen et al, 2012;Seppä et al, 2009). A sensitivity test in a simulation with ice masking out peatlands 8.2 kyr ago only shows a reduction of 6 % in the simulated emissions and no change to the sensitivity at all.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach appears to be justified, because the comparison of the recent peatland distribution with the ice coverage 8.2 kyr ago (Peltier, 2004) shows that only very small areas of present day peatlands were covered by land ice at that time. Warm Holocene climate conditions prevailed already for more than 1000 yr at that time allowing for an initiation of peat expansion to interglacial conditions (Renssen et al, 2012;Seppä et al, 2009). A sensitivity test in a simulation with ice masking out peatlands 8.2 kyr ago only shows a reduction of 6 % in the simulated emissions and no change to the sensitivity at all.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When compared to other long proxy records that do not suffer from de-trending problems, e.g. pollen data, it is clear that the long Fennoscandian tree-ring records do not show the long-term cooling summer temperature trend that is observed since the mid-Holocene in the other data (e.g., Seppä et al, 2009).…”
Section: A Regional Comparisonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The continued but reduced presence of Cyperaceaemost obvious in the PAR diagram (Fig. 6)-could relate to the replacement of sedges by ericaceous heaths within the renvall as recovery of the natural forest vegetation progressed, or to the limited creation of new damp habitats due to either the cessation of peat cutting, or the development of a warmer and drier climate during the 20th century (Seppä et al 2009;St. Amour et al 2010;Lindholm et al 2012).…”
Section: Initiation Of Intensive Clearance and Gathering Of Animals (mentioning
confidence: 99%