The Climate of Past Interglacials
- 1st Edition, Volume 7 - December 8, 2006
- Latest edition
- Editors: F. Sirocko, M. Claussen, T. Litt, M.F. Sanchez-Goni
- Language: English
Historically, climate fluctuations, such as the Little Ice Age, show that interglacial climate chage in not entirely stable, but responds to even subtle changes in radiative… Read more
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Description
Description
Historically, climate fluctuations, such as the Little Ice Age, show that interglacial climate chage in not entirely stable, but responds to even subtle changes in radiative forcing. Through research, it has been made clear that even an abrupt change of climate within years is not just a theoretical possibility but has in fact happened in the prehistoric past. It is therefore clear that in principal it could happen again. Human civilaization has exploded under the mild and relatively stable climatic conditions that have prevailed over the last 11,000 years. This book focuses on revisiting the past and to study climate and environment in a suite of experiments where boundary conditions are similar but not identical to today so we can learn about the climate-environment system, its sensitivity, thresholds and feedback. The palaeoclimate community holds an important key to scientific information on climate change that provides a basis for appropriate adaptation and mitigation strategies. The authors of this book have taken up this challenge and summarize their results in this special volume. It presents state-of-the-art science on new reconstructions from all spheres of the Earth System and on their synthesis, on methodological advances, and on the current ability of numerical models to simulate low and high frequency changes of climate, environment, and chemical cycling related to interglacials.
Key features
Key features
* Summarizes important information on climate change, providing a basis for appropriate adaptation and mitigation strategies for human civilization
* Reports on new reconstuctions on methodological advances, numerical models simulating low and high frequence changes, and chemical cycling related to interglacials
* Incorporates palaeovegetaion and numerical modeling of climate and environmental and geochemical parameters to address regional feedback to global change with successful data-models
* Reports on new reconstuctions on methodological advances, numerical models simulating low and high frequence changes, and chemical cycling related to interglacials
* Incorporates palaeovegetaion and numerical modeling of climate and environmental and geochemical parameters to address regional feedback to global change with successful data-models
Readership
Readership
geologists
Table of contents
Table of contents
Preface (T. Kiefer, C. Kull).
Chapter 1. Forcing mechanisms (ed. M. Claussen)
Chapter 2. Methods of palaeoclimate reconstruction and dating (ed. Frank Sirocko)
Chapter 3 Climate and vegetation in Europe during MIS5 (M.F. Sánchez Goni)
Chapter 4. Climate and vegetation history of MIS 5-15 in Europe (Ed. Thomas Litt).
Chapter 5. Modelling past interglacial climates (ed. Martin Claussen)
Chapter 6. Analysis (F. Sirocko, M,.Claussen,
et al.)
Chapter 1. Forcing mechanisms (ed. M. Claussen)
Chapter 2. Methods of palaeoclimate reconstruction and dating (ed. Frank Sirocko)
Chapter 3 Climate and vegetation in Europe during MIS5 (M.F. Sánchez Goni)
Chapter 4. Climate and vegetation history of MIS 5-15 in Europe (Ed. Thomas Litt).
Chapter 5. Modelling past interglacial climates (ed. Martin Claussen)
Chapter 6. Analysis (F. Sirocko, M,.Claussen,
et al.)
Product details
Product details
- Edition: 1
- Latest edition
- Volume: 7
- Published: December 8, 2006
- Language: English
About the editors
About the editors
FS
F. Sirocko
Affiliations and expertise
University of Mainz, GermanyMC
M. Claussen
Affiliations and expertise
Potsdam-Institut fuer Klimafolgenforschung, GermanyTL
T. Litt
Affiliations and expertise
Universitaet Bonn, GermanyMS
M.F. Sanchez-Goni
Affiliations and expertise
University of Bordeaux, Talence, FranceView book on ScienceDirect
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