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The ACER pollen and charcoal database: a global resource to document vegetation and fire response to abrupt climate changes during the last glacial period
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Sánchez Goñi, María Fernanda
Desprat, Stéphanie
Daniau, Anne-Laure
Bassinot, Frank C.
Polanco-Martínez, Josué M.
Harrison, Sandy P.
Allen, Judy R. M.
Anderson, R. Scott
Bonnefille, Raymonde
Burjachs, Francesc
Carrión, José S.
Cheddadi, Rachid
Clark, James S.
Combourieu-Nebout, Nathalie
Mustaphi, Colin. J. Courtney
Debusk, Georg H.
Dupont, Lydie M.
Finch, Jemma M.
Fletcher, William J.
Giardini, Marco
González, Catalina
Gosling, William D.
Grigg, Laurie D.
Grimm, Eric C.
Hayashi, Ryoma
Helmens, Karin
Heusser, Linda E.
Hill, Trevor
Hope, Geoffrey
Huntley, Brian
Igarashi, Yaeko
Irino, Tomohisa
Jacobs, Bonnie
Jiménez-Moreno, Gonzalo
Kawai, Sayuri
Kershaw, A. Peter
Kumon, Fujio
Lawson, Ian T.
Ledru, Marie-Pierre
Lézine, Anne-Marie
Liew, Ping Mei
Magri, Donatella
Marchant, Robert
Margari, Vasiliki
Mayle, Francis E.
McKenzie, G. Merna
Moss, Patrick
Müller, Stefanie
Müller, Ulrich C.
Naughton, Filipa
Newnham, Rewi M.
Oba, Tadamichi
Pérez-Obiol, Ramón
Pini, Roberta
Ravazzi, Cesare
Roucoux, Katy H.
Rucina, Stephen M.
Scott, Louis
Takahara, Hikaru
Tzedakis, Polichronis C.
Urrego, Dunia H.
van Geel, Bas
Valencia, B. Guido
Vandergoes, Marcus J.
Vincens, Annie
Whitlock, Cathy L.
Willard, Debra A.
Yamamoto, Masanobu
DOI
10.5194/essd-9-679-2017
Abstract
Quaternary records provide an opportunity to examine the nature of the vegetation and fire responses to rapid past climate changes comparable in velocity and magnitude to those expected in the 21st-century. The best documented examples of rapid climate change in the past are the warming events associated with the Dansgaard–Oeschger (D–O) cycles during the last glacial period, which were sufficiently large to have had a potential feedback through changes in albedo and greenhouse gas emissions on climate. Previous reconstructions of vegetation and fire changes during the D–O cycles used independently constructed age models, making it difficult to compare the changes between different sites and regions. Here, we present the ACER (Abrupt Climate Changes and Environmental Responses) global database, which includes 93 pollen records from the last glacial period (73–15 ka) with a temporal resolution better than 1000 years, 32 of which also provide charcoal records. A harmonized and consistent chronology based on radiometric dating (14C, 234U=230Th, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL), 40Ar=39Ar-dated tephra layers) has been constructed for 86 of these records, although in some cases additional information was derived using common control points based on event stratigraphy. The ACER database compiles metadata including geospatial and dating information, pollen and charcoal counts, and pollen percentages of the characteristic biomes and is archived in Microsoft AccessTM at https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.870867.