Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland. / Funder, Svend Visby; Abrahamsen, Niels.

In: Boreas, Vol. 17, 1988, p. 195-207.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Funder, SV & Abrahamsen, N 1988, 'Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland', Boreas, vol. 17, pp. 195-207.

APA

Funder, S. V., & Abrahamsen, N. (1988). Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland. Boreas, 17, 195-207.

Vancouver

Funder SV, Abrahamsen N. Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland. Boreas. 1988;17:195-207.

Author

Funder, Svend Visby ; Abrahamsen, Niels. / Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland. In: Boreas. 1988 ; Vol. 17. pp. 195-207.

Bibtex

@article{7366ce3dcbe1441ca48783b82e37fde9,
title = "Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland",
abstract = "history back to c. 7,000 years calBP (6,000 years convBP) in this·extreme environment, which presents the coldest thermal regime where vascular plants can grow. The diagram shows that polar desert developed from sparse high arctic tundra at c. 4,300 years calBP (3,900 years convBP), owing to reduced summer heat. Also adjacent parts of high arctic Greenland, Canada and Svalbard suffered environmental decline, and polar deserts- presently restricted to a narrow fringe of land at the shores of the Arctic Ocean-were even more restricted before this time. Like other arctic vegetation types, polar desert is highly sensitive to summer temperatures, and its southern limit coincides with the isotherm for mean July temperatures of 3.5'C, A comparison with the Northwest European ice-age pollen record shows no evidence of summers as cold as those now prevailing in the extreme north, and the results support the contention that the present Arctic and the ice-age mid-latitude environments are not identical.",
author = "Funder, {Svend Visby} and Niels Abrahamsen",
year = "1988",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "195--207",
journal = "Boreas",
issn = "0300-9483",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Palynology in a polar desert, eastern North Greenland

AU - Funder, Svend Visby

AU - Abrahamsen, Niels

PY - 1988

Y1 - 1988

N2 - history back to c. 7,000 years calBP (6,000 years convBP) in this·extreme environment, which presents the coldest thermal regime where vascular plants can grow. The diagram shows that polar desert developed from sparse high arctic tundra at c. 4,300 years calBP (3,900 years convBP), owing to reduced summer heat. Also adjacent parts of high arctic Greenland, Canada and Svalbard suffered environmental decline, and polar deserts- presently restricted to a narrow fringe of land at the shores of the Arctic Ocean-were even more restricted before this time. Like other arctic vegetation types, polar desert is highly sensitive to summer temperatures, and its southern limit coincides with the isotherm for mean July temperatures of 3.5'C, A comparison with the Northwest European ice-age pollen record shows no evidence of summers as cold as those now prevailing in the extreme north, and the results support the contention that the present Arctic and the ice-age mid-latitude environments are not identical.

AB - history back to c. 7,000 years calBP (6,000 years convBP) in this·extreme environment, which presents the coldest thermal regime where vascular plants can grow. The diagram shows that polar desert developed from sparse high arctic tundra at c. 4,300 years calBP (3,900 years convBP), owing to reduced summer heat. Also adjacent parts of high arctic Greenland, Canada and Svalbard suffered environmental decline, and polar deserts- presently restricted to a narrow fringe of land at the shores of the Arctic Ocean-were even more restricted before this time. Like other arctic vegetation types, polar desert is highly sensitive to summer temperatures, and its southern limit coincides with the isotherm for mean July temperatures of 3.5'C, A comparison with the Northwest European ice-age pollen record shows no evidence of summers as cold as those now prevailing in the extreme north, and the results support the contention that the present Arctic and the ice-age mid-latitude environments are not identical.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 195

EP - 207

JO - Boreas

JF - Boreas

SN - 0300-9483

ER -

ID: 35117422