Journal article

Changes in fire regimes since the last glacial maximum: An assessment based on a global synthesis and analysis of charcoal data

MJ Power, J Marlon, N Ortiz, PJ Bartlein, SP Harrison, FE Mayle, A Ballouche, RHW Bradshaw, C Carcaillet, C Cordova, S Mooney, PI Moreno, IC Prentice, K Thonicke, W Tinner, C Whitlock, Y Zhang, Y Zhao, AA Ali, RS Anderson Show all

Climate Dynamics | Published : 2008

Abstract

Fire activity has varied globally and continuously since the last glacial maximum (LGM) in response to long-term changes in global climate and shorter-term regional changes in climate, vegetation, and human land use. We have synthesized sedimentary charcoal records of biomass burning since the LGM and present global maps showing changes in fire activity for time slices during the past 21,000 years (as differences in charcoal accumulation values compared to pre-industrial). There is strong broad-scale coherence in fire activity after the LGM, but spatial heterogeneity in the signals increases thereafter. In North America, Europe and southern South America, charcoal records indicate less-than-..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers