Article

Understanding the impacts of Late Quaternary climate change in tropical and sub-tropical regions

Details

Citation

Thomas M (2008) Understanding the impacts of Late Quaternary climate change in tropical and sub-tropical regions. Geomorphology, 101 (1-2), pp. 146-158. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2008.05.026

Abstract
The understanding of climate impacts on tropical rivers and catchments has developed, in part, from models developed for temperate landscapes, and a common rhythm is often apparent when millennial-scale studies are compared. At this level issues arising from the complex response of rivers to internal and external factors appear less important than the climate-driven signal. Understanding the fluvial record, however, depends on the availability and interpretation of other sources of proxy data such as pollen spectra, lake levels and ocean In many rainforest areas few pollen records exist and many of these reveal a hiatus at the time of the cores. Last Glacial Maximum. Examples of fluvial archives from Africa, Indonesia and tropical Queensland. Australia are discussed in relation to independent records of vegetation change and inferences are made concerning critical episodes in fluvial history, focusing on the transitions from Oxygen Isotope Stage (OIS)3 towards 'glacial' conditions in OIS2 and the Pleistocene-Holocene transition to modern climates. Links between climate, vegetation change and fluvial activity are presented as descriptive models.

Keywords
activities; AFRICA; AREAS; AUSTRALIA; AVAILABILITY; C; CLIMATE; climate change; CLIMATE-CHANGE; COMPLEX; data; EXAMPLE; factors; HISTORY; IMPACT; IMPACTS; Inference; ISSUES; LAKE; Landscape; landscapes; Late Quaternary; LATE-QUATERNARY; LEVEL; levels; model; Models; OCEAN; other; QUATERNARY; quaternary climate change; QUEENSLAND; RECORD; REGION; regions; RIVER; SPECTRA; spectrum; time; transition; transitions; understanding; VEGETATION

Journal
Geomorphology: Volume 101, Issue 1-2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/10/2008
PublisherELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Place of publicationAMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
ISSN0169-555X

People (1)

Professor Mike Thomas

Professor Mike Thomas

Emeritus Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences