Richard Telford’s Blog
@richardjtelford
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- Resampling Assemblage Counts
- A demo targets plan for reproducible pipelines for Neotoma data
- Reproducibility of high resolution reconstruction – one year on
- Simplistic and Dangerous Models
- COVID-19, climate and the plague of preprints
- Erroneous information … was given
- Making a pollen diagram from Neotoma
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Tag Archives: LGM
My presentation at EGU2014
Getting into the right session at EGU is partly a matter of luck. This year I was in session CL2.2 “Paleoclimates from the Cretaceous to the Holocene: learning from numerical experiments and model-data comparisons” and was lucky to follow two … Continue reading
Clumped Isotopes and the Pacific Warm Pool at the Last Glacial Maximum
How warm were the tropical oceans at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), 21 thousand years ago? A good estimate would be valuable for several reasons. First, it would help us to understand LGM climates and the ecological response to this … Continue reading
Posted in climate, Novel proxies, Peer reviewed literature
Tagged Clumped isotope palaeothermometry, LGM, SST, Tripati et al 2014
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