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Anna F. Jones

Researcher at University College Dublin

Publications -  28
Citations -  1115

Anna F. Jones is an academic researcher from University College Dublin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Flood myth. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 28 publications receiving 989 citations. Previous affiliations of Anna F. Jones include Edge Hill University & Aberystwyth University.

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River response to rapid Holocene environmental change: evidence and explanation in British catchments

TL;DR: Macklin, M. G., Jones, A. F., Lewin, J. (2010). River response to rapid Holocene environmental change: evidence and explanation in British catchments.
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High-resolution interpretative geomorphological mapping of river valley environments using airborne LiDAR data

TL;DR: In this article, the use of airborne LiDAR data and GIS technology facilitates the rapid production of geomorphological maps of floodplain environments; however, unfiltered data, which include vegetation and buildings, are currently more suitable for geomorphology mapping than data that have been filtered to remove these features.
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Holocene flooding and climate change in the Mediterranean

TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial and temporal distribution of extreme Holocene hydrological events recorded in fluvial stratigraphy in the Iberian Peninsula (Spain and Portugal), southern France, southern Italy, and eastern Mediterranean (Greece, Crete, Turkey, Cyprus and Israel).
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Recurring flood distribution patterns related to short-term Holocene climatic variability

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of more than 2000 radiometrically dated flood units to reconstruct centennial-scale Holocene flood episodes in Europe and North Africa reveals complex but geographically highly interconnected climate-flood relationships, and provides a new framework to understand likely future spatial changes of flood frequency.
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Anthropogenic alluvium: an evidence-based meta-analysis for the UK Holocene

TL;DR: An exploratory meta-analysis of 14C-dated Holocene anthropogenic alluvium (AA) in the UK is presented in this article, where AA units were categorized by grain size, catchment area and location, depositional environment, and according to diagnostic criteria linked to recorded types of anthropogenic activity.