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Arne Micheels

Researcher at American Museum of Natural History

Publications -  19
Citations -  1078

Arne Micheels is an academic researcher from American Museum of Natural History. The author has contributed to research in topics: Late Miocene & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 19 publications receiving 984 citations. Previous affiliations of Arne Micheels include University of Tübingen.

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Distribution history and climatic controls of the Late Miocene Pikermian chronofauna

TL;DR: The rise and fall of the classic Pikermian fossil mammal chronofauna between 12 and 4.2 Ma is mapped, using genus-level faunal similarity between localities and paleoclimate modeling to directly relate land mammal community evolution to environmental change.
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A Late Miocene climate model simulation with ECHAM4/ML and its quantitative validation with terrestrial proxy data

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a model simulation using the atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM) ECHAM4 coupled to a mixed-layer (ML) ocean model for the Tortonian (11 to 7 Ma) climate.
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Cenozoic climate gradients in Eurasia — a palaeo-perspective on future climate change?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared past climate data from micro-and macro-floras using the Coexistence Approach in order to compare past gradients and patterns and their anomalies relative to present-day conditions with future climate change scenarios.
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Asynchronous responses of East Asian and Indian summer monsoons to mountain uplift shown by regional climate modelling experiments

TL;DR: In this paper, sensitivity experiments considering the diachronous growth of different parts of the Asian orography are performed using the regional climate model COSMO-CLM to investigate their effects on the Asian summer monsoons.
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Neogene aridification of the Northern Hemisphere

TL;DR: This article used community levels of hypsodonty to estimate precipitation during the Neogene (the past 23 Ma) and showed that aridification was more profound and occurred ∼5 Ma earlier in North America than in Eurasia.