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Christine Hatté

Researcher at Université Paris-Saclay

Publications -  141
Citations -  18673

Christine Hatté is an academic researcher from Université Paris-Saclay. The author has contributed to research in topics: Loess & Glacial period. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 129 publications receiving 17484 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine Hatté include University of Arizona & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Reconstruction of the Grande Pile Eemian using inverse modeling of biomes and δ13C

TL;DR: In this article, a new method to reconstruct past climatic conditions between 130 and 100 ka BP from pollen and isotopic data is applied to a previously unanalyzed Grande Pile core, GPXXI.
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Evènements éoliens rapides dans les Loess du Pléniglaciaire supérieur Weichselien : l'exemple de la séquence de Nussloch (vallée du Rhin-Allemagne)

TL;DR: In this paper, a mesure indirecte des variations de la dynamique eolienne and du taux de sedimentation au moment du depot des materiaux loessiques, particulierement rapide and discontinue, correspond to a succession of phases de depot rapides separees par des periodes d'arret or de forte reduction du flux eolien de quelques siecles.
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Rapid climatic changes of the last 90 kyr recorded on the European continent

TL;DR: Genty et al. as mentioned in this paper used three types of continental archives (the loess deposits, the pollen assemblage record of a continental margin core and speleothems) spread on western Europe along a SW-NE profile, give information about the humidity, temperature and vegetation changes that were due to these millennial scale climatic changes.
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Radiocarbon Calibration by Means of Varves Versus 14C Ages of Terrestrial Macrofossils from Lake Gościąż and Lake Perespilno, Poland

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present radiocarbon dates of terrestrial macrofossils from Lakes Gościąz and Perespilno, Poland, which agree very well with most of the German pine calibration curve.
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Compound-specific 13 C and 14 C measurements improve the understanding of soil organic matter dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, compound-specific isotopic analyses were used to assess the dynamics and origin of organic matter in soils across a 30-year chronosequence where native savanna (C4) had been replaced with eucalyptus (C3).