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Jacqueline Flückiger

Researcher at University of Bern

Publications -  24
Citations -  9934

Jacqueline Flückiger is an academic researcher from University of Bern. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ice core & Glacial period. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 24 publications receiving 9194 citations. Previous affiliations of Jacqueline Flückiger include ETH Zurich & Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research.

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Isotope calibrated Greenland temperature record over Marine Isotope Stage 3 and its relation to CH4

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a continuous temperature record based on high resolution δ15N measurements and firn model studies, which covers a sequence of 9 Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) events (9−17) during the time period from 38 to 64 kyr BP for which temperature changes of 8 to 15 °C were estimated.
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Strong hemispheric coupling of glacial climate through freshwater discharge and ocean circulation

TL;DR: An extended and quantitative bipolar seesaw concept is presented that explains the timing and amplitude of Greenland and Antarctic temperature changes, the slow changes in Antarctic temperature and its similarity to sea level, as well as a possible time lag of sea level with respect to Antarctic temperature during Marine Isotope Stage 3.
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Marine radiocarbon evidence for the mechanism of deglacial atmospheric CO2 rise.

TL;DR: The timing of intermediate-water radiocarbon depletion closely matches that of atmospheric carbon dioxide rise and effectively traces the redistribution of carbon from the deep ocean to the atmosphere during deglaciation.
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Variations in Atmospheric N2O Concentration During Abrupt Climatic Changes

TL;DR: Records covering the last glacial-interglacial transition and a fast climatic change during the last ice age show that the N2O concentration changed in parallel with fast temperature variations in the Northern Hemisphere.
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High-resolution Holocene N2O ice core record and its relationship with CH4 and CO2

TL;DR: In this paper, high-resolution N 2 O records from the European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA) Dome C Antarctic ice core were used to compare variations of the three most important greenhouse gases (after water vapor) without any uncertainty in their relative timing.