K
Katrina A. Moser
Researcher at University of Western Ontario
Publications - 50
Citations - 1986
Katrina A. Moser is an academic researcher from University of Western Ontario. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Paleolimnology. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 46 publications receiving 1806 citations. Previous affiliations of Katrina A. Moser include University of Toronto & McMaster University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Rapid response of treeline vegetation and lakes to past climate warming
Glen M. MacDonald,Thomas W. D. Edwards,Katrina A. Moser,Katrina A. Moser,Reinhard Pienitz,John P. Smol +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present palaeo-ecological evidence for changes in terrestrial vegetation and lake characteristics during an episode of climate warming that occurred between 5,000 and 4,000 years ago at the boreal treeline in central Canada.
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The reconstruction of boreal forest fire history from lake sediments: A comparison of charcoal, pollen, sedimentological, and geochemical indices
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the local and regional history of fires in the boreal forest with the microscopic charcoal content, macroscopic charcoal, elemental carbon content, fossil pollen content, sedimentology, and geochemistry of annually laminated sediments from a small lake.
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Mountain lakes: Eyes on global environmental change
Katrina A. Moser,Jill S. Baron,Janice Brahney,Isabella A. Oleksy,Jasmine E. Saros,Elizabeth J. Hundey,Steve Sadro,Jiří Kopáček,Ruben Sommaruga,Martin J. Kainz,Angela L. Strecker,Sudeep Chandra,David M. Walters,Daniel L. Preston,Neal Michelutti,Fabio Lepori,Sarah A. Spaulding,Kyle R. Christianson,John M. Melack,John P. Smol +19 more
TL;DR: A review and update of the growing body of research that shows that sediments in remote mountain lakes archive regional and global environmental changes, including those linked to climate change, altered biogeochemical cycles, and changes in dust composition and deposition, atmospheric fertilization, and biological manipulations can be found in this paper.
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Compositional changes in sediments of subalpine lakes, Uinta Mountains (Utah): evidence for the effects of human activity on atmospheric dust inputs
Richard L. Reynolds,Jessica S. Mordecai,Joseph G. Rosenbaum,Michael E. Ketterer,Megan K. Walsh,Katrina A. Moser +5 more
TL;DR: Sediments in Hidden Lake in the Uinta Mountains of northeastern Utah contain records of atmospheric mineral-dust deposition as revealed by differences in mineralogy and geochem-istry of lake sediments relative to Precambrian clastic rocks in the watersheds as mentioned in this paper.
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Applications of freshwater diatoms to geographical research
TL;DR: A review of palaeo-ecological reconstructions that are based on freshwater diatoms is presented in this article, focusing on palaeoencology, hydrology, geomorphology, bio geography, and water quality assessment and monitoring.