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Kevin J. Anchukaitis

Researcher at University of Arizona

Publications -  143
Citations -  11540

Kevin J. Anchukaitis is an academic researcher from University of Arizona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Global warming. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 129 publications receiving 9246 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin J. Anchukaitis include Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution & University of Tennessee.

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A Homogeneous Record (1896–2006) of Daily Weather and Climate at Mohonk Lake, New York*

TL;DR: Mohonk Lake, New York, is a continuous, long-term (1896-2006) daily weather record from Mohonk lake as mentioned in this paper, which is optimal for daily climate analyses.
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Reconstructed summer temperatures over the last 400 years based on larch ring widths: Sakhalin Island, Russian Far East

TL;DR: A ring-width record from the eastern flanks of the Eastern Sakhalin Range (Sakhalin Island, Russian Federation) has been used for the reconstruction of May-July average temperatures for the past 400 years.
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A Band Model of Cambium Development: Opportunities and Prospects

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a band model of cambium development, based on the kinetic heterogeneity of the cambial zone and the connectivity of the cell structure, which can be effectively used to estimate the seasonal cell production for individual trees.
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A re-appraisal of the ENSO response to volcanism with paleoclimate data assimilation

TL;DR: The authors found only a weak statistical association between volcanism and ENSO, and identified the selection of volcanic events as a key variable to the conclusion, and discussed the difficulties of conclusively establishing a volcanic influence on ENSI by empirical means, given the myriad factors affecting the response.
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Tree-ring reconstructions of cool season temperature for far southeastern Australia, 1731–2007

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented 277-year reconstructions of cool season (July-October) temperatures for southern Australia based on three different data sets: a spatial field reconstruction based on highly resolved temperature data from the Australian Water Availability Product data, reconstructions for the four southeast Australian states based on the Berkeley Earth mean temperature data for each state.