K
Kristian Schoning
Researcher at Geological Survey of Sweden
Publications - 19
Citations - 685
Kristian Schoning is an academic researcher from Geological Survey of Sweden. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Peat. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 17 publications receiving 572 citations. Previous affiliations of Kristian Schoning include Stockholm University & University of Plymouth.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Widespread drying of European peatlands in recent centuries
Graeme T. Swindles,Graeme T. Swindles,Graeme T. Swindles,Paul J. Morris,Donal Mullan,Richard J. Payne,Thomas P. Roland,Matthew J. Amesbury,Matthew J. Amesbury,Mariusz Lamentowicz,T. Edward Turner,Angela V. Gallego-Sala,Thomas G. Sim,Iestyn D. Barr,Maarten Blaauw,Antony Blundell,Frank M. Chambers,Dan J. Charman,Angelica Feurdean,Jennifer M. Galloway,Jennifer M. Galloway,Mariusz Gałka,Sophie M. Green,Katarzyna Kajukało,Edgar Karofeld,Atte Korhola,Łukasz Lamentowicz,Peter G. Langdon,Katarzyna Marcisz,Dmitri Mauquoy,Yuri Mazei,Michelle M. McKeown,Edward A. D. Mitchell,Elena Novenko,Elena Novenko,Gill Plunkett,Helen Roe,Kristian Schoning,Ülle Sillasoo,Andrey N. Tsyganov,Andrey N. Tsyganov,Marjolein van der Linden,Minna Väliranta,Barry G. Warner +43 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse testate amoeba-derived hydrological reconstructions from 31 peatlands across Britain, Ireland, Scandinavia and Continental Europe to examine changes in peatland surface wetness during the last 2,000 years.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ecosystem responses to increased precipitation and permafrost decay in subarctic Sweden inferred from peat and lake sediments
Ulla Kokfelt,Peter Rosén,Kristian Schoning,Torben R. Christensen,Johannes Förster,Jan Karlsson,Nina Reuss,Mats Rundgren,Terry V. Callaghan,Terry V. Callaghan,Christer Jonasson,Dan Hammarlund +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors attributed accelerated decay of discontinuous permafrost at the Stordalen Mire in northern Sweden to increased temperature and snow depth, and caused expansion of wet minerotrop...
Journal ArticleDOI
The long-term fate of permafrost peatlands under rapid climate warming
Graeme T. Swindles,Paul J. Morris,Donal Mullan,Elizabeth J. Watson,T. Edward Turner,Thomas P. Roland,Matthew J. Amesbury,Ulla Kokfelt,Kristian Schoning,Steve Pratte,Angela V. Gallego-Sala,Dan J. Charman,Nicole K. Sanderson,Michelle Garneau,Jonathan L. Carrivick,Clare Woulds,Joseph Holden,Lauren Parry,Jennifer M. Galloway +18 more
TL;DR: A high-resolution palaeoecological approach is used to understand the longer-term response of peatlands in contrasting states of permafrost degradation to recent rapid warming and suggests a shared ecohydrological trajectory towards a common end point: inundated Arctic fen.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reconstructed water tables from two ombrotrophic mires in eastern central Sweden compared with instrumental meteorological data
TL;DR: Water-level changes for the last 125 years were reconstructed from two ombrotrophic mires in eastern central Sweden using testate amoebae assemblages as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI
A comparative study of peat proxies from two eastern central Swedish bogs and their relation to meteorological data
TL;DR: In this paper, a comparison between a peat humification record from Varmland, southcentral Sweden, and a dendrochronological record from Jamtland, north-central Sweden indicates several synchronous changes between drier and wetter climate.