L
Lionel Carter
Researcher at Victoria University of Wellington
Publications - 172
Citations - 8099
Lionel Carter is an academic researcher from Victoria University of Wellington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Continental shelf & Terrigenous sediment. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 171 publications receiving 7358 citations. Previous affiliations of Lionel Carter include James Cook University & Indiana State University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Obliquity-paced Pliocene West Antarctic ice sheet oscillations
Tim R Naish,Tim R Naish,Ross D. Powell,Richard H. Levy,Richard H. Levy,Gary S. Wilson,Reed P. Scherer,Franco M Talarico,Lawrence A. Krissek,Frank Niessen,Massimo Pompilio,Terry J. Wilson,Lionel Carter,Robert M. DeConto,Peter Huybers,Robert M. McKay,David Pollard,James Ross,D. Winter,Peter Barrett,Greg H. Browne,Rosemary Cody,Rosemary Cody,Ellen A. Cowan,James S. Crampton,Gavin B. Dunbar,Nelia W. Dunbar,Fabio Florindo,Catalina Gebhardt,Ian J. Graham,M. J. Hannah,Dhiresh Hansaraj,Dhiresh Hansaraj,David M. Harwood,D. Helling,Stuart Henrys,Linda A. Hinnov,Gerhard Kuhn,Philip R. Kyle,Andreas Läufer,P. Maffioli,Diana Magens,Kevin W. Mandernack,William C. McIntosh,C. Millan,Roger H. Morin,Christian Ohneiser,Timothy Paulsen,Davide Persico,Ian Raine,J. Reed,J. Reed,Christina R. Riesselman,Leonardo Sagnotti,Douglas R. Schmitt,Charlotte Sjunneskog,P. Strong,Marco Taviani,S. W. Vogel,T. I. Wilch,Trevor Williams +60 more
TL;DR: A marine glacial record from the upper 600 m of the AND-1B sediment core recovered from beneath the northwest part of the Ross ice shelf is presented and well-dated, ∼40-kyr cyclic variations in ice-sheet extent linked to cycles in insolation influenced by changes in the Earth’s axial tilt (obliquity) during the Pliocene are demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI
Towards a climate event stratigraphy for New Zealand over the past 30 000 years (NZ‐INTIMATE project)
Brent V. Alloway,David J. Lowe,David J.A. Barrell,Rewi M. Newnham,Peter C. Almond,Paul Augustinus,Nancy A. N. Bertler,Lionel Carter,Nicola Litchfield,Matt S. McGlone,Jamie Shulmeister,Marcus J. Vandergoes,Paul W. Williams,Nz-Intimate members +13 more
TL;DR: The New Zealand Intimate project as mentioned in this paper has developed an event stratigraphy for the New Zealand region over the past 30 000 years, and to reconcile these events against the established climatostratigraphy of the last glacial cycle which has largely been developed from Northern Hemisphere records.
Journal ArticleDOI
Antarctic and Southern Ocean influences on Late Pliocene global cooling.
Robert M. McKay,Tim R Naish,Lionel Carter,Christina R. Riesselman,Robert B. Dunbar,Charlotte Sjunneskog,D. Winter,Francesca Sangiorgi,C. Warren,Mark Pagani,Stefan Schouten,Verónica Willmott,Richard H. Levy,Robert M. DeConto,Ross D. Powell +14 more
TL;DR: Evidence for a major expansion of an ice sheet in the Ross Sea that began at ∼3.3 Ma, followed by a coastal sea surface temperature cooling of ∼2.5 °C, indicates an additional role played by southern high-latitude cooling during development of the bipolar world.
Journal ArticleDOI
Antarctic contribution to meltwater pulse 1A from reduced Southern Ocean overturning
Nicholas R. Golledge,Nicholas R. Golledge,Laurie Menviel,Lionel Carter,Christopher J. Fogwill,Matthew H. England,Giuseppe Cortese,Richard H. Levy +7 more
TL;DR: Results reveal several episodes of accelerated ice-sheet recession, the largest being coincident with meltwater pulse 1A, which resulted from reduced Southern Ocean overturning following Heinrich Event 1, when warmer subsurface water thermally eroded grounded marine-based ice and instigated a positive feedback that further acceleratedIce-sheet retreat.
Journal ArticleDOI
The stratigraphic signature of the late Cenozoic Antarctic Ice Sheets in the Ross Embayment
Robert M. McKay,Greg H. Browne,Lionel Carter,Ellen A. Cowan,Gavin B. Dunbar,Lawrence A. Krissek,Tim R Naish,Tim R Naish,Ross D. Powell,Josh Reed,Franco M Talarico,T. I. Wilch +11 more
TL;DR: A 1284.87m-long sediment core (AND-1B) from beneath the McMurdo sector of the Ross Ice Shelf provides the most complete single section record to date of fluctuations of the Antarctic Ice Sheets over the last 13 Ma.