P
Peter Rosén
Researcher at Umeå University
Publications - 49
Citations - 2802
Peter Rosén is an academic researcher from Umeå University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Total organic carbon & Arctic. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 49 publications receiving 2531 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter Rosén include Abisko Scientific Research Station.
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Journal ArticleDOI
2.8 Million Years of Arctic Climate Change from Lake El’gygytgyn, NE Russia
Martin Melles,Julie Brigham-Grette,Pavel S Minyuk,Norbert R. Nowaczyk,Volker Wennrich,Robert M. DeConto,Patricia M. Anderson,Andrei Andreev,Anthony Coletti,Timothy L Cook,Eeva Haltia-Hovi,Maaret Kukkonen,Anatoli V. Lozhkin,Peter Rosén,Pavel E. Tarasov,Hendrik Vogel,Bernd Wagner +16 more
TL;DR: A 2.8-million-year record of Arctic climate is developed using a sediment core from a lake in northeastern Russia that was formed more than 3.5 million years ago by a meteorite impact, suggesting strong interhemispheric climate connectivity.
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Pliocene Warmth, Polar Amplification, and Stepped Pleistocene Cooling Recorded in NE Arctic Russia
Julie Brigham-Grette,Martin Melles,Pavel S Minyuk,Andrei Andreev,Pavel E. Tarasov,Robert M. DeConto,S. J. Koenig,Norbert R. Nowaczyk,Volker Wennrich,Peter Rosén,Eeva Haltia,Timothy L Cook,Catalina Gebhardt,Carsten Meyer-Jacob,Jeff Snyder,Ulrike Herzschuh +15 more
TL;DR: Data from Lake El'gygytgyn, in northeast Arctic Russia, is presented that shows how climate varied between 3.6 and 2.2 million years ago, an important interval in the global cooling trend that accelerated rapidly at the end of the Miocene.
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A lacustrine GDGT-temperature calibration from the Scandinavian Arctic to Antarctic : Renewed potential for the application of GDGT-paleothermometry in lakes
Emma J. Pearson,Steve Juggins,Helen M. Talbot,Jan Weckström,Peter Rosén,David B. Ryves,Stephen Roberts,Roland Schmidt +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a method to understand long-term trends in natural climate variability and to test climate models used to predict future climate change, which is fundamental to understanding longterm trends.
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A paleoclimate record with tephrochronological age control for the last glacial-interglacial cycle from Lake Ohrid, Albania and Macedonia
TL;DR: In this article, a 15m-long sediment succession from Lake Ohrid is reconstructed using lithological, sedimentological, geochemical and physical proxy analysis, and a chronological framework is derived from tephrochronology and radiocarbon dating.
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Diatom transfer-functions for quantifying past air temperature, pH and total organic carbon concentration from lakes in northern Sweden
TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between diatoms (Bacillariophyceae) in surface sediments of lakes and summer air temperature, pH and total organic carbon concentration (TOC) was explored along a steep climatic...