S
Sandrine Solignac
Researcher at Université du Québec à Montréal
Publications - 23
Citations - 2001
Sandrine Solignac is an academic researcher from Université du Québec à Montréal. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sea ice & Holocene. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 22 publications receiving 1838 citations. Previous affiliations of Sandrine Solignac include Aarhus University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Constraints on the magnitude and patterns of ocean cooling at the Last Glacial Maximum
Claire Waelbroeck,André Paul,Michal Kucera,Antoni Rosell-Melé,Mara Weinelt,Ralph R Schneider,Alan C. Mix,Andrea Abelmann,Leanne K. Armand,Edouard Bard,Stephen Barker,Timothy T. Barrows,Heather M. Benway,Isabel Cacho,Min-Te Chen,Elsa Cortijo,Xavier Crosta,A. de Vernal,Trond Dokken,Josette Duprat,Henry Elderfield,Frédérique Eynaud,Rainer Gersonde,A. Hayes,Maryse Henry,Claude Hillaire-Marcel,C.-C. Huang,Eystein Jansen,Steve Juggins,Nejib Kallel,Thorsten Kiefer,Markus Kienast,L. Labeyrie,Héloïse Leclaire,Laurent Londeix,Sylvie Mangin,Jens Matthiessen,Fabienne Marret,Marius Y. Meland,Ann E Morey,Stefan Mulitza,Uwe Pflaumann,Nicklas G Pisias,T. Radi,André Rochon,Eelco J. Rohling,Laura Sbaffi,C. Schäfer-Neth,Sandrine Solignac,Howard J. Spero,Kazuyo Tachikawa,Jean-Louis Turon +51 more
TL;DR: This article presented an updated synthesis of sea surface temperatures during the Last Glacial Maximum, rigorously defined as the period between 23 and 19 thousand years before present, from the Multiproxy Approach for the Reconstruction of the Glacial Ocean Surface (MARGO) project.
Journal ArticleDOI
Atlas of modern dinoflagellate cyst distribution based on 2405 data points
Karin A F Zonneveld,Fabienne Marret,Gerard J M Versteegh,Kara Bogus,Sophie Bonnet,Ilham Bouimetarhan,Erica M. Crouch,Anne de Vernal,Rehab Elshanawany,Rehab Elshanawany,Lucy E. Edwards,Oliver Esper,Sven Forke,Kari Grøsfjeld,Maryse Henry,Ulrike Holzwarth,Jean-François Kielt,So-Young Kim,Stéphanie Ladouceur,David Ledu,Liang Chen,Audrey Limoges,Laurent Londeix,S.-H. Lu,Magdy S. Mahmoud,Gianluca Marino,Gianluca Marino,Kazumi Matsouka,Jens Matthiessen,D.C. Mildenhal,Peta J. Mudie,Helen L Neil,Vera Pospelova,Yuzao Qi,Taoufik Radi,Thomas Richerol,André Rochon,Francesca Sangiorgi,Sandrine Solignac,Jean-Louis Turon,Thomas Verleye,Yan Wang,Zhaohui Wang,Marty Young +43 more
TL;DR: This Atlas summarises the modern global distribution of 71 organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst species and examines the relationship between seasonal and annual variations of these parameters and the relative abundance of the species.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reconstruction of sea-surface conditions at middle to high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) based on dinoflagellate cyst assemblages
A. de Vernal,Frédérique Eynaud,Maryse Henry,Claude Hillaire-Marcel,Laurent Londeix,Sylvie Mangin,Jens Matthiessen,Fabienne Marret,Taoufik Radi,André Rochon,Sandrine Solignac,Jean-Louis Turon +11 more
TL;DR: A database of census counts of organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst (dinocyst) assemblages has been developed from the analyses of surface sediment samples collected at middle to high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere after standardisation of taxonomy and laboratory procedures as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dinocyst-based reconstructions of sea ice cover concentration during the Holocene in the Arctic Ocean, the northern North Atlantic Ocean and its adjacent seas
Anne de Vernal,Claude Hillaire-Marcel,André Rochon,Bianca Fréchette,Maryse Henry,Sandrine Solignac,Sophie Bonnet +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reconstructed the sea ice cover in terms of mean annual concentration from the application of the modern analogue technique to dinocyst assemblages, using an updated database, which includes 1492 sites and 66 taxa.
Journal ArticleDOI
Holocene sea-surface conditions in the North Atlantic—contrasted trends and regimes in the western and eastern sectors (Labrador Sea vs. Iceland Basin)
TL;DR: In this article, two sediment cores from the Labrador Sea and one from the Iceland Basin were analysed in order to compare Holocene sea-surface conditions across the northern North Atlantic, showing a decreasing trend in sea surface temperature following an early Holocene maximum, is observed.