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Teresa E.V. Spicer

Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publications -  45
Citations -  1681

Teresa E.V. Spicer is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Monsoon & Palynology. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 38 publications receiving 1212 citations. Previous affiliations of Teresa E.V. Spicer include Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden & Open University.

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Quantifying the rise of the Himalaya orogen and implications for the South Asian monsoon

TL;DR: The authors reconstructs the rise of a segment of the southern flank of the Himalaya-Tibet orogen, to the south of the Lhasa terrane, using a paleoaltimeter based on paleoenthalpy encoded in fossil leaves from two new assemblages in southern Tibet (Liuqu and Qiabulin) and four previously known floras from the foreland basin.
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Miocene to Pleistocene floras and climate of the Eastern Himalayan Siwaliks, and new palaeoelevation estimates for the Namling–Oiyug Basin, Tibet

TL;DR: In this article, four fossil floras ranging in age from the mid Miocene to the early Pleistocene from the eastern Siwaliks near Darjeeling and in Arunachal Pradesh (AP) were compared taxonomically and subjected to a CLAMP (Climate Leaf Analysis Multivariate Program) analysis using a new calibration dataset that includes sites from India, southern China and Thailand and high resolution gridded climate data.
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‘CLAMP Online’: a new web-based palaeoclimate tool and its application to the terrestrial Paleogene and Neogene of North America

TL;DR: CLAMP Online as mentioned in this paper is a form-driven web facility enabling Climate Leaf Analysis Multivariate Program (CLAMP) palaeoclimate determinations to be conducted in their entirety without the need for additional software.
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Cool equatorial terrestrial temperatures and the South Asian monsoon in the Early Eocene: Evidence from the Gurha Mine, Rajasthan, India

TL;DR: In this paper, a multivariate foliar physiognomic analysis of two horizons separated by an estimated several tens of thousands of years of deposition in the Gurha Mine (27.87398°N, 72.86709°E), Rajasthan, India, yield a diversity of fossil leaves, flowers, fruits, seeds and insects.