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Warren J. Eastwood
Researcher at University of Birmingham
Publications - 51
Citations - 3055
Warren J. Eastwood is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Tephra. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 51 publications receiving 2682 citations. Previous affiliations of Warren J. Eastwood include Aberystwyth University.
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Climatic, vegetation and cultural change in the eastern Mediterranean during the mid-Holocene environmental transition
TL;DR: In this article, stable isotope data from lake and deep-sea sediment cores and from cave speleothems show an overall trend from a wetter to a drier climate during the mid Holocene.
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Stable isotope records of Late Quaternary climate and hydrology from Mediterranean lakes : the ISOMED synthesis
Neil Roberts,Matthew Jones,A. Benkaddour,Warren J. Eastwood,M. L. Filippi,M. R. Frogley,Henry F. Lamb,Melanie J. Leng,Melanie J. Leng,Jane M. Reed,Mordechai Stein,Lora Stevens,Blas L. Valero-Garcés,Giovanni Zanchetta +13 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors place modern and palaeo-data within a simple conceptual lake response model to show that the isotope hydrology of most Mediterranean lakes has been influenced strongly by water balance, even in those systems that are chemically dilute.
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Holocene climate change in the eastern Mediterranean region: a comparison of stable isotope and pollen data from Lake Gölhisar, southwest Turkey
TL;DR: Stable isotope and pollen data from Golhisar Golu, a small intramontane lake located in southwest Turkey, provide complementary records of Holocene climate change.
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Tephrostratigraphy, chronology and climatic events of the Mediterranean basin during the Holocene: an overview
Giovanni Zanchetta,Roberto Sulpizio,Neil Roberts,Raffaello Cioni,Warren J. Eastwood,Giuseppe Siani,Benoit Caron,Martine Paterne,Roberto Santacroce +8 more
TL;DR: The presence of time-spaced tephra beds in Quaternary Mediterranean successions represents an additional, independent tool for dating and correlating different sedimentary archives as discussed by the authors.
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Holocene environmental change in southwest Turkey: a palaeoecological record of lake and catchment-related changes
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used microfossil assemblages from the longest sediment core (GHA: 813 cm) to record changes in local and regional vegetation and lake productivity over the last &9500 years.