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Hydroclimate and fire paleorecords across the southern Rockies and Colorado Plateau over the common era

December 1, 2022

The southwestern US has been experiencing a severe drought and increased fire activity over the past two decades, affecting people’s health, homes, and businesses. Many individual fires occurring in the Southwest are the most severe in recorded history both in terms of dollars of damages as well as in fire extent. It is essential to be able to place the present drought and fires into the context of the current changing climate as well as in the framework of climate variability and human activity over centennial to millennial timescales. Dendrochronology can determine both the seasonality of fires as well as changes in precipitation. Charcoal, pollen, and the biomarkers levoglucosan, mannosan, and galactosan can help determine fire activity and the type of burned vegetation. People have controlled and utilized fire in the southwestern US for thousands of years. While proxies cannot yet determine if people ignited a specific fire, fecal sterols can determine if people were within an individual watershed. Here, we examine the strengths and weaknesses of using high-resolution tree-ring data in conjunction with biomarkers in ice and lake cores from the southwestern US to study interactions between changes in hydroclimate, fires, and human activity. 

Publication Year 2023
Title Hydroclimate and fire paleorecords across the southern Rockies and Colorado Plateau over the common era
Authors Natalie M. Kehrwald, Rebecca Lynn Brice
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70248260
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center
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