Guido van Reenen
University of Amsterdam
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Featured researches published by Guido van Reenen.
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2001
Rob Marchant; Hermann Behling; Juan Carlos Berrio; A.M. Cleef; Joost F. Duivenvoorden; H. Hooghiemstra; Peter Kuhry; B. Melief; Bas van Geel; Thomas van der Hammen; Guido van Reenen; Michael Wille
Abstract The assignment of Colombian pollen data to biomes allows the data to be synthesised at 10 ‘time windows’ from the present-day to 6000 radiocarbon years before present (BP). The modern reconstructed biomes are compared to a map of modern potential vegetation to check the applicability of the method and the a priori assignment of pollen taxa to plant functional types and ultimately biomes. The reconstructed modern biomes are successful in describing the composition and distribution of modern vegetation. In particular, altitudinal variations in vegetation within the northern Andean Cordilleras are well described. At 6000 BP the biomes are mainly characteristic of warmer environmental conditions relative to those of the present-day. This trend continues until between 4000 and 3000 BP when there is a shift to more mesic vegetation that is thought to equate to an increase in precipitation levels. The period between 2500 and 1000 BP represents little or no change in biome assignment and is interpreted as a period of environmental stability. The influence attributed to human-induced impact on the vegetation is recorded from 5000 BP, but is particularly important from 2000 BP. The extent of this impact increases over the Late-Holocene period, and is recorded at increasingly high altitudes. Despite these changes, a number of sites do not change their biome assignment throughout the analysis. This asynchronous vegetation response is discussed within the context of site location, non-linear response of vegetation to Late-Holocene environmental change, regionally differential signals, localised human impact and methodological artefacts.
Antiquity | 2004
Rob Marchant; Hermann Behling; Juan Carlos Berrio; H. Hooghiemstra; Bas van Geel; Thomas van der Hammen; Luisa Fernanda Herrera; B. Melief; Guido van Reenen; Michael Wille
Palaeoecologists using pollen to map vegetation since the last ice age have noted numerous changes – which they feel increasingly obliged to blame on humans. These changes, such as deforestation or the dominance of certain plants, may happen suddenly or take place over thousands of years. The authors study the pollen record in Colombia, identify plants diagnostic of cultivation or disturbed ground (“degraded vegetation”) and use them to map human activities by proxy. They show how the people move and the landscape changes between 5000 BP and the present day, from the coast inland, and from the lowlands up into the Andes.
The Holocene | 2014
Barbara Gravendeel; Albert Protopopov; Ian D. Bull; Elza Duijm; Fiona L. Gill; Aline M. Nieman; Natalia Rudaya; Alexei Tikhonov; Svetlana Trofimova; Guido van Reenen; Rutger A. Vos; Snezhana Zhilich; Bas van Geel
The last meal of a horse that lived in the northern part of the Sakha Republic (Russia) c. 5400 years ago was studied using pollen, spores, botanical macroremains, lipid composition, and ancient DNA in order to reconstruct its components. Pollen of Poaceae was superabundant, but this may be because of over-representation as a consequence of grazed inflorescenses of grasses. We evaluate the paleo-environmental indicator value of the different methods applied. Botanical macrofossils and chemical data show what the animal had eaten. Pollen grains and the aDNA record also give information about taxa that occurred elsewhere in the landscape. The combined data point to an open landscape of a coastal tundra dominated by graminoids (Poaceae, Cyperaceae) with a limited amount of Birch and Alder.
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2003
Bas van Geel; Janneke Buurman; Otto Brinkkemper; J. Schelvis; André Aptroot; Guido van Reenen; Tom Hakbijl
Quaternary Research | 2008
Bas van Geel; André Aptroot; Claudia Baittinger; Hilary H. Birks; Ian D. Bull; Hugh B. Cross; Richard P. Evershed; Barbara Gravendeel; Erwin J. O. Kompanje; P. Kuperus; Dick Mol; Klaas G.J. Nierop; J.P. Pals; Alexei Tikhonov; Guido van Reenen; Peter H. van Tienderen
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2011
Bas van Geel; Daniel C. Fisher; Adam N. Rountrey; Jan van Arkel; Joost F. Duivenvoorden; Aline M. Nieman; Guido van Reenen; Alexei Tikhonov; Bernard Buigues; Barbara Gravendeel
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2014
Valerie van den Bos; Otto Brinkkemper; Ian D. Bull; Stefan Engels; Tom Hakbijl; Mans Schepers; Marieke van Dinter; Guido van Reenen; Bas van Geel
Boreas | 2017
Bas van Geel; Albert Protopopov; Victoria Protopopova; Innokenti Pavlov; Johannes van der Plicht; Guido van Reenen
Revista de la Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales | 2018
Robbert Gradstein; Alain Vanderpoorten; Guido van Reenen; A.M. Cleef
Revista de la Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales | 2018
Robbert Gradstein; Alain Vanderpoorten; Guido van Reenen; A.M. Cleef