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Dive into the research topics where Lesleigh Anderson is active.

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Featured researches published by Lesleigh Anderson.


Geology | 2011

Holocene record of precipitation seasonality from lake calcite δ18O in the central Rocky Mountains, United States

Lesleigh Anderson

A context for recent hydroclimatic extremes and variability is provided by a ∼10 k.y. sediment carbonate oxygen isotope (δ 18 O) record at 5–100 yr resolution from Bison Lake, 3255 m above sea level, in northwestern Colorado (United States). Winter precipitation is the primary water source for the alpine headwater lake in the Upper Colorado River Basin and lake water δ 18 O measurements reflect seasonal variations in precipitation δ 18 O. Holocene lake water δ 18 O variations are inferred from endogenic sedimentary calcite δ 18 O based on comparisons with historic watershed discharge records and tree-ring reconstructions. Drought periods (i.e., drier winters and/or a more rain-dominated seasonal precipitation balance) generally correspond with higher calcite δ 18 O values, and vice-versa. Early to middle Holocene δ 18 O values are higher, implying a rain-dominated seasonal precipitation balance. Lower, more variable δ 18 O values after ca. 3500 yr ago indicate a snow-dominated but more seasonally variable precipitation balance. The middle to late Holocene δ 18 O record corresponds with records of El Nino Southern Oscillation intensification that supports a teleconnection between Rocky Mountain climate and North Pacific sea-surface temperatures at decade to century time scales.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Ocean‐atmosphere forcing of centennial hydroclimate variability in the Pacific Northwest

Byron A. Steinman; Mark B. Abbott; Michael E. Mann; Joseph D. Ortiz; Song Feng; David P. Pompeani; Nathan D. Stansell; Lesleigh Anderson; Bruce P. Finney

Reconstructing centennial timescale hydroclimate variability during the late Holocene is critically important for understanding large-scale patterns of drought and their relationship with climate dynamics. We present sediment oxygen isotope records spanning the last two millennia from 10 lakes, as well as climate model simulations, indicating that the Little Ice Age was dry relative to the Medieval Climate Anomaly in much of the Pacific Northwest of North America. This pattern is consistent with observed associations between the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the Northern Annular Mode, and drought as well as with proxy-based reconstructions of Pacific and Atlantic ocean-atmosphere variations over the past 1000 years. The large amplitude of centennial variability indicated by the lake data suggests that regional hydroclimate is characterized by longer-term shifts in ENSO-like dynamics and that an improved understanding of the centennial timescale relationship between external forcing and drought is necessary for projecting future hydroclimatic conditions in western North America.


The Holocene | 2015

A multi-proxy record of hydroclimate, vegetation, fire, and post-settlement impacts for a subalpine plateau, central Rocky Mountains, U.S.A

Lesleigh Anderson; Andrea Brunelle; Robert S. Thompson

Apparent changes in vegetation distribution, fire, and other disturbance regimes throughout western North America have prompted investigations of the relative importance of human activities and climate change as potential causal mechanisms. Assessing the effects of Euro-American settlement is difficult because climate changes occur on multi-decadal to centennial time scales and require longer time perspectives than historic observations can provide. Here, we report vegetation and environmental changes over the past ~13,000 years as recorded in a sediment record from Bison Lake, a subalpine lake on a high plateau in northwestern Colorado. Results are based on multiple independent proxies, which include pollen, charcoal, and elemental geochemistry, and are compared with previously reported interpretations of hydroclimatic changes from oxygen isotope ratios. The pollen data indicate a slowly changing vegetation sequence from sagebrush steppe during the late glacial to coniferous forest through the late Holocene. The most dramatic vegetation changes of the Holocene occurred during the ‘Medieval Climate Anomaly’ (MCA) and ‘Little Ice Age’ (LIA) with rapid replacement of conifer forest by grassland followed by an equally rapid return to conifer forest. Late Holocene vegetation responses are mirrored by changes in fire, lake biological productivity, and watershed erosion. These combined records indicate that subsequent disturbance related to Euro-American settlement, although perhaps significant, had acted upon a landscape that was already responding to MCA-LIA hydroclimatic change. Results document both rapid and long-term subalpine grassland ecosystem dynamics driven by agents of change that can be anticipated in the future and simulated by ecosystem models.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

High sensitivity of gross primary production in the Rocky Mountains to summer rain

Max Berkelhammer; I.C. Stefanescu; Joanna Joiner; Lesleigh Anderson

In the catchments of the Rocky Mountains, peak snowpack is declining in response to warmer spring temperatures. To understand how this will influence terrestrial gross primary production (GPP), we compared precipitation data across the intermountain west with satellite retrievals of solar-induced fluorescence (SIF), a proxy for GPP. Annual precipitation patterns explained most of the spatial and temporal variability of SIF, but the slope of the response was dependent on site to site differences in the proportion of snowpack to summer rain. We separated the response of SIF to different seasonal precipitation amounts and found that SIF was approximately twice as sensitive to variations in summer rain than snowpack. The response of peak GPP to a secular decline in snowpack will likely be subtle, whereas a change in summer rain amount will have precipitous effects on GPP. The study suggests that the rain use efficiency of Rocky Mountain ecosystems is strongly dependent on precipitation form and timing.


Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research | 2018

Lake levels in a discontinuous permafrost landscape: Late Holocene variations inferred from sediment oxygen isotopes, Yukon Flats, Alaska

Lesleigh Anderson; Bruce P. Finney; Mark D. Shapley

ABSTRACT During recent decades, lake levels in the Yukon Flats region of interior Alaska have fluctuated dramatically. However, prior to recorded observations, no data are available to indicate if similar or more extreme variations occurred during past centuries and millennia. This study explores the history of Yukon Flats lake origins and lake levels for the past approximately 5,500 years from sediment analyses guided by previous work on permafrost extent, thermokarst, and modern isotope hydrology. Sediments dated by 210Pb and AMS radiocarbon indicate stable chronologies following initial lake initiation. Subsequent lithology is autochthonous, and oxygen isotope ratios of endogenic carbonate reflect lake level change at multiple time scales. Sediment results indicate high lake levels between approximately 4000 and 1850 cal yr BP, which is interpreted to reflect wetter-than-modern conditions. Lower lake levels with short-lived high stands during the past approximately 800 years reflect generally arid conditions with brief wet intervals similar to the region’s moisture regime today. The millennial trend is one of increasing aridity and corresponds closely with fire reconstructions and regional paleoclimatic trends. We conclude that high-magnitude lake-level fluctuations and decadal scale trends occurred before the observational period and are persistent hydroclimatic features of the Yukon Flats region.


Quaternary Research | 2005

Regional atmospheric circulation change in the North Pacific during the holocene inferred from lacustrine carbonate oxygen isotopes, Yukon Territory, Canada

Lesleigh Anderson; Mark B. Abbott; Bruce P. Finney; Stephen J. Burns


Geophysical Research Letters | 2012

Airborne electromagnetic imaging of discontinuous permafrost

Burke J. Minsley; Jared D. Abraham; Bruce D. Smith; James C. Cannia; Clifford I. Voss; M. Torre Jorgenson; Michelle Ann Walvoord; Bruce K. Wylie; Lesleigh Anderson; Lyndsay B. Ball; Maryla Deszcz-Pan; Tristan P. Wellman; Thomas A. Ager


Quaternary International | 2011

Enhanced Late Holocene ENSO/PDO expression along the margins of the eastern North Pacific

John A. Barron; Lesleigh Anderson


Quaternary Research | 2001

Holocene Climate Inferred from Oxygen Isotope Ratios in Lake Sediments, Central Brooks Range, Alaska

Lesleigh Anderson; Mark B. Abbott; Bruce P. Finney


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2007

Late Holocene moisture balance variability in the southwest Yukon Territory, Canada

Lesleigh Anderson; Mark B. Abbott; Bruce P. Finney; Stephen J. Burns

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Mark B. Abbott

University of Pittsburgh

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Byron A. Steinman

Pennsylvania State University

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Max Berkelhammer

University of Illinois at Chicago

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John A. Barron

United States Geological Survey

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Michael E. Mann

Pennsylvania State University

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Stephen J. Burns

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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