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The developmental history of Adirondack (N.Y.) lakes
Donald R. Whitehead
, Donald F. Charles
, Stephen T. Jackson
, John P. Smol
, Daniel R. Engstrom
Limnological Research Center
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
58
Scopus citations
Overview
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Keyphrases
Development History
100%
High Elevation
100%
Late Glacial
100%
Elevational Gradient
100%
Adirondacks
100%
Alder
66%
Trophic State
66%
Histosols
66%
Hydrology
33%
Soil Type
33%
Woodland
33%
Alkaline pH
33%
Northern Hardwoods
33%
Spruce
33%
Tundra
33%
Limnological
33%
Biogeochemical Processes
33%
New York State
33%
Leaching
33%
Evapotranspiration
33%
Paleoecological
33%
Plant Macrofossils
33%
Early Holocene
33%
Carotenoids
33%
Diatoms
33%
Soil Processes
33%
Low Elevation
33%
Base Cations
33%
Spruce-fir
33%
Chlorophyll a (Chl a)
33%
Alnus
33%
Late Glacial-Holocene
33%
High pH
33%
Corroborative Evidence
33%
Highest Peak
33%
Lake Chemistry
33%
Lake Productivity
33%
Soil Thickness
33%
High Precipitation
33%
Lake Trophic State
33%
Adirondack Mountains
33%
Vegetation Cycle
33%
Chrysophytes
33%
Pollen Plants
33%
Lake Biogeochemistry
33%
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Holocene
100%
Late Glacial
80%
Vegetation
60%
Histosol
40%
United States of America
20%
Lake Water
20%
New York
20%
Early Holocene
20%
Diatom
20%
Water Chemistry
20%
Evapotranspiration
20%
Biogeochemistry
20%
Alkalinity
20%
Chlorophyll
20%
Carotenoid
20%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Watersheds
100%
Alnus
60%
Histosol
40%
Fir
20%
Hardwood
20%
Evapotranspiration
20%
Biogeochemistry
20%
Carotenoid
20%
Diatom
20%
Macrofossil
20%
Chrysophyta
20%
Chlorophyll
20%