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New Baylor Research Shows Using Leaves' Characteristics Improves Accuracy Measuring Past Climates

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OKIsItJustMe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-18-11 03:45 PM
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New Baylor Research Shows Using Leaves' Characteristics Improves Accuracy Measuring Past Climates
http://www.baylor.edu/pr/news.php?action=story&story=92465

New Baylor Research Shows Using Leaves' Characteristics Improves Accuracy Measuring Past Climates

April 18, 2011

NSF-funded study shows high promise for new method to estimate temperature, precipitation for ancient ecosystems

A study led by Baylor University and Wesleyan University geologists shows that a new method that uses different size and shape traits of leaves to reconstruct past climates over the last 120 million years is more accurate than other current methods.

The study appeared in the April issue of the journal New Phytologist and was funded by the National Science Foundation.

"Paleobotanists have long used models based on leaf size and shape to reconstruct ancient climates," said Dr. Daniel Peppe, assistant professor of geology at Baylor, College of Arts and Sciences, who is an expert in paleomagnetism, paleobotany and paleoclimatology. "However most of these models use just a single variable or variables that are not directly linked to climate, which obviously limits the models' predictive power. For that reason, they models often underestimate ancient temperatures."

Baylor geology researchers, along with 26 other co-authors from universities around the world, collected thousands of leaves from many different species of plants from 92 climatically-different and plant-diverse locations on every continent except Africa and Antarctica. Multiple linear regression models for mean annual temperature and mean annual precipitation were developed and then applied to nine well-studied fossil floras.

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