Blue Intensity In Pinus Sylvestris Tree Rings: A Manual For A New Palaeoclimate Proxy
Affiliation
Department of Geography, College of Science, Swansea UniversityBert Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Department of Physical Geography and Quaternary Geology, Stockholm University
Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå , Sweden
Issue Date
2011-07
Metadata
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Copyright © Tree-Ring Society. All rights reserved.Collection Information
This item is part of the Tree-Ring Research (formerly Tree-Ring Bulletin) archive. For more information about this peer-reviewed scholarly journal, please email the Editor of Tree-Ring Research at editor@treeringsociety.org.Publisher
Tree-Ring SocietyJournal
Tree-Ring ResearchCitation
Campbell, R., McCarroll, D., Robertson, I., Loader, N.J., Grudd, H., Gunnarson, B., 2011. Blue Intensity in Pinus sylvestris tree rings: A manual for a new palaeoclimate proxy. Tree-Ring Research 67(2):127-134.Abstract
Minimum blue intensity is a reflected light imaging technique that provides an inexpensive, robust and reliable surrogate for maximum latewood density. In this application it was found that temperature reconstructions from resin-extracted samples of Pinus sylvestris (L.) from Fennoscandia provide results equivalent to conventional x-ray densitometry. This paper describes the implementation of the blue intensity method using commercially available software and a flat-bed scanner. A calibration procedure is presented that permits results obtained by different laboratories, or using different scanners, to be compared. In addition, the use of carefully prepared and chemically treated 10-mm-diameter cores are explored; suggesting that it may not be necessary to produce thin laths with the rings aligned exactly perpendicular to the measurement surface.ISSN
2162-45851536-1098