Jacquelyn Gill
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Paleoecologist
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Why Is Jacquelyn Gill Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Jacquelyn Gill is a paleoecologist and assistant professor of climate science at the University of Maine. She has worked on such as the relationship between megafauna and vegetation in the Pleistocene, and the sediment cores of Jamaica. Gill is also a science communicator on climate change.
Jacquelyn Gill's Published Works
Published Works
- Pleistocene Megafaunal Collapse, Novel Plant Communities, and Enhanced Fire Regimes in North America (2009) (458)
- Multidimensional evaluation of managed relocation (2009) (374)
- Combining paleo-data and modern exclosure experiments to assess the impact of megafauna extinctions on woody vegetation (2015) (253)
- People have shaped most of terrestrial nature for at least 12,000 years (2021) (223)
- Managed Relocation: Integrating the Scientific, Regulatory, and Ethical Challenges (2012) (220)
- Looking forward through the past: identification of 50 priority research questions in palaeoecology (2014) (217)
- The theory behind, and the challenges of, conserving nature's stage in a time of rapid change (2015) (182)
- Ecological impacts of the late Quaternary megaherbivore extinctions. (2014) (129)
- Climatic and megaherbivory controls on late-glacial vegetation dynamics: a new, high-resolution, multi-proxy record from Silver Lake, Ohio (2012) (125)
- Linking abundances of the dung fungus Sporormiella to the density of bison: implications for assessing grazing by megaherbivores in palaeorecords (2013) (100)
- Model systems for a no‐analog future: species associations and climates during the last deglaciation (2013) (48)
- Arguments and Evidence Against a Younger Dryas Impact Event (2013) (35)
- A 2.5‐million‐year perspective on coarse‐filter strategies for conserving nature's stage (2015) (31)
- Long-term herbivore population dynamics in the northeastern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau and its implications for early human impacts (2020) (29)
- Widespread underfilling of the potential ranges of North American trees (2020) (21)
- A practical solution: the Anthropocene is a geological event, not a formal epoch (2021) (15)
- The Anthropocene as an Event, not an Epoch (2022) (15)
- Pronounced variations in Fagus grandifolia abundances in the Great Lakes region during the Holocene (2016) (11)
- Age models and the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (2012) (11)
- Seabird establishment during regional cooling drove a terrestrial ecosystem shift 5000 years ago (2020) (9)
- Microclimate‐based species distribution models in complex forested terrain indicate widespread cryptic refugia under climate change (2022) (8)
- Ten Simple Rules for a successful remote postdoc (2019) (8)
- Evidence of prehistoric human activity in the Falkland Islands (2021) (8)
- Learning from Africa's herbivores (2015) (5)
- More than one way to kill a spruce forest: The role of fire and climate in the late‐glacial termination of spruce woodlands across the southern Great Lakes (2020) (4)
- Emerging palaeoecological frameworks for elucidating plant dynamics in response to fire and other disturbance (2021) (4)
- Incomplete Bayesian model rejects contradictory radiocarbon data for being contradictory (2015) (3)
- Biomolecular analyses reveal the age, sex and species identity of a near-intact Pleistocene bird carcass (2020) (3)
- The Anthropocene serves science better as an event, rather than an epoch (2022) (2)
- Plant Love Stories: Share Your Story and Grow a Movement (2020) (2)
- Paleoecological changes at Lake Cuitzeo were not consistent with an extraterrestrial impact (2012) (2)
- Response to Waters et al. (2022) The Anthropocene is complex. Defining it is not (2023) (2)
- Response to comment on “Evidence of prehistoric human activity in the Falkland Islands” (2022) (1)
- Modern calibration of Poa flabellata (tussac grass) as a new paleoclimate proxy in the South Atlantic (2020) (1)
- Diverse responses of vegetation and fire after pleistocene megaherbivore extinction across the eastern US (2022) (1)
- Models and macrofossils: integrating Rancho La Brea's plant collection with dynamic vegetation modeling during Marine Isotope Stage 3 (2018) (1)
- Assessing linkages among the late-glacial megafaunal collapse, novel plant communities, and fire in eastern North America using the dung fungus Sporormiella (2012) (0)
- Impact did not Cause Climate Change Extinction or Clovis Termination at 12.9 ka. (2011) (0)
- The ecology of novelty: Using plant traits to link paleoecological patterns and ecosystem processes in response to 21,000 years of global change (2016) (0)
- Early Holocene plant macrofossils indicate cool refugia for subalpine plant taxa in Acadia National Park, Maine (2023) (0)
- IF STEM IS A PATHWAY, WHERE ARE THE TRAIL CREWS? EVIDENCE-BASED APPROACHES TO IMPROVING DIVERSITY IN THE GEOSCIENCES (2018) (0)
- NA2746 Jacquelyn Gill, interviewed by Adam Lee Cilli (2014) (0)
- Fire and Foxes: Investigations into a Pre-historic Human Presence in the Falkland Islands (2019) (0)
- Past and present range filling of North American trees reveals the importance of non-climatic factors and dispersal limitations in driving climatic disequilibrium (2019) (0)
- CROSS-SCALE TEMPORAL ECOLOGY FOR COMMUNITIES IN A DYNAMIC WORLD (2018) (0)
- Modern calibration of Tussac grass (Poa flabellata) as a new paleoclimate proxy in the Falkland Islands (2017) (0)
- Science Communication on the Fly: Improv your Science (2019) (0)
- The Past Isn't Dead: The Last 2 Million Years Can Help Biodiversity in the Next 100 (2017) (0)
- Biomolecular analyses reveal the age, sex and species identity of a near-intact Pleistocene bird carcass (2020) (0)
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Jacquelyn Gill is affiliated with the following schools: