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Philip E. Higuera
CONTACT
INFORMATION Office: 231 Traphagen Hall
/ 709 Leon Johnson Hall
FALL 2008 OFFICE HOURS: Ph.D., University of Washington, Seattle, 2006 M.S., University of Washington, Seattle, 2002 B.A., Middlebury College, Vermont, 1998 |
My research focuses broadly on understanding the patterns and causes of late Quaternary vegetation change at landscape to regional spatial scales. I use paleoecological archives, such as lake sediments and tree-ring records, to reconstruct fire regimes and vegetation composition over thousands of years. I also use numerical modeling and statistical techniques to understand and quantify paleoecological records. My current projects focus on:
Interactions between climate, fire, and vegetation in boreal forests, subalpine forests, and arctic tundra
Understanding the origin of sediment charcoal records and developing analytical methods for reconstructing fire regimes with sediment charcoal data