Suzanne Leroy

Suzanne Leroy
Maison Mediterranenne des Sciences de l'Homme, Lampea, Quaternary Ecosystems, Aix-en-Provence, France

Doctorate in Sciences in 1990

About

276
Publications
114,471
Reads
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8,278
Citations
Additional affiliations
November 1993 - February 1995
University of Bern
Position
  • Managing Director
Description
  • Associate director of the core project office of PAGES/IGBP (Past Global Change, International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme) at University of Berne
November 1993 - February 1994
University of Bern
Position
  • Managing Director
Description
  • Associate director of the core project office of PAGES/IGBP (Past Global Change, International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme) at University of Berne
Education
September 1983 - March 1990
Catholic University of Louvain
Field of study
  • sciences
September 1980 - September 1982
Catholic University of Louvain
Field of study
  • Sciences Géographiques
September 1978 - June 1980
University of Namur
Field of study
  • sciences géographiques

Publications

Publications (276)
Article
Palynology, the study of pollen and spores, plays a crucial role in various scientific disciplines, including earth sciences (paleovegetation and paleoclimatology), botany, allergy, archaeology, forensic sciencs and cosmetics. This study delves into the critical question in fossil pollen analysis studies: the minimum count of pollen grains required...
Article
The Caspian Sea, the world’s largest enclosed water body, experiences significant transformations in its physicochemical properties and a decline in bioresources due to extensive anthropogenic activities. These activities include the discharge of diverse pollutants and bio-physical alterations such as over-fishing, hunting, and physical alterations...
Article
The Marmara region (NW Turkey) has a transitional vegetation and climate between the Mediterranean one and the Euxinian one. For the last Interglacial period or Eemian and following the two Saint-Germain Interstadials (i.e. c. MIS 5), as well and the previous glacial, the Saalian, no vegetation or climate information is available yet. Here we provi...
Book
Full-text available
COORDINACIÓN José S. Carrión EQUIPO EDITORIAL José S. Carrión, Juan Ochando, Manuel Munuera, Manuel Casas-Gallego, Gabriela Amorós Secretaria Técnica y Maquetación Maximiliano Gómez Rodríguez, Santiago Fernández, Manuel Munuera Trabajo artístico Gabriela Amorós, Victoria Sánchez-Giner, Ariadna Amorós, Manuel Munuera, Manuel Fernández-Díaz, Pedro...
Article
Full-text available
Coastal systems store enormous carbon quantities in their sediment, which originates from various autochthonous and allochthonous sources. Carbon fluxes in coastal ecosystems have a strong effect on the recipient food-webs and carbon emission offsets. Yet, the relative importance of autochthonous vs. allochthonous C inputs to coastal carbon budget...
Article
This paper provides a review of the dates used to define major hydrologic changes in the Caspian Sea during the Late Pleistocene that includes the Early Khvalynian and Hyrcanian highstands and the Atelian lowstand, and it discusses their driving mechanisms. Dates obtained by ¹⁴C (that are the most numerous), by OSL and by U/Th for samples that are...
Article
Full-text available
At a time, when the five riparian countries have renewed consultation with each other about the future of the Caspian Sea, it is appropriate to propose a state of the art of the potential natural threats to the regional environment. We present a critical review of geological, meteorological–climatological and hydrological hazards and disasters illu...
Article
A revision of the data used to build the Caspian Sea level curve over the last 2200 years BP has been made based on a combination of geological and archaeo-historical data, using only those for which sufficient metadata were available. This compilation is completed by new sedimentological and palynological data from the south-east corner of the Cas...
Article
Full-text available
The Caspian Sea (CS) is the largest inland lake in the world. Large variations in sea level and surface area occurred in the past and are projected for the future. The potential impacts on regional and large‐scale hydroclimate are not well understood. Here, we examine the impact of CS area on climate within its catchment and across the northern hem...
Data
Supplementary information for "Impacts of Variations in Caspian Sea Surface Area on Catchment-Scale and Large-Scale Climate."
Article
Determining the diversity of past floras helps with interpreting both the history and predicting the future of vegetation change. For global-scale and regional-scale diversity studies especially, secondary data are often used but local-scale studies tend to be based on survey data that require rigorous sampling. The correct sampling strategies depe...
Article
Marine influence on low-salinity environments can trigger aquatic ecosystem shifts, including biodiversity turnovers. High-resolution palaeoenvironmental records of marine connection events are particularly valuable, as they provide natural laboratories to understand analogous oceanographic and biodiversity turnover events in present-day climate- a...
Article
Arid Central Asia is at the border between the prevailing Westerlies and monsoonal climates. Lake Issyk-Kul, a large mountain lake, and its sediment record are key to reconstructing complex interactions between these two major climatic systems over time. We present for the first time sedimentological (magnetic susceptibility, CaCO3, δ¹³C and δ¹⁸O v...
Article
Palaeobotany and palynology are the main direct sources of evidence for studying vegetation diversity dynamics through geological time. However, plant fossil diversity is affected by various factors other than vegetation diversity, which need to be taken into account in such studies. The use of fossil-taxa will potentially inflate perceived plant d...
Article
Algal blooms are natural phenomena that may cause human health problems, millions of dollars in losses and ecological disasters worldwide. Anthropogenic pressures like eutrophication may increase the frequency and intensity of these phenomena. The Black Sea is characterized by rapid changes in salinity and temperature in surface waters. In addition...
Article
Central-west Turkey is a transition zone both tectonically and climatically between the quite different central and western regions of Anatolia. Central Anatolia represents the seismically quiet part of the otherwise highly active Turkey. On the other hand, this region has some of the lowest precipitation and highest evaporation ratios of Turkey. C...
Article
Central-west Turkey is a transition zone both tectonically and climatically between the quite different central and western regions of Anatolia. Central Anatolia represents the seismically quiet part of the otherwise highly active Turkey. On the other hand, this region has some of the lowest precipitation and highest evaporation ratios of Turkey. C...
Article
Central Asia, with its high mountains, despite its location between Europe and eastern Asia remains a data poor area. However, mountain glaciers are strongly affected by global change and have a wide-ranging impact. A new pollen record over the last 5600 years shows the extension of a dry Artemisia steppe around Lake Issyk-Kul, with a slightly wett...
Article
Full-text available
Publications on temperate deciduous tree refugia in Europe are abundant, but little is known about the patterns of temperate tree refugia in eastern Asia, an area where biodiversity survived Quaternary glaciations and which has the world's most diverse temperate flora. Our goal is to compare climate model simulations with pollen data in order to es...
Article
Full-text available
The Eurasian (née European) Modern Pollen Database (EMPD) was established in 2013 to provide a public database of high-quality modern pollen surface samples to help support studies of past climate, land cover, and land use using fossil pollen. The EMPD is part of, and complementary to, the European Pollen Database (EPD) which contains data on fossi...
Chapter
The Caspian Sea (CS), located between Europe and Asia, is the largest lake in the world; however, its physical environment and its floor have oceanic characteristics. The CS is composed of a very shallow north sub-basin with a very low salinity mostly below 5 psu. The middle and southern sub-basins are deep and have a salinity of c. 13 psu. To the...
Article
Full-text available
Newly available time series of 10‐m winds over last 60 years in the South Caspian Sea (CS) region show a remarkable shift in wind speed in 1995, that is also the year of maximum elevation of the Caspian Sea level (CSL). Our aim is to find the mechanisms linking these two features. This change is not only seen in the wind observations along the Sout...
Preprint
Full-text available
Abstract. Publications on temperate deciduous tree refugia in Europe are abundant, but little is known about the patterns of temperate tree refugia in eastern Asia, an area where biodiversity survived Quaternary glaciations and which has the world's most diverse temperate flora. Our goal is to compare climate model simulations with pollen data in o...
Preprint
Full-text available
Abstract. The Eurasian (née European) Modern Pollen Database (EMPD) was established in 2013 to provide a public database of high-quality modern pollen surface samples to help support studies of past climate, land-cover and land-use using fossil pollen. The EMPD is part of, and complementary to, the European Pollen Database (EPD) which contains data...
Chapter
A series of case studies, derived from Holocene palaeoenvironmental investigations, archaeology, and history, are used to analyze ancient natural hazards and their impact on societies. The evolution of societies is inscribed in geomorphology, as a close relationship exists between the landscape and humans. Four factors underpin disasters: time, spa...
Article
The Plio-Pleistocene transition marked a key moment in global climate history, characterised by the onset of major glaciations in the Northern Hemisphere. The palaeoenvironmental history of the Plio-Pleistocene transition is not well known for the Caspian Sea region, despite its importance for global climate dynamics. Here we present an independent...
Article
Multi-proxy analyses and lithology of two cores, MRS-CS18 and MRS-CS27, from the İmralı Basin of the Sea of Marmara (SoM) provide novel information on environmental conditions, relative sea level, and sill depths of the straits of Bosporus and Dardanelles during the Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 5 and 6. The fossil and multi-proxy geochemical records...
Article
Bernasso is an Early Pleistocene locality that has a well-dated floral fossil content including both pollen grains and megaremains. Pollen record shows vegetation changes corresponding to two glacial and one interglacial periods. The megafloral fossil assemblage was interpreted as an association of present-day Mediterranean and Caucasian taxa that...
Article
Multi-proxy analyses and lithology of two cores, MRS-CS18 and MRS-CS27, from the _ Imralı Basin of the Sea of Marmara (SoM) provide novel information on environmental conditions, relative sea level, and sill depths of the straits of Bosporus and Dardanelles during the Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 5 and 6. The fossil and multi-proxy geochemical recor...
Article
Full-text available
Abstract The study presents the late Quaternary evolution of the southern Marmara region in the northwestern Turkey and discusses the suitability of the area for settlements. It is based on interpretation of sediment analyses together with radiometric dates obtained from the drilling cores. As three fourth of the southern Marmara region (ca 30 000...
Article
The south Caspian subbasin extends from the foot of the Alborz Mountains to the deepest part of Caspian Sea. The lithological background and tectonic setting of the study area primarily control the deposition of thick sedimentary sequences of the basin, while hydroclimatic processes exert secondary impacts on the sediment distribution pattern. To e...
Article
Full-text available
This paper explores long-term trends in human population and vegetation change in the Levant from the early to the late Holocene in order to assess when and how human impact has shaped the region’s landscapes over the millennia. To do so, we employed multiple proxies and compared archaeological, pollen and palaeoclimate data within a multi-scalar a...
Article
Full-text available
The responses of the Indian and East Asian summer monsoons (ISM and EASM) to warming since the last deglaciation are controversial. Pollen results from a subalpine lake in the ISM area show that the Tsuga dumosa forest zone migrated at least 650 m upward during 18.6–7.1 kyr BP, indicating a gradual rise in mean annual temperature exceeding 3.9 °C....
Article
Full-text available
With a fall of the Caspian Sea level (CSL), its size gets smaller and therefore the total evaporation over the sea is reduced. With a reduced evaporation from the sea, the fall of the CSL is weakened. This creates a negative feedback as less evaporation leads to less water losses of the Caspian Sea (CS). On the other hand, less evaporation reduces...
Article
Understanding the long-term environmental forcings driving Caspian Sea (CS) water levels is of utmost importance, not only owing to its large size, or to the surrounding developing economies but also to improve global climate models and forecasts. However, Late Quaternary CS level changes and their amplitude are mostly documented from incomplete co...
Article
The south Caspian subbasin extends from the foot of the Alborz Mountains to the deepest part of Caspian Sea. The lithological background and tectonic setting of the study area primarily control the deposition of thick sedimentary sequences of the basin, while hydroclimatic processes exert secondary impacts on the sediment distribution pattern. To e...
Article
The Early Pleistocene deposits of the Iberian Peninsula provided some of the oldest hominin fossil sites of Western Europe. Evidence also shows that early Homo thrived in the Mediterranean peninsulas during the Early Pleistocene ‘interglacial’ phases. To assess the role of climatic conditions on early human environments, the present work features a...
Article
Full-text available
At present, Lake Chad ( ~13°0 N, ~14° E) is a shallow freshwater lake located in the Sahel/Sahara region of central northern Africa. The lake is primarily fed by the Chari-Logone river system draining a ~600 000 km2 watershed in tropical Africa. Discharge is strongly controlled by the annual passage of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) and...
Article
Full-text available
The Sefidrud, a river flowing into south west Caspian Sea, is prone to avulsion. Previous studies of the river delta support the idea that several major avulsions have occurred during the past few thousand years. During the most recent major avulsion, a 23 km shift occurred along the coast. However, in literature the timing of the event is subject...
Article
Full-text available
The early Pleistocene site at Bòvila Ordis (Banyoles-Besalú Basin in NE Iberia) delivered in the past a significant pollen succession which can be assigned to the upper Matuyama geomagnetic chron owing to the identification of the Cobb Mountain magnetic subchron (1.2 Ma ago). It has been previously shown by palynology that the succession of lakes r...
Article
We present results of mineralogical (light, heavy and clay minerals), geochemical and palynological investigations of floodplain sediments at Saqqara. Our investigations provide new insights into our understanding of the source of the Holocene Nile sediments, local palaeoclimate and palaeoenvironment of the floodplain at Saqqara as well as the Holo...
Article
Full-text available
The response of large water-bodies to global change in terms of ecosystem services and economical value is a major concern. The Caspian Sea, the world’s largest enclosed water-body, has a poorly-known water-level history, but observed changes are a hundred times faster than recent global sea-level rise. This ancient lake, characterised by brackish...
Article
Full-text available
To investigate the disparity between plankton and cyst records, sediment slurry cultures were used to isolate the motile stage of dinoflagellates from Caspian Sea sediment. This has resulted in new records for this area of Kryptoperidinium foliaceum, Gymnodinium aureolum and Woloszynskia sp. and for the cyst record, Scrippsiella acuminata. Two Gony...
Article
Full-text available
Clay minerals are useful tools for reconstructing palaeoclimatic history. The clay mineral composition and total organic carbon (TOC) of the Pliocene Productive Series from the western South Caspian Basin was used to reconstruct palaeoclimate on the adjacent land, which still remains a data-poor area. Variations of the smectite and illite contents...
Poster
Full-text available
This new Atlas [1] aims (a) to illustrate the known present-day distributions of 71 BSC dinocyst species in 185 surface sediment samples; (b) to define and apply a framework of standardised taxonomy and methodology that will be available for future work throughout the culturally diverse region; (c) to describe the relationships between the distribu...
Article
Full-text available
Aim To evaluate the biomization technique for reconstructing past vegetation in the Eastern Mediterranean–Black Sea–Caspian‐Corridor using an extensive modern pollen data set and comparing reconstructions to potential vegetation and observed land cover data. Location The region between 28–48°N and 22–62°E. Methods We apply the biomization techniq...
Article
Full-text available
We present the first comprehensive taxonomic and environmental study of dinoflagellate cysts in 185 surface sediment samples from the Black Sea Corridor (BSC) which is a series of marine basins extending from the Aegean to the Aral Seas (including Marmara, Black, Azov and Caspian Seas). For decades, these low-salinity, semi-enclosed or endorheic ba...
Article
Full-text available
We investigate the cyst-theca relationship of Impagidinium caspienense. Through an incubation experiment, we succeeded in examining the motile stage. Additional molecular analysis of single-cyst PCR (LSU and SSU rDNA) reveal that the cyst is related to the species Gonyaulax baltica Ellegaard et al. (2002). The ability of this species to belong to t...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Lacustrine laminated sediments are often varves representing annual rhythmic deposition. The Dead Sea high-stand laminated sections consist of mm-scale alternating detrital and authigenic aragonite laminae. Previous studies assumed these laminae were varves; detritus deposition during the winter and aragonite in the summer. These sequences were use...
Article
Full-text available
Due to the recent destructive pressures on the Caspian environment, an effect on phytoplankton communities is expected in different aspects such as cell size and form. This paper aims to survey the size and form in the dominant phytoplankton species in the years of 1996, 2001, 2006, 2009, 2011 and 2012 in the Iranian coast of the Caspian Sea. Resul...
Article
Full-text available
Fossil pollen and dinocyst records in marine sequences are frequently combined to reveal the response of vegetation and ocean conditions to changes in both regional and global climate. In this study we analysed pollen and dinocysts within a clearly-laminated sediment core off the Iranian coast in the Gulf of Oman, an extremely data-poor area, to re...
Article
Full-text available
This paper provides new data on the evolution of the Caspian Sea and Black Sea from the Last Glacial Maximum until ca. 12 cal kyr BP. We present new analyses (clay mineralogy, grain-size, Nd isotopes and pollen) applied to sediments from the river terraces in the lower Volga, from the middle Caspian Sea and from the western part of the Black Sea. T...
Article
Full-text available
Lacustrine laminated sediments are often varves representing annual rhythmic deposition. The Dead Sea high-stand laminated sections consist of mm-scale alternating detrital and authigenic aragonite laminae. Previous studies assumed these laminae were varves deposited seasonally. However, this assumption has never been robustly validated. Here we re...
Article
Full-text available
The research work presents clay mineral composition in the sediment of the Pliocene Productive Series from western South Caspian Basin and identify potential source areas for the different research regions. The Productive Series is a main reservoir unit in the South Caspian Basin and divided into a lower division and an upper division. The clay min...
Article
Full-text available
Lake Neor is the largest lacustrine basin in the high mountains of the Middle East, at 2500 m altitude in the Alborz belt. This lake of Holocene age is a shallow, fresh water body of glacial origin with ca 4 km2 surface area and a 40 km2 drainage area. Its sedimentary sequence comprised of peat and gyttja consists of >10 m infill, which is fairly t...
Article
Full-text available
Owing to their continuous sedimentation, lacustrine environments are usually excellent archives of palaeo-environmental changes (Stockhecke et al., 2014; Sharifi et al., 2015). Even environmental changes at an annual scale may be detected in lake sediments and therefore offer an opportunity to study past changes at high resolution, e.g. when the se...
Article
Full-text available
In the face of global rise in sea level, understanding the response of the shoreline to sea level rise is an important key for coastal management. The rapid sea level fluctuations taking place in the Caspian Sea provide a live model for studying shoreline response to sea level rise. Coastal lagoon deposits provide an ideal archive to study sea leve...