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International Journal of Wildland Fire
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Table of Contents     |     Next Issue >>  

International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire
Volume 17 Number 1 2008
Fire Climatology


Descriptive Table of Contents
 



 


Fire Climatology in the western United States: introduction to special issue 

Thomas W. Swetnam and R. Scott Anderson

pp. 1-7

 


Temporal and spatial structure in a daily wildfire-start data set from the western United States (1986–96) 

P. J. Bartlein, S. W. Hostetler, S. L. Shafer, J. O. Holman and A. M. Solomon

pp. 8-17

  
 


Evaluating predictive models of critical live fuel moisture in the Santa Monica Mountains, California 

Philip E. Dennison, Max A. Moritz and Robert S. Taylor

pp. 18-27

  
 


Climate effects on historical fires (1630–1900) in Utah 

Peter M. Brown, Emily K. Heyerdahl, Stanley G. Kitchen and Marc H. Weber

pp. 28-39

  
 


Climate drivers of regionally synchronous fires in the inland Northwest (1651–1900) 

Emily K. Heyerdahl, Donald McKenzie, Lori D. Daniels, Amy E. Hessl, Jeremy S. Littell and Nathan J. Mantua

pp. 40-49

  
 


Variability in fire–climate relationships in ponderosa pine forests in the Colorado Front Range 

Rosemary L. Sherriff and Thomas T. Veblen

pp. 50-59

  
 


Climatic influences on fire regimes in montane forests of the southern Cascades, California, USA 

A. H. Taylor, V. Trouet and C. N. Skinner

pp. 60-71

  
 


Long-term relations among fire, fuel, and climate in the north-western US based on lake-sediment studies 

Cathy Whitlock, Jennifer Marlon, Christy Briles, Andrea Brunelle, Colin Long and Patrick Bartlein

pp. 72-83

  
 


Long-term fire history from alluvial fan sediments: the role of drought and climate variability, and implications for management of Rocky Mountain forests 

Jennifer Pierce and Grant Meyer

pp. 84-95

  
 


Holocene vegetation and fire regimes in subalpine and mixed conifer forests, southern Rocky Mountains, USA 

R. S. Anderson, C. D. Allen, J. L. Toney, R. B. Jass and A. N. Bair

pp. 96-114

  
 


Paired charcoal and tree-ring records of high-frequency Holocene fire from two New Mexico bog sites 

Craig D. Allen, R. Scott Anderson, Renata B. Jass, Jaime L. Toney and Christopher H. Baisan

pp. 115-130

  
 


Long-term impacts of prescribed burns on soil thermal conductivity and soil heating at a Colorado Rocky Mountain site: a data/model fusion study 

W. J. Massman, J. M. Frank and N. B. Reisch

pp. 131-146

  
 


Estimating crown fuel loading for calabrian pine and Anatolian black pine 

Ömer Küçük, Ertuğrul Bilgili and Bülent Sağlam

pp. 147-154

  
 


  
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