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Neotoma Paleoecology Database

The Neotoma Paleoecology Database (Neotoma) is an open international data resource that stores and shares multiple kinds of fossil, paleoecological, and paleoenvironmental data.[1] Neotoma specializes in fossil data holdings at timescales covering the last several decades to the last several million years. Neotoma is organized and led by scientists and enhances data consistency through community curation by experts. Neotoma data are open to all and available to anyone with an internet connection.

Neotoma data are used by scientists and teachers (especially paleoecologists, biogeographers, and archaeologists) to study the responses of species and ecosystems to past environmental change and growing human activity. Paleoclimatologists use Neotoma data to help reconstruct past climates.[2] Sample research questions addressed include: 1) How sensitive are ecosystems to past climate change.[3] 2) Why were rates of tree range expansion so fast after the end of the last ice age, given that tree seed dispersal distances are usually so short (Reid’s Paradox)? 3) Where and when did humans begin transforming ecosystems?[4] 4) What were the causes and consequences of the widespread extinctions of large animals over the last 50,000 years?[5][6]  5) Which ecosystems are characterized by abrupt change between alternate stable states and what triggers these abrupt changes?[7] 6) How have freshwater resources and aquatic ecosystems been affected by human land use and activity over the last several decades?[8][9] 

Data types and data volume edit

The species and taxa stored in Neotoma represent a breadth of terrestrial and aquatic organisms: plants (pollen and larger fossils), mammals and other vertebrates, insects and other invertebrates, diatoms, ostracodes, and testate amoebae. Neotoma also stores the age estimates provided by radiometric dating (e.g. radiocarbon, lead-210) and the age estimates that are derived from statistical models of age as a function of depth in sediment column. The Neotoma data model is extensible to other types of paleoecological and paleoenvironmental variables.

Data volume in Neotoma is growing rapidly, as are the data holdings in other paleontological and contemporary databases.[10] As of May 2020, Neotoma held 7 million individual observations from over 38,700 datasets, 18,600 sites, 7,000 scientific papers, 6,000 authors, and 100 countries [1]. For comparison, On Nov 8, 2017, Neotoma held 3.8 million observations, from 17,275 datasets and 9,269 sites.[11]

History edit

The intellectual foundations of Neotoma trace back to efforts by early paleontologists and paleoecologists in the first half of the 20th century to assemble many individual records into larger mapped syntheses.[12] As von Post wrote, paleoecologists must “think horizontally, work vertically,”[13] i.e. think across both time and space to understand the processes governing the ever-changing distribution of species, the associations among species, and the diversity of life.

These efforts accelerated in the 1970s and 1980s, when a number of scientific teams began assembling databases of fossil distributions to study the spatial distributions of species over space and time and the effects of past environmental variations on these distributions. These efforts were powered by advances in computing capabilities and the growing availability of radiocarbon and other radiometric dates to provide a common time framework for all fossil occurrences. Much of this work focused on environmental and ecological changes accompanying the glacial-interglacial cycles of the Quaternary. These databases were used both by paleoclimatologists to draw inferences about past climates that could be used to test the paleoclimatic simulations of earth system models,[14] and by paleoecologists interested in how past community dynamics were driven by these environmental changes.[15][16] For example, Margaret Davis demonstrated tree species experienced large range shifts with the climate changes at the end of the last ice age and that species responded individualistically.[17] As a result, many past communities were 'no analog,' i.e. their mixtures of species lack any close counterpart in modern communities. Some records and Constituent Databases in Neotoma extend deeper into the Cenozoic.

In parallel, other research teams were gathering fossil records from high-resolution sediment archives spanning the last few decades to centuries to study the effects of human activities upon communities and ecosystems. Examples include the effects of acid rain on ecosystems in the 1980s,[18] or the eutrophication of many lake ecosystems due to increasing nutrient runoff into lakes and streams.[19][20]  

Many of these initial data-gathering efforts were led by individual pioneers (e.g. Margaret Davis, Tom Webb, Russ Graham, Bjorn Berglund, Jacques-Louis Beaulieu) or by small research teams. As these efforts have matured and as the amount of data has grown, the volume and complexity of paleoecological data is now beyond the capacity of any single individual expert to manage or curate. At the same time, many smaller paleontological and paleoecological databases have been unable to keep up with current advances in informatics, or have gone offline as funding lapsed or lead investigators retired or moved on.

Hence, the fields of paleoecology and paleontology have developed data governance models based on community curation, in which data resources like Neotoma are managed by communities of scientists working together to curate and share their data.[11] Neotoma follows a model of centralized informatics but distributed scientific governance, and is best viewed as a coalition of Constituent Databases that share a common set of database and software resources, while retaining separate rights to govern and curate the data in their Data Stewards' domains of expertise. For example, the European Pollen Database uses the Neotoma data model and software services, but is governed by its own board and community of expert data stewards.

Neotoma works closely with the Paleobiology Database, which has a similar intellectual history, but has focused on the entire history of life, at timescales of millions to hundreds of millions of years. Together, Neotoma and the Paleobiology Database have helped launch the EarthLife Consortium, a non-profit umbrella organization to support the easy and free sharing of paleoecological and paleobiological data.

Data curation and governance edit

Neotoma employs a model of distributed data curation and governance. In this model, Neotoma data are curated and governed by a community of Data Stewards, organized into Constituent Databases.[11][12] These Constituent Databases can be organized by region, time, or taxonomic group. For example, FAUNMAP is a Constituent Database in Neotoma that manages Quaternary fossil vertebrate records in North America, while MioMap primarily emphasizes Miocene vertebrate records.[21] For pollen data, Constituent Databases are organized geographically and include the European Pollen Database,[22][23] the North American Pollen Database, and the Latin American Pollen Database.[24] Other major Constituent Databases include the Testate Amoebae Database,[25] the International Ostracode Database, and the Diatom Paleoecology Data Cooperative. All data in Neotoma are uploaded and curated by Data Stewards associated with one or more Constituent Databases. This model of distributed community curation is essential to ensuring data quality and consistency.

Neotoma is led by a Neotoma Leadership Council (NLC) comprising 14 elected councilors, of which 2 seats are reserved for early career scientists (Bylaws). Elections are held annually, with roughly one-third of the NLC elected each cycle.

Neotoma is a recommended data facility for the Earth Sciences Division of the National Science Foundation, Past Global Changes, and the American Quaternary Association. Neotoma is a member of the ICSU World Data System and is registered with COPDESS registry for scientific data sources adhering to FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reproducible) principles. Neotoma has been supported by multiple sources, including the National Science Foundation and the Belmont Forum.

Data use and access edit

Use of data in Neotoma is governed by a Creative Commons NC-BY license, which permits unrestricted use as long as data sources are properly acknowledged and cited (Neotoma Data Use Policy). Proper full citation of data in Neotoma occurs at three levels: Neotoma itself, the governing Constituent Database(s), and the original authors.

Data can be retrieved from Neotoma in several ways. Neotoma Explorer is a map-based interface designed for quick-look searches and first-pass data explorations. Explorer is well suited for researchers interested in quick-look searches and data views and for explorations by high school and college-level teachers and students. Teaching exercises using Neotoma Explorer have been prepared and hosted by the Science and Education Research Center (SERC) at Carleton College. An R package (neotoma) supports exporting of data from Neotoma into the R programmatic environment.[26] Application Programmatic Interfaces (APIs) support access to Neotoma data by third-party software developers. Resources using Neotoma data include the Flyover Country app for travelers and the Global Pollen Project.

References edit

  1. ^ Williams, J. W.; Blois, J.; Goring, S. J.; Grimm, E. C.; Smith, A. J.; Uhen, M. D. (December 2019). "The Neotoma Paleoecology Database and EarthLife Consortium: Building Community Data Resources to Mobilize Dark, Long-Tail Records of Past Biodiversity Dynamics". AGUFM. 2019: B53O–2614. Bibcode:2019AGUFM.B53O2614W.
  2. ^ Kaufman, Darrell; McKay, Nicholas; Routson, Cody; Erb, Michael; Davis, Basil; Heiri, Oliver; Jaccard, Samuel; Tierney, Jessica; Dätwyler, Christoph; Axford, Yarrow; Brussel, Thomas (December 2020). "A global database of Holocene paleotemperature records". Scientific Data. 7 (1): 115. Bibcode:2020NatSD...7..115K. doi:10.1038/s41597-020-0445-3. ISSN 2052-4463. PMC 7156486. PMID 32286335.
  3. ^ Nolan, Connor; Tipton, John; Booth, Robert K; Hooten, Mevin B; Jackson, Stephen T (August 2019). "Comparing and improving methods for reconstructing peatland water-table depth from testate amoebae". The Holocene. 29 (8): 1350–1361. Bibcode:2019Holoc..29.1350N. doi:10.1177/0959683619846969. ISSN 0959-6836.
  4. ^ Kaplan, Jed O.; Krumhardt, Kristen M.; Gaillard, Marie-José; Sugita, Shinya; Trondman, Anna-Kari; Fyfe, Ralph; Marquer, Laurent; Mazier, Florence; Nielsen, Anne Birgitte (December 2017). "Constraining the Deforestation History of Europe: Evaluation of Historical Land Use Scenarios with Pollen-Based Land Cover Reconstructions". Land. 6 (4): 91. doi:10.3390/land6040091. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-002E-9BA0-C.
  5. ^ Barnosky, Anthony D.; Koch, Paul L.; Feranec, Robert S.; Wing, Scott L.; Shabel, Alan B. (2004-10-01). "Assessing the Causes of Late Pleistocene Extinctions on the Continents". Science. 306 (5693): 70–75. Bibcode:2004Sci...306...70B. doi:10.1126/science.1101476. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 15459379. S2CID 36156087.
  6. ^ Emery-Wetherell, Meaghan M.; McHorse, Brianna K.; Davis, Edward Byrd (November 2017). "Spatially explicit analysis sheds new light on the Pleistocene megafaunal extinction in North America". Paleobiology. 43 (4): 642–655. Bibcode:2017Pbio...43..642E. doi:10.1017/pab.2017.15. ISSN 0094-8373.
  7. ^ Lenton, T. M.; Held, H.; Kriegler, E.; Hall, J. W.; Lucht, W.; Rahmstorf, S.; Schellnhuber, H. J. (2008-02-07). "Tipping elements in the Earth's climate system". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 105 (6): 1786–1793. doi:10.1073/pnas.0705414105. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2538841. PMID 18258748.
  8. ^ Smol, John P. (2010). "The power of the past: using sediments to track the effects of multiple stressors on lake ecosystems". Freshwater Biology. 55 (s1): 43–59. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2427.2009.02373.x. ISSN 1365-2427.
  9. ^ Larocque-Tobler, Isabelle (2016). "Editorial: Using Paleolimnology for Lake Restoration and Management". Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 4. doi:10.3389/fevo.2016.00103. ISSN 2296-701X.
  10. ^ Farley, Scott S.; Dawson, Andria; Goring, Simon J.; Williams, John W. (2018-08-01). "Situating Ecology as a Big-Data Science: Current Advances, Challenges, and Solutions". BioScience. 68 (8): 563–576. doi:10.1093/biosci/biy068. ISSN 0006-3568.
  11. ^ a b c Williams, John W; Kaufman, Ds; Newton, A; von Gunten, L (November 2018). "Building open data: Data stewards and community-curated data resources". Past Global Change Magazine. 26 (2): 50–51. doi:10.22498/pages.26.2.50.
  12. ^ a b Grimm, Eric C; Blois, Jl; Giesecke, T; Graham, Rw; Smith, Aj; Williams, Jw (November 2018). "Constituent databases and data stewards in the Neotoma Paleoecology Database: History, growth, and new directions". Past Global Change Magazine. 26 (2): 64–65. doi:10.22498/pages.26.2.64.
  13. ^ Edwards, Kevin J.; Fyfe, Ralph M.; Jackson, Stephen T. (2017-02-07). "The first 100 years of pollen analysis". Nature Plants. 3 (2): 1–4. doi:10.1038/nplants.2017.1. hdl:2164/9078. ISSN 2055-0278. S2CID 27399118.
  14. ^ Members, Cohmap (1988-08-26). "Climatic Changes of the Last 18,000 Years: Observations and Model Simulations". Science. 241 (4869): 1043–1052. Bibcode:1988Sci...241.1043M. doi:10.1126/science.241.4869.1043. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17747487.
  15. ^ Graham, Russell W.; Lundelius, Ernest L.; Graham, Mary Ann; Schroeder, Erich K.; Toomey, Rickard S.; Anderson, Elaine; Barnosky, Anthony D.; Burns, James A.; Churcher, Charles S.; Grayson, Donald K.; Guthrie, R. Dale (1996-06-14). "Spatial Response of Mammals to Late Quaternary Environmental Fluctuations". Science. 272 (5268): 1601–1606. Bibcode:1996Sci...272.1601G. doi:10.1126/science.272.5268.1601. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 8662471. S2CID 28738669.
  16. ^ Webb III, Thompson; Bartlein, Patrick J.; Harrison, Sandy P.; Anderson, Katherine H. (1993). "Vegetation, Lake Levels, and Climate in Eastern North America for the Past 18,000 Years". Global Climates since the Last Glacial Maximum. edited by Wright H. E., Kutzbach J. E., Webb T., Ruddiman W. F., Street-Perrott F. A., and Bartlein P. J. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 415–467. ISBN 978-0816621453.
  17. ^ Davis, M. B. (1976). "Pleistocene biogeography of temperate deciduous forests". Geoscience and Man. 13: 13–26.
  18. ^ Whitehead, Donald R.; Charles, Donald F.; Goldstein, Robert A. (1990-01-01). "The PIRLA project (Paleoecological Investigation of Recent Lake Acidification): an introduction to the synthesis of the project". Journal of Paleolimnology. 3 (3): 187–194. Bibcode:1990JPall...3..187W. doi:10.1007/BF00219458. ISSN 1573-0417. S2CID 129480215.
  19. ^ Davidson, Thomas A.; Jeppesen, Erik (2013-03-01). "The role of palaeolimnology in assessing eutrophication and its impact on lakes". Journal of Paleolimnology. 49 (3): 391–410. Bibcode:2013JPall..49..391D. doi:10.1007/s10933-012-9651-0. ISSN 1573-0417. S2CID 128574128.
  20. ^ Ramstack, Joy M; Fritz, Sherilyn C; Engstrom, Daniel R (2004-04-01). "Twentieth century water quality trends in Minnesota lakes compared with presettlement variability". Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 61 (4): 561–576. doi:10.1139/f04-015. hdl:1912/235. ISSN 0706-652X. S2CID 42121388.
  21. ^ Carrasco, Marc; Barnosky, Anthony; Kraatz, Brian; Davis, Edward (2007-12-01). "The Miocene MammaL Mapping Project (Miomap): An Online Database of Arikareean Through Hemphillian Fossil Mammals". Bulletin of Carnegie Museum of Natural History. 39: 183–188. doi:10.2992/0145-9058(2007)39[183:TMMMPM]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 2771629.
  22. ^ Giesecke, Thomas; de Beaulieu, J-L; Leydet-Barbier, M (August 2016). "The European Pollen Database: Research tool and community". Past Global Change Magazine. 24 (1): 48. doi:10.22498/pages.24.1.48. ISSN 2411-605X.
  23. ^ Fyfe, Ralph M.; de Beaulieu, Jacques-Louis; Binney, Heather; Bradshaw, Richard H. W.; Brewer, Simon; Le Flao, Anne; Finsinger, Walter; Gaillard, Marie-José; Giesecke, Thomas; Gil-Romera, Graciela; Grimm, Eric C. (2009-09-01). "The European Pollen Database: past efforts and current activities". Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 18 (5): 417–424. doi:10.1007/s00334-009-0215-9. ISSN 1617-6278.
  24. ^ Flantua, Suzette G. A.; Hooghiemstra, Henry; Grimm, Eric C.; Behling, Hermann; Bush, Mark B.; González-Arango, Catalina; Gosling, William D.; Ledru, Marie-Pierre; Lozano-García, Socorro; Maldonado, Antonio; Prieto, Aldo R. (2015-12-01). "Updated site compilation of the Latin American Pollen Database". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 223: 104–115. Bibcode:2015RPaPa.223..104F. doi:10.1016/j.revpalbo.2015.09.008. hdl:10261/125254. ISSN 0034-6667.
  25. ^ Amesbury, Matthew J.; Booth, Robert K.; Roland, Thomas P.; Bunbury, Joan; Clifford, Michael J.; Charman, Dan J.; Elliot, Suzanne; Finkelstein, Sarah; Garneau, Michelle; Hughes, Paul D. M.; Lamarre, Alexandre (2018-12-01). "Towards a Holarctic synthesis of peatland testate amoeba ecology: Development of a new continental-scale palaeohydrological transfer function for North America and comparison to European data". Quaternary Science Reviews. 201: 483–500. Bibcode:2018QSRv..201..483A. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.10.034. hdl:10871/35099. ISSN 0277-3791.
  26. ^ Goring, Simon; Dawson, Andria; Simpson, Gavin; Ram, Karthik; Graham, Russ; Grimm, Eric; Williams, John (2015-03-09). "neotoma: A Programmatic Interface to the Neotoma Paleoecological Database". Open Quaternary. 1 (1): Art. 2. doi:10.5334/oq.ab. ISSN 2055-298X.

External links edit

  • Neotoma Paleoecology Database

neotoma, paleoecology, database, this, article, external, links, follow, wikipedia, policies, guidelines, please, improve, this, article, removing, excessive, inappropriate, external, links, converting, useful, links, where, appropriate, into, footnote, refere. This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Neotoma Paleoecology Database Neotoma is an open international data resource that stores and shares multiple kinds of fossil paleoecological and paleoenvironmental data 1 Neotoma specializes in fossil data holdings at timescales covering the last several decades to the last several million years Neotoma is organized and led by scientists and enhances data consistency through community curation by experts Neotoma data are open to all and available to anyone with an internet connection Neotoma data are used by scientists and teachers especially paleoecologists biogeographers and archaeologists to study the responses of species and ecosystems to past environmental change and growing human activity Paleoclimatologists use Neotoma data to help reconstruct past climates 2 Sample research questions addressed include 1 How sensitive are ecosystems to past climate change 3 2 Why were rates of tree range expansion so fast after the end of the last ice age given that tree seed dispersal distances are usually so short Reid s Paradox 3 Where and when did humans begin transforming ecosystems 4 4 What were the causes and consequences of the widespread extinctions of large animals over the last 50 000 years 5 6 5 Which ecosystems are characterized by abrupt change between alternate stable states and what triggers these abrupt changes 7 6 How have freshwater resources and aquatic ecosystems been affected by human land use and activity over the last several decades 8 9 Contents 1 Data types and data volume 2 History 3 Data curation and governance 4 Data use and access 5 References 6 External linksData types and data volume editThe species and taxa stored in Neotoma represent a breadth of terrestrial and aquatic organisms plants pollen and larger fossils mammals and other vertebrates insects and other invertebrates diatoms ostracodes and testate amoebae Neotoma also stores the age estimates provided by radiometric dating e g radiocarbon lead 210 and the age estimates that are derived from statistical models of age as a function of depth in sediment column The Neotoma data model is extensible to other types of paleoecological and paleoenvironmental variables Data volume in Neotoma is growing rapidly as are the data holdings in other paleontological and contemporary databases 10 As of May 2020 Neotoma held 7 million individual observations from over 38 700 datasets 18 600 sites 7 000 scientific papers 6 000 authors and 100 countries 1 For comparison On Nov 8 2017 Neotoma held 3 8 million observations from 17 275 datasets and 9 269 sites 11 History editThe intellectual foundations of Neotoma trace back to efforts by early paleontologists and paleoecologists in the first half of the 20th century to assemble many individual records into larger mapped syntheses 12 As von Post wrote paleoecologists must think horizontally work vertically 13 i e think across both time and space to understand the processes governing the ever changing distribution of species the associations among species and the diversity of life These efforts accelerated in the 1970s and 1980s when a number of scientific teams began assembling databases of fossil distributions to study the spatial distributions of species over space and time and the effects of past environmental variations on these distributions These efforts were powered by advances in computing capabilities and the growing availability of radiocarbon and other radiometric dates to provide a common time framework for all fossil occurrences Much of this work focused on environmental and ecological changes accompanying the glacial interglacial cycles of the Quaternary These databases were used both by paleoclimatologists to draw inferences about past climates that could be used to test the paleoclimatic simulations of earth system models 14 and by paleoecologists interested in how past community dynamics were driven by these environmental changes 15 16 For example Margaret Davis demonstrated tree species experienced large range shifts with the climate changes at the end of the last ice age and that species responded individualistically 17 As a result many past communities were no analog i e their mixtures of species lack any close counterpart in modern communities Some records and Constituent Databases in Neotoma extend deeper into the Cenozoic In parallel other research teams were gathering fossil records from high resolution sediment archives spanning the last few decades to centuries to study the effects of human activities upon communities and ecosystems Examples include the effects of acid rain on ecosystems in the 1980s 18 or the eutrophication of many lake ecosystems due to increasing nutrient runoff into lakes and streams 19 20 Many of these initial data gathering efforts were led by individual pioneers e g Margaret Davis Tom Webb Russ Graham Bjorn Berglund Jacques Louis Beaulieu or by small research teams As these efforts have matured and as the amount of data has grown the volume and complexity of paleoecological data is now beyond the capacity of any single individual expert to manage or curate At the same time many smaller paleontological and paleoecological databases have been unable to keep up with current advances in informatics or have gone offline as funding lapsed or lead investigators retired or moved on Hence the fields of paleoecology and paleontology have developed data governance models based on community curation in which data resources like Neotoma are managed by communities of scientists working together to curate and share their data 11 Neotoma follows a model of centralized informatics but distributed scientific governance and is best viewed as a coalition of Constituent Databases that share a common set of database and software resources while retaining separate rights to govern and curate the data in their Data Stewards domains of expertise For example the European Pollen Database uses the Neotoma data model and software services but is governed by its own board and community of expert data stewards Neotoma works closely with the Paleobiology Database which has a similar intellectual history but has focused on the entire history of life at timescales of millions to hundreds of millions of years Together Neotoma and the Paleobiology Database have helped launch the EarthLife Consortium a non profit umbrella organization to support the easy and free sharing of paleoecological and paleobiological data Data curation and governance editNeotoma employs a model of distributed data curation and governance In this model Neotoma data are curated and governed by a community of Data Stewards organized into Constituent Databases 11 12 These Constituent Databases can be organized by region time or taxonomic group For example FAUNMAP is a Constituent Database in Neotoma that manages Quaternary fossil vertebrate records in North America while MioMap primarily emphasizes Miocene vertebrate records 21 For pollen data Constituent Databases are organized geographically and include the European Pollen Database 22 23 the North American Pollen Database and the Latin American Pollen Database 24 Other major Constituent Databases include the Testate Amoebae Database 25 the International Ostracode Database and the Diatom Paleoecology Data Cooperative All data in Neotoma are uploaded and curated by Data Stewards associated with one or more Constituent Databases This model of distributed community curation is essential to ensuring data quality and consistency Neotoma is led by a Neotoma Leadership Council NLC comprising 14 elected councilors of which 2 seats are reserved for early career scientists Bylaws Elections are held annually with roughly one third of the NLC elected each cycle Neotoma is a recommended data facility for the Earth Sciences Division of the National Science Foundation Past Global Changes and the American Quaternary Association Neotoma is a member of the ICSU World Data System and is registered with COPDESS registry for scientific data sources adhering to FAIR Findable Accessible Interoperable Reproducible principles Neotoma has been supported by multiple sources including the National Science Foundation and the Belmont Forum Data use and access editUse of data in Neotoma is governed by a Creative Commons NC BY license which permits unrestricted use as long as data sources are properly acknowledged and cited Neotoma Data Use Policy Proper full citation of data in Neotoma occurs at three levels Neotoma itself the governing Constituent Database s and the original authors Data can be retrieved from Neotoma in several ways Neotoma Explorer is a map based interface designed for quick look searches and first pass data explorations Explorer is well suited for researchers interested in quick look searches and data views and for explorations by high school and college level teachers and students Teaching exercises using Neotoma Explorer have been prepared and hosted by the Science and Education Research Center SERC at Carleton College An R package neotoma supports exporting of data from Neotoma into the R programmatic environment 26 Application Programmatic Interfaces APIs support access to Neotoma data by third party software developers Resources using Neotoma data include the Flyover Country app for travelers and the Global Pollen Project References edit Williams J W Blois J Goring S J Grimm E C Smith A J Uhen M D December 2019 The Neotoma Paleoecology Database and EarthLife Consortium Building Community Data Resources to Mobilize Dark Long Tail Records of Past Biodiversity Dynamics AGUFM 2019 B53O 2614 Bibcode 2019AGUFM B53O2614W Kaufman Darrell McKay Nicholas Routson Cody Erb Michael Davis Basil Heiri Oliver Jaccard Samuel Tierney Jessica Datwyler Christoph Axford Yarrow Brussel Thomas December 2020 A global database of Holocene paleotemperature records Scientific Data 7 1 115 Bibcode 2020NatSD 7 115K doi 10 1038 s41597 020 0445 3 ISSN 2052 4463 PMC 7156486 PMID 32286335 Nolan Connor Tipton John Booth Robert K Hooten Mevin B Jackson Stephen T August 2019 Comparing and improving methods for reconstructing peatland water table depth from testate amoebae The Holocene 29 8 1350 1361 Bibcode 2019Holoc 29 1350N doi 10 1177 0959683619846969 ISSN 0959 6836 Kaplan Jed O Krumhardt Kristen M Gaillard Marie Jose Sugita Shinya Trondman Anna Kari Fyfe Ralph Marquer Laurent Mazier Florence Nielsen Anne Birgitte December 2017 Constraining the Deforestation History of Europe Evaluation of Historical Land Use Scenarios with Pollen Based Land Cover Reconstructions Land 6 4 91 doi 10 3390 land6040091 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 002E 9BA0 C Barnosky Anthony D Koch Paul L Feranec Robert S Wing Scott L Shabel Alan B 2004 10 01 Assessing the Causes of Late Pleistocene Extinctions on the Continents Science 306 5693 70 75 Bibcode 2004Sci 306 70B doi 10 1126 science 1101476 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 15459379 S2CID 36156087 Emery Wetherell Meaghan M McHorse Brianna K Davis Edward Byrd November 2017 Spatially explicit analysis sheds new light on the Pleistocene megafaunal extinction in North America Paleobiology 43 4 642 655 Bibcode 2017Pbio 43 642E doi 10 1017 pab 2017 15 ISSN 0094 8373 Lenton T M Held H Kriegler E Hall J W Lucht W Rahmstorf S Schellnhuber H J 2008 02 07 Tipping elements in the Earth s climate system Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105 6 1786 1793 doi 10 1073 pnas 0705414105 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 2538841 PMID 18258748 Smol John P 2010 The power of the past using sediments to track the effects of multiple stressors on lake ecosystems Freshwater Biology 55 s1 43 59 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2427 2009 02373 x ISSN 1365 2427 Larocque Tobler Isabelle 2016 Editorial Using Paleolimnology for Lake Restoration and Management Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 4 doi 10 3389 fevo 2016 00103 ISSN 2296 701X Farley Scott S Dawson Andria Goring Simon J Williams John W 2018 08 01 Situating Ecology as a Big Data Science Current Advances Challenges and Solutions BioScience 68 8 563 576 doi 10 1093 biosci biy068 ISSN 0006 3568 a b c Williams John W Kaufman Ds Newton A von Gunten L November 2018 Building open data Data stewards and community curated data resources Past Global Change Magazine 26 2 50 51 doi 10 22498 pages 26 2 50 a b Grimm Eric C Blois Jl Giesecke T Graham Rw Smith Aj Williams Jw November 2018 Constituent databases and data stewards in the Neotoma Paleoecology Database History growth and new directions Past Global Change Magazine 26 2 64 65 doi 10 22498 pages 26 2 64 Edwards Kevin J Fyfe Ralph M Jackson Stephen T 2017 02 07 The first 100 years of pollen analysis Nature Plants 3 2 1 4 doi 10 1038 nplants 2017 1 hdl 2164 9078 ISSN 2055 0278 S2CID 27399118 Members Cohmap 1988 08 26 Climatic Changes of the Last 18 000 Years Observations and Model Simulations Science 241 4869 1043 1052 Bibcode 1988Sci 241 1043M doi 10 1126 science 241 4869 1043 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 17747487 Graham Russell W Lundelius Ernest L Graham Mary Ann Schroeder Erich K Toomey Rickard S Anderson Elaine Barnosky Anthony D Burns James A Churcher Charles S Grayson Donald K Guthrie R Dale 1996 06 14 Spatial Response of Mammals to Late Quaternary Environmental Fluctuations Science 272 5268 1601 1606 Bibcode 1996Sci 272 1601G doi 10 1126 science 272 5268 1601 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 8662471 S2CID 28738669 Webb III Thompson Bartlein Patrick J Harrison Sandy P Anderson Katherine H 1993 Vegetation Lake Levels and Climate in Eastern North America for the Past 18 000 Years Global Climates since the Last Glacial Maximum edited by Wright H E Kutzbach J E Webb T Ruddiman W F Street Perrott F A and Bartlein P J University of Minnesota Press pp 415 467 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Prieto Aldo R 2015 12 01 Updated site compilation of the Latin American Pollen Database Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 223 104 115 Bibcode 2015RPaPa 223 104F doi 10 1016 j revpalbo 2015 09 008 hdl 10261 125254 ISSN 0034 6667 Amesbury Matthew J Booth Robert K Roland Thomas P Bunbury Joan Clifford Michael J Charman Dan J Elliot Suzanne Finkelstein Sarah Garneau Michelle Hughes Paul D M Lamarre Alexandre 2018 12 01 Towards a Holarctic synthesis of peatland testate amoeba ecology Development of a new continental scale palaeohydrological transfer function for North America and comparison to European data Quaternary Science Reviews 201 483 500 Bibcode 2018QSRv 201 483A doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2018 10 034 hdl 10871 35099 ISSN 0277 3791 Goring Simon Dawson Andria Simpson Gavin Ram Karthik Graham Russ Grimm Eric Williams John 2015 03 09 neotoma A Programmatic Interface to the Neotoma Paleoecological Database Open Quaternary 1 1 Art 2 doi 10 5334 oq ab ISSN 2055 298X External links 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