Long continental pollen records (LCPRs) form a remarkable aspect of palynological research. They are rare, mostly collected in multiple coring sessions, due to time constraints they often do not reach the sample resolution anticipated, train the international audience to accept regularly improved age models, and show exciting histories of how ecosystems responded to Quaternary ice-age cycles. LCPRs also offer marine, and ice-core studies a framework to explore how marine, ice and land ecosystems are responding to climate change in a mutual interaction. The decennia needed to complete such record is bizarre resulting in pollen records do not match in time...
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