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The NATO Advanced Research Workshop on "Paleoclimatology and
Paleometeorology: Modem and Past Patterns of Global Atmospheric
Transport" (held at Oracle, Arizona, USA from November 17-19, 1987)
brought together atmospheric chemists, physicists, and
meteorologists who study the origin and transport of modem-day
mineral and biological aerosols with geologists and paleobotanists
who study the sedimentary record of eolian and hydrologic processes
along with modelers who study and conceptualize the processes
influencing atmospheric transport at present and in the past.
Presentations at the workshop provided a guide to our present
knowledge of the entire spectrum of processes and phenomena
important to the generation, transport, and deposition of eolian
terrigenous material that ultimately becomes part of the geologic
record and the modeling techniques that used to represent these
processes. The presenta tions on the geologic record of eolian
deposition documented our present understanding of the na e and
causes of climate change on time scales of the last glacial ages
(tens of thousands of years) to time scales over which the
arrangement of continents, mountains, and oceans has changed sub
stantially (tens of millions of years). There has been a growing
recognition of the importance of global climatic changes to the
future well-being of humanity. In particular, the climatic response
to human alterations to the earth's surface and chemical
composition has led to concern over the agricultural, ecological,
and societal impacts of such potential global changes."
The NATO Advanced Research Workshop on "Paleoclimatology and
Paleometeorology: Modem and Past Patterns of Global Atmospheric
Transport" (held at Oracle, Arizona, USA from November 17-19, 1987)
brought together atmospheric chemists, physicists, and
meteorologists who study the origin and transport of modem-day
mineral and biological aerosols with geologists and paleobotanists
who study the sedimentary record of eolian and hydrologic processes
along with modelers who study and conceptualize the processes
influencing atmospheric transport at present and in the past.
Presentations at the workshop provided a guide to our present
knowledge of the entire spectrum of processes and phenomena
important to the generation, transport, and deposition of eolian
terrigenous material that ultimately becomes part of the geologic
record and the modeling techniques that used to represent these
processes. The presenta tions on the geologic record of eolian
deposition documented our present understanding of the na~e and
causes of climate change on time scales of the last glacial ages
(tens of thousands of years) to time scales over which the
arrangement of continents, mountains, and oceans has changed sub
stantially (tens of millions of years). There has been a growing
recognition of the importance of global climatic changes to the
future well-being of humanity. In particular, the climatic response
to human alterations to the earth's surface and chemical
composition has led to concern over the agricultural, ecological,
and societal impacts of such potential global changes.
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