Wei Wang
Inner Mongolia University
12 Papers
8 Citations
Wei Wang is an academic researcher from Inner Mongolia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Vegetation. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications. Previous affiliations of Wei Wang include Lanzhou University.
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Papers
Holocene climate and vegetation changes inferred from pollen records of Lake Aibi, northern Xinjiang, China: A potential contribution to understanding of Holocene climate pattern in East-central Asia
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reconstructed the lake hydrologic variations and the basinwide vegetation changes over past ∼13,870 years based on pollen data of 195 samples and the lithologic variations obtained from Lake Aibi in the western part of Xinjiang area.
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A survey of modern pollen and vegetation along a south–north transect in Mongolia
TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial and quantitative relationship between modern pollen and vegetation in Mongolia, and explores the potential for using this relationship in palaeoclimatic reconstructions, is explored.
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Lacustrine and eolian records of Holocene climate changes in the Mongolian Plateau : preliminary results
Z.-D. Feng,Z.-D. Feng,Wei Wang,L.L. Guo,P. Khosbayar,Ts. Narantsetseg,A. J. T. Jull,Chengbang An,Xiaoqiang Li,H.C. Zhang,Y.Z. Ma +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare two pairs of adjacent lacustrine and eolian sections at sites in the southern and northern Mongolian Plateaus in order to test spatial climate variability during the Holocene.
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vegetation along a south-north transect in Mongolia
Yuzhen Ma,Kam-biu Liu,Zhaodong Feng,Yanli Sang,Wei Wang,Aizhi Sun +5 more
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial and quantitative relationship between modern pollen and vegetation in Mongolia has been investigated, and the potential for using this relationship in palaeoclimatic reconstructions has been explored.
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A prolonged dry mid-Holocene climate revealed by pollen and diatom records from Lake Ugii Nuur in central Mongolia
Wei Wang,Wei Wang,Yuzhen Ma,Zhaodong Feng,Zhaodong Feng,Ts. Narantsetseg,Kam-biu Liu,Xinwei Zhai +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, a high-resolution pollen and diatom-based bioclimatic reconstruction from Ugii Nuur lake core with a chronological support of 14 AMS dates revealed that a prolonged dry climate prevailed between 5830-3080 14C BP in central Mongolia, as indicated by a dramatic increase in Chenopodiaceae pollen percentages at the expense of Pinus, Poaceae, Cyperaceae and other mesophytic forbs pollen percentages.
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