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  • © 2007

Lochnagar

The Natural History of a Mountain Lake

Editors:

  • Brings together the knowledge gained over two decades of multi-disciplinary scientific study, with the results of lake sediment research covering millennia, to show how the loch has changed and developed both naturally and as a result of human impact
  • Because of the focus on a single site, at which a great deal of scientific study has been conducted, it allows an in-depth treatment of subjects that is not possible in texts dealing with these subjects more generally
  • Provides more extensive and detailed background information for interested visitors to the area than standard guidebooks which are either short guides to a much wider region or designed specifically for one interest group (i.e. walking and climbing guides)
  • Draws from a broad range of disciplines (geology, botany, zoology, climatology, meteorology, environmental chemistry) and time-frames (i.e. contemporary high resolution meteorological and hydrological data, to geological data, to future predictions of climate impacts)

Part of the book series: Developments in Paleoenvironmental Research (DPER, volume 12)

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Table of contents (19 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages I-XXX
  2. An introduction to Lochnagar

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 1-25
    2. An Introduction to Lochnagar

      • Neil L. Rose
      Pages 1-25
    3. Physical Characteristics of Lochnagar

      • Michael Hughes
      Pages 27-35
  3. The Environmental Landscape of Lochnagar

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 37-37
    2. Lochnagar Water-Temperatures, Climate and Weather

      • Roy Thompson, Helen Kettle, Donald T. Monteith, Neil L. Rose
      Pages 63-91
  4. The Contemporary Physical and Biological Status of Lochnagar

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 153-153
    2. Hydrology and Hydrochemistry of Lochnagar

      • Alan Jenkins, Nick Reynard, Mike Hutchins, Muriel Bonjean, Martin Lees
      Pages 177-198
    3. The Aquatic Flora of Lochnagar

      • Roger J. Flower, Donald T. Monteith, Jonathan Tyler, Ewan Shilland, Sergi Pla
      Pages 199-229
    4. Pattern And Process In The Lochnagar Food Web

      • Guy Woodward, Katrin Layer
      Pages 231-252
    5. Brown Trout in Lochnagar: Population and Contamination by Metals and Organic Micropollutants

      • Bjørn Olav Rosseland, Sigurd Rognerud, Peter Collen, Joan O. Grimalt, Ingrid Vives, Jean-Charles Massabuau et al.
      Pages 253-285
  5. Anthropogenic Impacts from Atmospheric Pollutant Deposition

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 287-287
    2. National, International and Global Sources of Contamination at Lochnagar

      • Neil L. Rose, Sarah E. Metcalfe, Anna C. Benedictow, Martin Todd, Jim Nicholson
      Pages 289-315
    3. Acidification of Lochnagar and Prospects for Recovery

      • Donald T. Monteith, Chris D. Evans, Catherine Dalton
      Pages 317-344
    4. Trace Metals in the Catchment, Loch and Sediments of Lochnagar: Measurements and Modelling

      • Edward Tipping, Handong Yang, Alan J. Lawlor, Neil L. Rose, Laura Shotbolt
      Pages 345-373

About this book

Previous volumes in this ‘Developments in Paleoenvironmental Research’ (DPER) series have focussed on providing in-depth descriptions of palaeoenvironmental techniques or have described the applications of these approaches on various regional bases. The former of these now provide an invaluable series of standard text books for scientists and students, while the latter show how the application of palaeo-techniques can be used across broad geographical scales. In this current volume, we have attempted something a little different. Not only are a variety of palaeo-techniques applied to a single, small lake, but we have tried to show how these methods, and the data derived from them, can be integrated synergistically with contemporary monitoring and predictive modelling. The acidification and metals research provide two good examples of this. Along with other upland lakes across the UK, the early research work at Lochnagar was based on assessing the competing hypotheses for the causes of surface water acidification. As a result, palaeolimnological techniques were used to assess the timing and extent of pH changes over hundreds of years. The subsequent establishment of the UK Acid Waters Monitoring Network (UK AWMN) then allowed a range of biological and chemical parameters to be assessed routinely in order to determine the rate at which the lakes and streams, including Lochnagar, were recovering following emissions reductions.

Reviews

From the reviews:

"Lochnagar brings together a wealth of information about a remote lake … . this volume brings together the best authorities in the field of (paleo-) limnology and related sciences—46 persons all in all—who have condensed the knowledge about Lochnager into 500 pages. … they have also added background information to each of the 19 chapters, which will make this book readable to non-specialists and students. … To help readers from other disciplines, the book contains an excellent glossary … ." (Roland Psenner, Journal of Paleolimnology, Vol. 40, 2008)

Editors and Affiliations

  • Environmental Change Research Centre, University College London, London, UK

    Neil L. Rose

About the editor

Neil Rose’s first degree was in Chemistry with Geochemistry at University of Leicester (1981 – 1984). He then joined the British Antarctic Survey and spent 30 months in the Antarctic working on limnology of sub-Antarctic lakes and discovering the joys of lake sediment. Upon return to the UK, he joined the Palaeoecology Research Unit (later becoming the Environmental Change Research Centre - ECRC) at University College London as a Research Assistant. His PhD was awarded in July 1991 entitled "Fly-ash particles in lake sediments: Extraction, characterisation and distribution". Since then he has remained with the ECRC being appointed Principal Research Fellow in October 2001. His main research focus is in the use of lake sediments to determine spatial and temporal distributions of pollutants in remote lakes and this has led him to work in Svalbard, Greenland, Uganda, China, Alaska and many European mountain areas. Further research areas include the source apportionment of fly-ash particles and the use of SCP temporal profiles to provide lake sediment chronologies for the industrial period. His research at Lochnagar began in 1988 and shows no sign of stopping any time soon.

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 84.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 109.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
Hardcover Book USD 109.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access