After many days of coring, eight meters of lake sediment were obtained from Wildcat Lake by a group of scientists including Clarke Knight and Marie Champagne (left to right). (Photo Credit: Lysanna Anderson)
Lysanna Anderson, PhD
Dr. Anderson is a Research Geologist with Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center in Menlo Park, CA. She received her degrees in Geology and Geography from University of Colorado and University of Texas. She has devoted her career to studying the dynamics of ecosystems and their response to climactic forcing, as well as human impact.
Dr. Anderson was led to ecological science by a fascination with the incredible diversity of ecosystems that comprise our planet. She witnessed firsthand in Asia, Africa, South America, and in Western North America, the impact of human land use practices and the challenges of sustainable development. In particular, she saw the impact and issues on decision making, risk assessment, and policy that arise from a view of ecological dynamics that is restricted to historical time scales. Her research interests center on understanding ecosystem change on millennial to decadal time scales, and in making that understanding useful and available to managers, planners, and other stakeholders in order to help facilitate sustainable land use practices.
Education and Certifications
Ph.D., Geology, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1998
M.A., Geography, University of Texas at Austin, 1991
B.A., Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1988
Science and Products
Drivers and Impacts of North Pacific Climate Variability
Twentieth century extreme precipitation detected in a high-resolution, coastal lake-sediment record from California
Bayesian approaches to proxy uncertainty quantification in paleoecology: A mathematical justification and practical integration
Atmospheric river activity during the late Holocene exceeds modern range of variability in California
Regional variability in peatland burning at mid-to high-latitudes during the Holocene
Assessing reproducibility in sedimentary macroscopic charcoal count data
Land management explains major trends in forest structure and composition over the last millennium in California’s Klamath Mountains
Understanding rates of change: A case study using fossil pollen records from California to assess the potential for and challenges to a regional data synthesis
Paleoenvironmental, epigraphic, and archaeological evidence of total warfare among the Classic Maya
A North American Hydroclimate Synthesis (NAHS) of the Common Era
Holocene climate variability and anthropogenic impacts from Lago Paixban, a perennial wetland in Peten, Guatemala
Holocene environmental changes inferred from biological and sedimentological proxies in a high elevation Great Basin lake in the northern Ruby Mountains, Nevada, USA
Limiting age for the Provo shoreline of Lake Bonneville
After many days of coring, eight meters of lake sediment were obtained from Wildcat Lake by a group of scientists including Clarke Knight and Marie Champagne (left to right). (Photo Credit: Lysanna Anderson)
Science and Products
Drivers and Impacts of North Pacific Climate Variability
Twentieth century extreme precipitation detected in a high-resolution, coastal lake-sediment record from California
Bayesian approaches to proxy uncertainty quantification in paleoecology: A mathematical justification and practical integration
Atmospheric river activity during the late Holocene exceeds modern range of variability in California
Regional variability in peatland burning at mid-to high-latitudes during the Holocene
Assessing reproducibility in sedimentary macroscopic charcoal count data
Land management explains major trends in forest structure and composition over the last millennium in California’s Klamath Mountains
Understanding rates of change: A case study using fossil pollen records from California to assess the potential for and challenges to a regional data synthesis
Paleoenvironmental, epigraphic, and archaeological evidence of total warfare among the Classic Maya
A North American Hydroclimate Synthesis (NAHS) of the Common Era
Holocene climate variability and anthropogenic impacts from Lago Paixban, a perennial wetland in Peten, Guatemala
Holocene environmental changes inferred from biological and sedimentological proxies in a high elevation Great Basin lake in the northern Ruby Mountains, Nevada, USA
Limiting age for the Provo shoreline of Lake Bonneville
After many days of coring, eight meters of lake sediment were obtained from Wildcat Lake by a group of scientists including Clarke Knight and Marie Champagne (left to right). (Photo Credit: Lysanna Anderson)
After many days of coring, eight meters of lake sediment were obtained from Wildcat Lake by a group of scientists including Clarke Knight and Marie Champagne (left to right). (Photo Credit: Lysanna Anderson)