Trevor Porter
I am a professor in the Department of Geography, Geomatics and Environment at the University of Toronto Mississauga. My research focuses on northern paleoenvironmental change over recent centuries to millions of years BP. I specialise in reconstructing the past using natural indicators such as tree rings, leaf waxes, ice-rich permafrost, and the stable isotopes they contain. Most of this work is based in areas of N.W. Canada and Alaska.
Publications
Clackett, S, Porter, TJ, and Lehnherr, I (2021). The tree-ring mercury record of Klondike gold mining at Bear Creek, central Yukon. Environmental Pollution, doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.115777.
Holland, KM, Porter, TJ, Froese, DG, Kokelj, SV, Buchanan, C (2020). Ice-wedge evidence of Holocene winter warming in the Canadian Arctic. Geophysical Research Letters 47(12), doi: 10.1029/2020GL087942.
Otiniano, G, Porter, TJ, Benowitz, J, Bindeman, I, Froese, D, Jensen, B, Davies, L, Phillips, M (2020): A late Miocene to late Pleistocene reconstruction of precipitation isotopes and climate from hydrated volcanic glass shards and biomarkers in central Alaska and Yukon. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology 35, doi:10.1029/2019PA003791.
Porter, TJ, Opel, T (2020). Recent advances in paleoclimatological studies of Arctic wedge- and pore-ice stable-water isotope records. Permafrost and Periglacial Processes 31 (2020 International Permafrost Association Transactions Special Issue), 429-441.
Porter, TJ, Schoenemann, SW, Davies, LJ, Steig, EJ, Bandara, S, Froese, DG (2019). Recent summer warming in northwestern Canada exceeds the Holocene thermal maximum. Nature Communications, doi://10.1038/s41467-019-09622-y.
People Type:
Research Area:
Paleoclimatology of high-latitude regions.