Williams,
J. W. (in
press) Quaternary Vegetation Distributions. Encyclopedia
of Paleoclimatology and Ancient Environments. Edited by V. Gornitz.
Kluwer
Academic Publishers. (Preprint)
Webb, T., Shuman, B. N., Williams,
J. W.
(2004) Climatically forced vegetation dynamics in
eastern North America during the late Quaternary period. The Quaternary Period in the United States. Edited
by Gillespie, A. R., Porter, S. C., Atwater, B.
F. Elsevier, pp. 459-478. (Introduction)
Williams, J. W., Shuman, B. N., Webb, T., III, Bartlein,
P. J., Leduc, P.(2004) Quaternary vegetation dynamics in North America: Scaling
from taxa to biomes.
Ecological Monographs 74: 309-334.
(Abstract and Figure PDFs) (Request Reprint)
Gavin, D. G.,
Oswald, W.
W., Wahl, E. R., Williams,
J. W. (2003) A statistical approach to
evaluating distance metrics and analog assignments for pollen
records. Quaternary
Research 60: 356-367.
(Abstract) (Request Reprint)
Williams, J. W.
and
Jackson, S. T. (2003) Palynological and AVHRR
observations of modern vegetational gradients in eastern North
America. The Holocene 13: 485-497. (Abstract) (Request Reprint)
Williams, J. W.
(2003) Needleleaved and broadleaved tree cover
distributions in North America since the Last Glacial Maximum.
Global and Planetary Change 35: 1-23. (Abstract and Figure PDFs) (Request Reprint)
Williams, J. W., Post,
D. M., Cwynar, L. C., Lotter, A. F., Levesque,
A. J. (2002) Rapid vegetation responses to past climate
change. Geology 30: 971-974. (Abstract) (Request Reprint)
Shuman,
B. N., Webb III, T., Bartlein, P. J., Williams, J. W. (2002)
The anatomy of a climatic oscillation: Vegetation change in
eastern North America during the Younger Dryas chronozone.
Quaternary Science Reviews. 21: 1777-1791. (Request Reprint)
Williams, J. W.,
Shuman, B. N., Webb III, T. (2001) No-analog
conditions and rates of change in the climate and vegetation of eastern
North America. Ecology 82: 3346-3362.
(Abstract and Figure PDFs) (Request Reprint)
Williams, J. W.,
Webb
III, T., Richard, P. J. H., and Newby,
P. (2000) Late Quaternary biomes of Canada and the eastern United
States.
Journal
of Biogeography 27: 585-607. (Abstract) (Request Reprint)
Edwards, M. E., Anderson, P. M., Brubaker, L. B., Ager, T., Andreev, A. A., Bigelow, N. H., Cwynar, L. C., Eisner, W. R., Harrison, S. P., Hu, F.-S., Jolly, D., Lozhkin, A. V., McDonald, G. M., Mock, C. J., Ritchie, J. C., Sher, A. V., Spear, R. W., Williams, J. W., and Yu., G. (2000) Pollen-based biomes for Beringia 18,000, 6000, and 0 14C yr. B.P. Journal of Biogeography 27: 521-554.
Williams, J. W.,
Webb III, T., Shuman, B. N., and Bartlein,
P.
J. (2000) Do low CO2 concentrations affect pollen-based
reconstructions
of LGM climates? A response to ‘Physiological significance of low
atmospheric
CO2 for plant-climate interactions’ by Cowling and Sykes. Quaternary
Research 53: 402-404. (Request
Reprint)
Williams, J. W.,
Bartlein, P. J., and Webb III, T. (2000)
Data-model
comparisons for eastern North America - inferred biomes and climate
values
from pollen data. Proceedings of the Third Paleoclimate Modeling
Intercomparison Project Workshop, Oct. 4-8, 1999. Montreal,
Canada.
Edited by P. Braconnot. WCRP-111, WMO/TD-No. 1007. (Request Reprint)
Jackson, S. T., Webb, R. S., Anderson, K. H., Overpeck, J. T., Webb
III, T., Williams, J. W.,
and Hansen, B. C. S. (2000)
Vegetation
and environment in eastern North America during the last glacial
maximum.
Quaternary
Science Reviews 19: 489-508. (Request Reprint)
Williams, J. W.,
Summers, R., and Webb III, T. (1998)
Applying
plant functional types to construct biome maps from eastern North
American
pollen data: comparisons with model results. Quaternary
Science Reviews 17: 607-627. (Abstract) (Request Reprint)
Leduc, P. L., Williams, J. W., and Webb III, T. (1998) Programs for site selection, tabular display, and interpolation of data from Paradox-based pollen databases. INQUA Newsletter 17.
Williams, J. W.
(1995) Factors controlling the formation of
fossiliferous
beds in the Devonian Columbus limestone at Marblehead Quarry,
Marblehead,
Ohio. Ohio Journal of Sciences 95: 325-330.