"The diverse sediment, archeological, and fossil records of the Quaternary narrate the story of how we got to today: the origin and movements of our species, the biogeographic re-shuffling of others, and the imprints of a fluctuating climate that have intersected to shape our present world and its pressing environmental challenges. These archives of the near past have grown increasingly valuable in guiding conservation decision-making as we move into an uncertain future. In this light, a book about the Quaternary is extremely timely and, ideally, would equip readers with a toolkit for generating and applying multidisciplinary datasets within a new temporal perspective. I suggest that this volume is best situated for an advanced undergraduate course in geology, where the students are familiar with navigating jargon but unfamiliar with basic biological and anthropological concepts and frameworks." --The Quarterly Review of Biology
1. Climate: Continuous variability and impact on the earth system2. Organisms: Adaption, extinction and biogeographical reorganizations3. Biodiversity: Diversification or impoverishment?4. Communities: Adjustments, innovations and revolutions5. Humans: Settlement and humanization of the planet6. The future: Natural cycles and human interference
Valentí Rull is a biologist with a PhD in paleoecology (1990). He is a Tenured Scientist of the Spanish Council for Scientific Research (CSIC) at the Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera, Barcelona. He uses paleocological evidence to study the type and characteristics of biotic responses to environmental shifts, the natural and anthropogenic drivers of ecological change and the role of tectonics and environmental change on the origin of biodiversity. He also works on the contribution of paleoecology to biodiversity conservation. Dr. Rull has conducted his research on several temperate (Pyrenees, Azores Islands), tropical (Andes, Orinoco delta, Maracaibo basin, Gran Sabana, Pantepui) and subtropical (Easter Island) regions.