Publisher: Tree-Ring Society
Below are lists of this title's Most Read and Most Recently Cited articles. The Most Read articles are the articles which have been downloaded the most on the new platform. The Most Recently Cited articles list uses Crossref cited-by data (downloaded on the 1st and 15th of each month) to automatically identify papers which have received the most new citations over the last month. The articles that appear here are not those which have received the most citations in total, but rather the articles which have been cited most often most recently.
When is One Core per Tree Sufficient to Characterize Stand Attributes? Results of a Pinus ponderosa Case Study
C.W. Woodall. (2008)
METEOROLOGICAL FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH FROST RINGS IN ROCKY MOUNTAIN BRISTLECONE PINE AT MT. GOLIATH, COLORADO
Ana Carolina Barbosa, et al. (2019)
The Meteorological Significance of False Rings in Eastern Redcedar (Juniperus virginiana L.) from the Southern Great Plains, U.S.A
Jesse R. Edmondson. (2010)
The Relationship Between Earlywood and Latewood Ring-Growth Across North America
M. C. A. Torbenson, et al. (2016)
KNMI Climate Explorer: A Web-Based Research Tool for High-Resolution Paleoclimatology
Valerie Trouet, et al. (2013)
A Theory-Driven Approach to Tree-Ring Standardization: Defining the Biological Trend from Expected Basal Area Increment
Franco Biondi, et al. (2008)
Multiple Dendrochronological Signals Indicate the Eruption of ParíCutin Volcano, Michoacán, Mexico
Paul R. Sheppard, et al. (2008)
Latewood Chronology Development for Summer-Moisture Reconstruction In the US Southwest
Daniel Griffin, et al. (2011)