World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Earth Science

D-Index
46
Citations
8413
World Ranking
4194
National Ranking
472

Overview

Joy S. Singarayer is affiliated with the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. Their research focuses primarily on Earth and Planetary Sciences as well as Environmental Science, with an emphasis on several subfields including Atmospheric Science, Oceanography, Sociology and Political Science, Ecology, and Anthropology.

The main topics covered in Joy S. Singarayer's work include:

  • Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
  • Marine and environmental studies
  • Pleistocene-Era Hominins and Archaeology
  • Isotope Analysis in Ecology
  • Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
  • Species Distribution and Climate Change
  • Amazonian Archaeology and Ethnohistory

Frequent co-authors in their publications are:

  • Paul J. Valdes
  • Sifan A. Koriche
  • Hannah Cloke
  • Judy R M Allen
  • Matthew Forrest

Joy S. Singarayer has published in various reputable scientific venues, with multiple articles appearing in the Journal of Biogeography. Other venues include the Cambridge Journal of Education, Climate of the Past, Environmental Research Letters, and the Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres.

Selected recent papers by Joy S. Singarayer are:

  • "Global vegetation patterns of the past 140,000 years" (2020), Journal of Biogeography
  • "Is race still relevant? Student perceptions and experiences of racism in higher education" (2020), Cambridge Journal of Education
  • "CMIP6/PMIP4 simulations of the mid-Holocene and Last Interglacial using HadGEM3: comparison to the pre-industrial era, previous model versions and proxy data" (2020), Climate of the Past
  • "The fate of the Caspian Sea under projected climate change and water extraction during the 21st century" (2021), Environmental Research Letters
  • "Impacts of Variations in Caspian Sea Surface Area on Catchment-Scale and Large-Scale Climate" (2021), Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres

Best Publications

  • Species-specific responses of Late Quaternary megafauna to climate and humans

    Eline D. Lorenzen;David Nogués-Bravo;Ludovic Orlando;Jaco Weinstock

  • Present state of global wetland extent and wetland methane modelling: conclusions from a model inter-comparison project (WETCHIMP)

    J. R. Melton;J. R. Melton;R. Wania;E. L. Hodson;B. Poulter

  • Genomic evidence for the Pleistocene and recent population history of Native Americans

    Maanasa Raghavan;Matthias Steinrücken;Matthias Steinrücken;Kelley Harris;Stephan Schiffels

  • Further investigations of the quartz optically stimulated luminescence components using linear modulation

    J.S. Singarayer;R.M. Bailey

  • High-latitude climate sensitivity to ice-sheet forcing over the last 120 kyr

    Joy S. Singarayer;Paul J. Valdes

  • Quaternary time scales for the Pontocaspian domain : Interbasinal connectivity and faunal evolution

    W. Krijgsman;A. Tesakov;T. Yanina;S. Lazarev

  • Building the niche through time: using 13,000 years of data to predict the effects of climate change on three tree species in Europe

    L. Maiorano;R. Cheddadi;N. E. Zimmermann;L. Pellissier

  • Climatic impacts of fresh water hosing under Last Glacial Maximum conditions: a multi-model study

    M Kageyama;Ute Merkel;B Otto-Bliesner;Matthias Prange

  • Late Pleistocene climate change and the global expansion of anatomically modern humans.

    Anders Eriksson;Lia Betti;Andrew D. Friend;Stephen J. Lycett

  • Late Holocene methane rise caused by orbitally controlled increase in tropical sources

    Joy S. Singarayer;Paul J. Valdes;Pierre Friedlingstein;Pierre Friedlingstein;Sarah Nelson

  • Microbial community dynamics in the forefield of glaciers

    James A Bradley;Joy S Singarayer;Alexandre M B Anesio

  • Present state of global wetland extent and wetland methane modelling: methodology of a model inter-comparison project (WETCHIMP)

    Rita Wania;Joe Melton;Joe Melton;EL Hodson;B Poulter

  • Tackling regional climate change by leaf albedo bio-geoengineering.

    Andy Ridgwell;Joy S. Singarayer;Alistair M. Hetherington;Paul J. Valdes

  • Component-resolved bleaching spectra of quartz optically stimulated luminescence: preliminary results and implications for dating

    J.S. Singarayer;R.M. Bailey

  • Twenty-First-Century Climate Impacts from a Declining Arctic Sea Ice Cover

    Joy S. Singarayer;Jonathan L. Bamber;Paul J. Valdes

  • Last glacial vegetation of northern Eurasia

    Judy R.M. Allen;Thomas Hickler;Joy S. Singarayer;Martin T. Sykes

  • Robustness despite uncertainty: regional climate data reveal the dominant role of humans in explaining global extinctions of Late Quaternary megafauna

    Lewis J. Bartlett;David R. Williams;Graham W. Prescott;Andrew Balmford

  • New age estimates for the Palaeolithic assemblages and Pleistocene succession of Casablanca, Morocco

    Edward J. Rhodes;J.S. Singarayer;Jean-Paul Raynal;K.E. Westaway

  • The greening of Arabia: Multiple opportunities for human occupation of the Arabian Peninsula during the Late Pleistocene inferred from an ensemble of climate model simulations

    Richard P. Jennings;Joy Singarayer;Emma J. Stone;Uta Krebs-Kanzow

  • Towards radiocarbon calibration beyond 28 ka using speleothems from the Bahamas

    Dirk L. Hoffmann;J. Warren Beck;David A. Richards;Peter L. Smart

  • Assessing the completeness of optical resetting of quartz OSL in the natural environment

    J.S. Singarayer;R.M. Bailey;S. Ward;S. Stokes

Frequent Co-Authors

Paul J. Valdes
Paul J. Valdes University of Bristol
Louise C. Sime
Louise C. Sime British Antarctic Survey
Richard M. Bailey
Richard M. Bailey University of Oxford
Julia C. Tindall
Julia C. Tindall University of Leeds
Andy Ridgwell
Andy Ridgwell University of California, Riverside
Brian Huntley
Brian Huntley Durham University
Daniel J. Lunt
Daniel J. Lunt University of Bristol
Andrea Manica
Andrea Manica University of Cambridge
Judy R M Allen
Judy R M Allen Durham University
Sandy P. Harrison
Sandy P. Harrison University of Reading

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