Gunnarson, Björn
- Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Minimum blue intensity is a reflected light imaging technique that provides an inexpensive, robust and reliable surrogate for maximum latewood density. In this application it was found that temperature reconstructions from resin-extracted samples of Pious sylvestris (L.) from Fennoscandia provide results equivalent to conventional x-ray densitometry. This paper describes the implementation of the blue intensity method using commercially available software and a flat-bed scanner. A calibration procedure is presented that permits results obtained by different laboratories, or using different scanners, to be compared. In addition, the use of carefully prepared and chemically treated 10-mm-diameter cores are explored; suggesting that it may not be necessary to produce thin laths with the rings aligned exactly perpendicular to the measurement surface.
Dendrochronology; Scots pine; x-ray density; resin extraction; Fennoscandia
Tree-Ring Research
2011, volume: 67, number: 2, pages: 127-134
Publisher: TREE-RING SOC
Environmental Sciences and Nature Conservation
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/46514