Anthropogenic land use estimates for the Holocene – HYDE 3.2
Anthropogenic land use estimates for the Holocene – HYDE 3.2
About this item
Full title
Author / Creator
Publisher
Katlenburg-Lindau: Copernicus GmbH
Journal title
Language
English
Formats
Publication information
Publisher
Katlenburg-Lindau: Copernicus GmbH
Subjects
More information
Scope and Contents
Contents
This paper presents an update and extension of HYDE, the History Database of the Global Environment (HYDE version 3.2). HYDE is an internally consistent combination of historical population estimates and allocation algorithms with time-dependent weighting maps for land use. Categories include cropland, with new distinctions for irrigated and rain-fed crops (other than rice) and irrigated and rain-fed rice. Grazing lands are also provided, divided into more intensively used pasture and less intensively used rangeland, and further specified with respect to conversion of natural vegetation to facilitate global change modellers. Population is represented by maps of total, urban, rural population, population density and built-up area. The period covered is 10 000 before Common Era (BCE) to 2015 Common Era (CE). All data can be downloaded from https://doi.org/10.17026/dans-25g-gez3. We estimate that global population increased from 4.4 million people (we also estimate a lower range < 0.01 and an upper range of 8.9 million) in 10 000 BCE to 7.257 billion in 2015 CE, resulting in a global population density increase from 0.03 persons (or capita, in short cap) km−2 (range 0–0.07) to almost 56 cap km−2 respectively. The ur...
Alternative Titles
Full title
Anthropogenic land use estimates for the Holocene – HYDE 3.2
Authors, Artists and Contributors
Author / Creator
Identifiers
Primary Identifiers
Record Identifier
TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_f089d79cab584c78881e5c782d12bc6f
Permalink
https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_f089d79cab584c78881e5c782d12bc6f
Other Identifiers
ISSN
1866-3516,1866-3508
E-ISSN
1866-3516
DOI
10.5194/essd-9-927-2017