David J. Nash

David J. Nash

University of Brighton

H-index: 42

Europe-United Kingdom

About David J. Nash

David J. Nash, With an exceptional h-index of 42 and a recent h-index of 24 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Brighton, specializes in the field of Geomorphology, silcrete, calcrete, historical climatology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Younger Dryas and Early Holocene ice‐margin dynamics in northwest Russia

Local and exotic sources of sarsen debitage at Stonehenge revealed by geochemical provenancing

Post-depositional disturbance and spatial organization at exposed open-air sites: examples from the Middle Stone Age of the Makgadikgadi Basin, Botswana

The last Fennoscandian Ice Sheet glaciation on the Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland (Part 2): Ice sheet margin positions, evolution, and dynamics

DOCU-CLIM: A global documentary climate dataset for climate reconstructions

A new flood chronology for KwaZulu-Natal (1836–2022): The April 2022 Durban floods in historical context

Making points: the middle stone age lithic industry of the Makgadikgadi basin, Botswana

Fennoscandian Ice Sheet glaciation on the Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland

David J. Nash Information

University

Position

Professor of Physical Geography (); Honorary Research Fellow (University of

Citations(all)

5476

Citations(since 2020)

2356

Cited By

3846

hIndex(all)

42

hIndex(since 2020)

24

i10Index(all)

78

i10Index(since 2020)

57

Email

University Profile Page

University of Brighton

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

David J. Nash Skills & Research Interests

Geomorphology

silcrete

calcrete

historical climatology

Top articles of David J. Nash

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Younger Dryas and Early Holocene ice‐margin dynamics in northwest Russia

Boreas

Benjamin M Boyes

Danni M Pearce

Lorna D Linch

David J Nash

2024/3/3

Local and exotic sources of sarsen debitage at Stonehenge revealed by geochemical provenancing

Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports

T Jake R Ciborowski

David J Nash

Timothy Darvill

Ben Chan

Mike Parker Pearson

...

2024/2/1

Post-depositional disturbance and spatial organization at exposed open-air sites: examples from the Middle Stone Age of the Makgadikgadi Basin, Botswana

Sigrid Staurset

Sheila D Coulson

Sarah Mothulatshipi

Sallie L Burrough

David J Nash

...

2023/2/1

The last Fennoscandian Ice Sheet glaciation on the Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland (Part 2): Ice sheet margin positions, evolution, and dynamics

Benjamin M Boyes

Lorna D Linch

Danni M Pearce

David J Nash

2023/1/15

DOCU-CLIM: A global documentary climate dataset for climate reconstructions

Scientific data

Angela-Maria Burgdorf

Stefan Brönnimann

George Adamson

Tatsuya Amano

Yasuyuki Aono

...

2023/6/23

A new flood chronology for KwaZulu-Natal (1836–2022): The April 2022 Durban floods in historical context

South African Geographical Journal

SW Grab

David J Nash

2023/3/25

Making points: the middle stone age lithic industry of the Makgadikgadi basin, Botswana

Sigrid Staurset

Sheila D Coulson

Sarah Mothulatshipi

Sallie L Burrough

David J Nash

...

2023/2/1

Fennoscandian Ice Sheet glaciation on the Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland

EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts

Benjamin Boyes

Lorna Linch

Danni Pearce

David Nash

2022/5

Is eastern Africa’s drought the worst in recent history? And are worse yet to come?

The Conversation

David Nash

2022/6/26

Provenancing silcrete artefacts in the Kalahari Desert: Full geochemical dataset

David Nash

Jake Ciborowski

2022/3/22

Buried by lake sediments, revealed by deflation: the MSA of Makgadikgadi, central southern Africa

David Thomas

Sallie L Burrough

Sheila Coulson

Sarah Mothulatshipi

David J Nash

...

2022/6/20

Thriving in the Thirstland: new stone age sites from the middle kalahari, Botswana

Sheila Coulson

Sigrid Staurset

Sarah Mothulatshipi

Sallie L Burrough

David J Nash

...

2022/12/1

“But what silence! No more gazelles…”: Occurrence and extinction of fauna in Lesotho, southern Africa, since the late Pleistocene

Quaternary International

Stefan W Grab

David J Nash

2022/2/20

Dry Valleys (Mekgacha)

David J Nash

2022/5/18

Lacustrine geoarchaeology in the central Kalahari: Implications for Middle Stone Age behaviour and adaptation in dryland conditions

David SG Thomas

Sallie L Burrough

Sheila D Coulson

Sarah Mothulatshipi

David J Nash

...

2022/12/1

Calcretes, silcretes and intergrade duricrusts

David J Nash

2022/5/18

Mapping Middle Stone Age human mobility in the Makgadikgadi Pans (Botswana) through multi-site geochemical provenancing of silcrete artefacts

David J Nash

T Jake R Ciborowski

Sheila D Coulson

Sigrid Staurset

Sallie L Burrough

...

2022/12/1

Quantifying and reducing researcher subjectivity in the generation of climate indices from documentary sources

Climate of the Past

George Adamson

David Nash

Stefan Grab

2021/12/22

Lessons from a lakebed: unpicking hydrological change and early human landscape use in the Makgadikgadi basin, Botswana

Sallie L Burrough

David SG Thomas

Joshua R Allin

Sheila D Coulson

Sarah M Mothulatshipi

...

2022/9/1

Petrography, geochemistry and mineralogy of the Stonehenge sarsens: Digital data collection

David Nash

Jake Ciborowski

Tobias Salge

Magret Damaschke

Steven Goderis

2021/3/19

See List of Professors in David J. Nash University(University of Brighton)

Co-Authors

H-index: 86
Nicholson SE

Nicholson SE

Florida State University

H-index: 76
David S. G. Thomas

David S. G. Thomas

University of Oxford

H-index: 44
Michael Meadows

Michael Meadows

University of Cape Town

H-index: 41
Joanna Bullard

Joanna Bullard

Loughborough University

H-index: 33
M. P. Smith

M. P. Smith

University of Brighton

H-index: 32
Asfawossen Asrat; Asfawossen Asrat Kassaye

Asfawossen Asrat; Asfawossen Asrat Kassaye

Addis Ababa University

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