“…For example, Witt et al (2017) used a combination of wood element levels (as detected by x-ray fluorescence, or ‘XRF’) and stable isotope data to find tree-ring boundaries in an Australian Acacia species. As expansion of ‘nontraditional species’ continues, new insights are continually being added to fields such as archaeology (Boswijk and Johns, 2018), ecology (Argent et al, 2004; Grau et al, 2003; O’Donnell et al, 2010; Rozendaal and Zuidema, 2011; Schweingruber et al, 2013), and climatology (Amoroso et al, 2017; Trouet et al, 2017). It is also increasingly recognized that climate-sensitive conifers and select angiosperms can only inform on certain aspects of climate, forest dynamics, and ecology (Duchesne et al, 2017; Klesse et al, 2018).…”