“…Millennial to centennial scale climate changes as observed in the Wular Lake sediments have also been documented by other studies from the Himalayan region (Babeesh et al, 2019; Demske et al, 2009; Khan et al, 2018; Lone et al, 2019; Rawat et al, 2015; Srivastava et al, 2017), in south Indian lakes and deltas (Achyuthan et al, 2016; Ponton et al, 2012; Rajmanickam et al, 2016; Sarkar et al, 2015), marine sediment records (Bond et al, 1997; Cullen et al, 2000; Gupta et al, 2003; Nagasundaram et al, 2014; Orme et al, 2018; Staubwasser et al, 2003), ice core records (Grootes and Stuiver 1997; Stuiver et al, 1995; Thompson et al, 1997), and speleothem records (Cai et al, 2010; Fleitmann et al, 2003; Lone et al, 2014; Smith et al, 2016; Wang et al, 2005; Yadava et al, 2004). These palaeoclimate records provide an integrated record that includes short and extreme dry/cool events such as at 10,300 yr BP, 8200 yr BP, 6300 yr BP, 4200 yr BP and 600–400 yr BP during the Holocene.…”