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  • 1995-1999  (15)
  • 2011  (567,181)
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  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Spielhagen, Robert F; Werner, Kirstin; Sørensen, Steffen Aagaard; Zamelczyk, Katarzyna; Kandiano, Evgenia S; Budéus, Gereon; Husum, Katrine; Marchitto, Thomas M; Hald, Morten (2011): Enhanced modern heat transfer to the Arctic by warm Atlantic water. Science, 331(6016), 450-453, https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1197397
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: The Arctic is responding more rapidly to global warming than most other areas on our planet. Northward flowing Atlantic Water is the major means of heat advection towards the Arctic and strongly affects the sea ice distribution. Records of its natural variability are critical for the understanding of feedback mechanisms and the future of the Arctic climate system, but continuous historical records reach back only ~150 years. Here, we present a multidecadal scale record of ocean temperature variations during the last 2000 years, derived from marine sediments off Western Svalbard (79°N). We find that early-21st-century temperatures of Atlantic Water entering the Arctic Ocean are unprecedented over the past 2000 years and are presumably linked to the Arctic Amplification of global warming.
    Keywords: CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Fram Strait; Giant box corer; GKG; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; Jan Mayen; JM06-WP; JM06-WP-02; Maria S. Merian; MSM05/5; MSM05/5_712-1; MSM05/5_713-1; North Greenland Sea; WarmPast 2006
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Möbius, Jürgen; Lahajnar, Niko; Emeis, Kay-Christian (2010): Diagenetic control of nitrogen isotope ratios in Holocene sapropels and recent sediments from the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Biogeosciences, 7, 3901-3914, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-7-3901-2010
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: The enhanced accumulation of organic matter in Eastern Mediterranean sapropels and their unusually low d15N values have been attributed to either enhanced nutrient availability which led to elevated primary production and carbon sequestration or to enhanced organic matter preservation under anoxic conditions. In order to evaluate these two hypothesis we have determined Ba/Al ratios, amino acid composition, N and organic C concentrations and d15N in sinking particles, surface sediments, eight spatially distributed core records of the youngest sapropel S1 (10-6 ka) and older sapropels (S5, S6) from two locations. These data suggest that (i) temporal and spatial variations in d15N of sedimentary N are driven by different degrees of diagenesis at different sites rather than by changes in N-sources or primary productivity and (ii) present day TOC export production would suffice to create a sapropel like S1 under conditions of deep-water anoxia. This implies that both enhanced TOC accumulation and d15N depletion in sapropels were due to the absence of oxygen in deep waters. Thus preservation plays a major role for the accumulation of organic-rich sediments casting doubt on the need of enhanced primary production for sapropel formation.
    Keywords: 101; 101-105; 106-111; 107; 111; 112-116; 116; 117-122; 118; 123-126; 137-139; 140-142; 143-148; 149-154; 155-162; 163-170; 171-179; 180-187; 188-194; 560; 561; 562; 563; 564; 565; 566; 569; 570; 571; 572; 573; 574; 575; 576; 577; 578; 579; 580; 581; 582; 584; 585; 586; 589; 590; 592; 594; 596; 599; 601; 602; 604; 666; 667; 668; 670; 671; 672; 673; 674; 676; 677; 678; 680; 681; 682; 683; 684; 685; 686; 687; 689; 690; 691; 692; 693; 694; 695; 696; 697; 699; 700; 701; 702; 703; 704; 705; 706; 707; 708; 709; 710; 712; 713; 714; 716; 717; 718; 719; 80; 82; 85; Cyprus; Eastern Mediterranean, Continental slope off Israel; Eratosthenes Seamount; Gargano Promontory; GeoB10701-4; GeoB10702-3; GeoB10703-3; GeoB10704-3; GeoB10705-3; GeoB10706-3; GeoB10707-4; GeoB10708-3; GeoB10710-4; GeoB10711-3; GeoB10712-3; GeoB10713-3; GeoB10714-3; GeoB10715-3; GeoB10716-3; GeoB10717-3; GeoB10718-3; GeoB10719-3; GeoB10720-5; GeoB10721-3; GeoB10722-3; GeoB10723-3; GeoB10724-3; GeoB10725-3; GeoB10726-3; GeoB10727-3; GeoB10728-3; GeoB10729-4; GeoB10730-3; GeoB10731-3; GeoB10732-3; GeoB10733-3; GeoB10734-3; GeoB10735-3; GeoB10736-3; GeoB10737-3; GeoB10738-3; GeoB10739-3; GeoB10740-3; GeoB10741-3; GeoB10742-3; GeoB10743-3; GeoB10744-3; GeoB10746-3; GeoB10747-3; GeoB10748-3; GeoB10749-3; GeoB7704-1; GeoB7705-1; GeoB7706-2; GeoB7714-1; GeoB7718-1; GeoB7720-1; GeoB7723-2; GeoB7725-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greece; Gulf of Manfredonia; Gulf of Taranto; Haifa; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; Lybia; M40/4; M40/4_MUC65; M40/4_MUC66; M40/4_MUC67; M40/4_MUC68; M40/4_MUC69; M40/4_MUC70; M40/4_MUC71; M40/4_MUC72; M40/4_MUC73; M40/4_MUC74; M40/4_MUC75; M40/4_MUC76-2; M40/4_MUC76-3; M40/4_MUC77A; M40/4_MUC77B; M40/4_MUC78-2; M40/4_MUC79; M40/4_MUC81; M40/4_MUC82; M40/4_MUC84; M40/4_MUC85; M40/4_MUC86; M40/4_MUC87; M40/4_MUC88; M40/4_MUC89; M40/4_MUC90; M40/4_MUC91; M40/4_SL80; M51/3; M51/3_560-1; M51/3_561-4; M51/3_562-5; M51/3_563-5; M51/3_564-2; M51/3_565-1; M51/3_566-3; M51/3_569-3; M51/3_570-2; M51/3_571; M51/3_572-2; M51/3_573; M51/3_574-2; M51/3_575-6; M51/3_576-3; M51/3_577-1; M51/3_578; M51/3_579; M51/3_580; M51/3_581; M51/3_582; M51/3_584; M51/3_585; M51/3_586; M51/3_589; M51/3_590; M51/3_592; M51/3_594; M51/3_596; M51/3_599; M51/3_601-3; M51/3_602; M51/3_604; M52/2; M71/3; M71/3_H01; M71/3_H02; M71/3_H03; M71/3_H04; M71/3_H05; M71/3_H06; M71/3_H07; M71/3_H11; M71/3_H12; M71/3_Her01; M71/3_Her03; M71/3_ler01; M71/3_Rho02; M71/3_Sk01; Malta; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; Nile Fan; POS339; Poseidon; SL; Strait of Otranto; Turkey; Zyprus
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: Increasing amounts of data is collected in most areas of research and application. The degree to which this data can be accessed, analyzed, and retrieved, is a decisive in obtaining progress in fields such as scientific research or industrial production. We present a novel methodology supporting content-based retrieval and exploratory search in repositories of multivariate research data. In particular, our methods are able to describe two-dimensional functional dependencies in research data, e.g. the relationship between ination and unemployment in economics. Our basic idea is to use feature vectors based on the goodness-of-fit of a set of regression models to describe the data mathematically. We denote this approach Regressional Features and use it for content-based search and, since our approach motivates an intuitive definition of interestingness, for exploring the most interesting data. We apply our method on considerable real-world research datasets, showing the usefulness of our approach for user-centered access to research data in a Digital Library system.
    Type: Dataset
    Format: 7498 datasets
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Keywords: Attributed to extreme Sr/Ca values of any single year; BON-6-A; CaribClim_Coral_2006; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Diploria strigosa, Strontium/Calcium ratio; Diploria strigosa, δ18O; DISTANCE; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Estimated based on subannual extension-rate and tie points; ICP-OES, Perkin-Elmer, Optima 3300R; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; Internal coral chronology; MARUM; Mass spectrometer Finnigan MAT 251; referred samples; Sample ID; Southern Caribbean Sea, Bonaire; Tie point
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 3189 data points
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Werner, Kirstin; Spielhagen, Robert F; Bauch, Dorothea; Hass, H Christian; Kandiano, Evgenia S; Zamelczyk, Katarzyna (2011): Atlantic Water advection to the eastern Fram Strait - multiproxy evidence for late Holocene variability. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 308(3-4), 264-276, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.05.030
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: A multiproxy data set of an AMS radiocarbon dated 46 cm long sediment core from the continental margin off western Svalbard reveals multidecadal climatic variability during the past two millennia. Investigation of planktic and benthic stable isotopes, planktic foraminiferal fauna, and lithogenic parameters aims to unveil the Atlantic Water advection to the eastern Fram Strait by intensity, temperatures, and salinities. Atlantic Water has been continuously present at the site over the last 2,000 years. Superimposed on the increase in sea ice/icebergs, a strengthened intensity of Atlantic Water inflow and seasonal ice-free conditions were detected at ~ 1000 to 1200 AD, during the well-known Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA). However, temperatures of the MCA never exceeded those of the 20th century. Since ~ 1400 AD significantly higher portions of ice rafted debris and high planktic foraminifer fluxes suggest that the site was located in the region of a seasonal highly fluctuating sea ice margin. A sharp reduction in planktic foraminifer fluxes around 800 AD and after 1730 AD indicates cool summer conditions with major influence of sea ice/icebergs. High amounts of the subpolar planktic foraminifer species Turborotalia quinqueloba in size fraction 150–250 µm indicate strengthened Atlantic Water inflow to the eastern Fram Strait already after ~ 1860 AD. Nevertheless surface conditions stayed cold well into the 20th century indicated by low planktic foraminiferal fluxes. Most likely at the beginning of the 20th century, cold conditions of the terminating Little Ice Age period persisted at the surface whereas warm and saline Atlantic Water already strengthened, hereby subsiding below the cold upper mixed layer. Surface sediments with high abundances of subpolar planktic foraminifers indicate a strong inflow of Atlantic Water providing seasonal ice-free conditions in the eastern Fram Strait during the last few decades.
    Keywords: Accumulation rate, ice rafted debris by number; Age; AGE; Calculated, see reference(s); Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi, δ13C; Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi, δ18O; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Foraminifera, planktic, flux; Fram Strait; Giant box corer; GKG; Ice rafted debris; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; Maria S. Merian; Mass spectrometer, Finnigan, MAT 253; MSM05/5; MSM05/5_712-1; Neogloboquadrina pachyderma sinistral, δ13C; Neogloboquadrina pachyderma sinistral, δ18O; Sea surface salinity; Size fraction 1.000-0.063 mm; Sortable-silt mean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 971 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Keywords: Attributed to extreme Sr/Ca values of any single year; BON-4-G; CaribClim_Coral_2006; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Diploria strigosa, Strontium/Calcium ratio; Diploria strigosa, δ18O; DISTANCE; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Estimated based on subannual extension-rate and tie points; ICP-OES, Perkin-Elmer, Optima 3300R; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; Internal coral chronology; MARUM; Mass spectrometer Finnigan MAT 251; referred samples; Sample ID; Southern Caribbean Sea, Bonaire; Tie point
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1069 data points
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bahr, André; Nürnberg, Dirk; Schönfeld, Joachim; Garbe-Schönberg, Dieter (2011): Hydrological variability in Florida Straits during marine isotope stage 5 cold events. Paleoceanography, 26, PA2214, https://doi.org/10.1029/2010PA002015
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: Modeling and proxy studies indicate that a reduction of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) strength profoundly impacts temperatures and salinities in the (sub)tropical Atlantic, especially on subsurface levels. While previous studies focused on prominent periods of AMOC reduction during the last deglaciation, we aim to test whether similar reconfigurations of the subtropical hydrography occurred during the moderate climatic alterations punctuating the last interglacial, Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5. Here, we present temperature and salinity records from a Florida Straits core by combining d18O and Mg/Ca analyses on surface (Globigerinoides ruber, white) and deep-dwelling (Globorotalia crassaformis) foraminifera, covering MIS 5 in high resolution. The data reveal increasing salinities at intermediate depths during interglacial cooling episodes, decoupled from relatively stable surface conditions. This probably indicates the spatial expansion of saline Subtropical Gyre waters due to enhanced Ekman downwelling and might also point to a changed density structure and altered geostrophic balance in Florida Straits. Notably, these oceanographic alterations are not consistently occurring during periods of AMOC reduction. The data suggest that the expansion of gyre waters into Florida Straits was impeded by the increasing influence of Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) from MIS 5.5 to ~107 kyr BP. Afterwards, increasingly positive benthic d13C values imply a recession of AAIW, allowing the temporary expansion of Gyre waters into Florida Straits. We argue that the inferred transient subtropical salt accumulation and warm pool expansion might have played a pivotal role in reinvigorating meridional overturning and dampen the severity of interglacial cold phases.
    Keywords: Florida Strait; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; PC; Piston corer; RASTA/GOLDFLOS; SO164; SO164-17-2; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: Multidecadal variations in Atlantic sea surface temperatures (SST) influence the climate of the Northern Hemisphere. However, prior to the instrumental time period, information on multidecadal climate variability becomes limited, and there is a particular scarcity of sufficiently resolved SST reconstructions. Here, we present an eastern tropical North Atlantic reconstruction of SSTs based on foraminiferal (Globigerinoides ruber pink) Mg/Ca ratios that resolves multidecadal variability over the past 1700 years. Spectral power in the multidecadal band (50 to 70 years period) is significant over several time intervals suggesting that the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) has been influencing local SST. Since our data exhibit high scatter the absence of multidecadal variability in the remaining record does not exclude the possibility that SST variations on this time scale might have been present without being detected in our data. Cooling by ~0.5 °C takes place between about AD 1250 and AD 1500; while this corresponds to the inception of the Little Ice Age (LIA), the end of the LIA is not reflected in our record and SST remains relatively low. This transition to cooler SSTs parallels the previously reconstructed shift in the North Atlantic Oscillation towards a low pre-20th century mean state and possibly reflects common solar forcing.
    Keywords: 286; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB9501-4; GeoB9501-5; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; M65/1; MARUM; Mauritania Canyon; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: Here we present a 1200 yr long benthic foraminiferal Mg/Ca based temperature and oxygen isotope record from a ~900 m deep sediment core off northwest Africa to show that atmosphere-ocean interactions in the eastern subpolar gyre are transferred at central water depth into the eastern boundary of the subtropical gyre. Further we link the variability of the NAO (over the past 165 yrs) and solar irradiance (Late Holocene) and their control on subpolar mode water formation to the multidecadal variability observed at mid-depth in the eastern subtropical gyre. Our results show that eastern North Atlantic central waters cooled by up to ~0.8± 0.7 °C and densities decreased by Sigma theta=0.3±0.2 during positive NAO years and during minima in solar irradiance during the Late Holocene. The presented records demonstrate the sensitivity of central water formation to enhanced atmospheric forcing and ice/freshwater fluxes into the eastern subpolar gyre and the importance of central water circulation for cross-gyre climate signal propagation during the Late Holocene.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB6007-1; GeoB6007-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; M45/5a; MARUM; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mikolajewicz, Uwe (2011): Modeling Mediterranean Ocean climate of the Last Glacial Maximum. Climate of the Past, 7, 161-180, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-7-161-2011
    Publication Date: 2024-05-31
    Description: A regional ocean general circulation model of the Mediterranean is used to study the climate of the Last Glacial Maximum. The atmospheric forcing for these simulations has been derived from simulations with an atmospheric general circulation model, which in turn was forced with surface conditions from a coarse resolution earth system model. The model is successful in reproducing the general patterns of reconstructed sea surface temperature anomalies with the strongest cooling in summer in the northwestern Mediterranean and weak cooling in the Levantine, although the model underestimates the extent of the summer cooling in the western Mediterranean. However, there is a strong vertical gradient associated with this pattern of summer cooling, which makes the comparison with reconstructions complicated. The exchange with the Atlantic is decreased to roughly one half of its present value, which can be explained by the shallower Strait of Gibraltar as a consequence of lower global sea level. This reduced exchange causes a strong increase of salinity in the Mediterranean in spite of reduced net evaporation.
    Keywords: Experiment; File format; File name; File size; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; Parameter; Uniform resource locator/link to model result file; Unit
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 56 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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