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  • 2020-2022  (399,847)
  • 2021  (399,847)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-12-14
    Description: The British Isles lack long high-precision and independent chronologies to reconstruct Holocene environmental and climatic conditions at sub-decadal timescales. This paper reports the first Holocene varved chronology for the lacustrine sediment record of Diss Mere in the UK. The record of Diss Mere is 15 m long, and shows 4.2 m of finely-laminated sediments, which are present between ca. 9 and 13 m of core depth. The microfacies analysis identified three major seasonal patterns of deposition (microfacies 1–3), which corroborate the annual nature of sedimentation throughout the whole interval. The sediments are diatomaceous organic and carbonate varves with an average thickness of 0.45 mm. Microfacies 1 consists of a pale layer of authigenic calcite crystals and diatom frustules, and a dark layer composed of a planktonic diatoms and filaments of organic matter. Microfacies 2 is similar but includes a mono-specific diatom bloom layer preceding the calcite layer. Microfacies 3 consists of varves with an occasional very thin calcite layer and mono-specific diatom blooms in spring and autumn. A total of 8473 varves were counted with maximum counting error of up to 40 varves by the bottom of the varved sequence. To tie the resulting floating varve chronology to the IntCal 2020 radiocarbon timescale, we used a Bayesian Deposition model (P_Sequence with outlier detection) on all available chronological data from the core. The data included five radiocarbon dates, two known tephra layers (Glen Garry and OMH-185) with calendar ages based on Bayesian modelling of sequences of radiocarbon ages, and the relative varve counts between dated points. The resulting age-depth model (DISSV-2020) dates the varved sequence between ca. 2100 and 10,300 cal BP and age uncertainties are decadal in scale (95% confidence). The immediate implication of this new UK Holocene chronology is the updated precise ages for the Glen Garry tephra at 2073 ± 39 cal BP and the OMH-185 tephra at 2617 ± 29 cal BP. DISSV-2020 will also enable Holocene research at high time resolution and comparisons to other annually-resolved records on absolute timescales supporting climatic investigations at the regional level.
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-12-14
    Description: This study of Lithium (Li) isotopes in surface waters and sediments in the catchment of Lake Bangong and the Upper Indus on the western Tibetan Plateau aims to identify processes that control Li isotope variations during weathering under a cold and hyper-arid climate. Additionally, Li isotope ratios in the Yarlung Tsangpo – Brahmaputra River were investigated. The lake and river sediments of Lake Bangong catchment display remarkable low δ7Li values between −4.7‰ and −0.6‰ relative to L-SVEC. Li isotopes in river bed sediments correlate with weathering intensity tracers such as the chemical index of alteration (CIA), K/(Na + K), or Na/Ti, and δ7Li values decrease continuously within the sediment cascade. These observations cannot be explained by mixing of different lithologies but reflects increasing intensity of weathering. The hyper-arid climate on the western plateau results in considerably long sediment residence times, which allows for overcoming the limitation of water availability on chemical weathering reactions. Samples from the Lake Bangong basins display low δ7Li values between +8.1‰ and +11.1‰. The major inflows have dissolved δ7Li values of +6.1‰ and +8.9‰. High Li/Na ratios in the stream waters indicate some contribution of hydrothermal Li. However, low δ7Li values in surface waters result from impeded silicate weathering processes in the thin soils. The samples from Indus headwaters and Yarlung Tsangpo provide evidence for low δ7Li all over the western and southern Tibetan Plateau. Using data of the Bangong Co, the Indus headwaters, and Yarlung Tsangpo, as well as published data from the northeastern plateau, we explore what controls Li isotope variation across the Tibetan plateau. Mass balance calculations suggest that similar proportions of dissolved Li and particulate Li are exported by river water and sediments on the western plateau. In contrast, high δ7Li values around +17‰ of the dissolved load in rivers on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau reflect a particulate Li export flux that is about five times higher than the export flux of dissolved Li. There is no first-order control by silicate weathering rates. The δ7Li differences largely follow the precipitation gradient across the Tibetan Plateau, which results in high net-incorporation of Li into clays on the northeastern but limits soil formation on the western Tibetan Plateau and, therefore limited, processing of lithium in the weathering zone.
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-01-09
    Description: This data set is the part 8 of a series reporting chemical data for accessory minerals from felsic igneous rocks. Compositional data were acquired by electron-probe microanalysis (EPMA) between about 1995 and 2005 on surface rocks and borehole samples. This data set assembles the results of EPMA of fluorapatite from felsic rocks representing three groups of granites in the Erzgebirge−Vogtland metallogenic province of Germany emplaced in the late Carboniferous: F-poor biotite granites, F-poor two-mica granites, and P-F-rich Li-mica granite. In these rocks, fluorapatite is typically omnipresent. It has to be noted that apatite has not yet been in the focus of mineralogical studies of the granites in this province and a comprehensive survey of its compositional signature and variability in space and time is still pending. However, the data listed in this data set provide a valuable glimpse into the similarities and differences in apatite chemistry between geochemically distinct felsic rocks, and into the evolution in composition from early to late crystallizing apatite populations. The data underpin that apatite is a sensitive monitor of the compositional properties of the media (melts and fluids) from which it was deposited or with which it interacted. Apatite from the studied rocks is basically fluorapatite with little or no Cl and OH detected respectively inferred. Elemental variations are observed at various scales, i.e., between granite groups, subsequently crystallized sub-intrusion within composite massifs, grains present in a single thin section, or between the center and the rim of a particular grain. These variations in particular refer to the following elements: Mn, Fe, Na, and the rare-earth elements (REE). For example, measured Mn concentrations range from 0.15 to 8.8 wt% MnO. The data set contains the complete pile of electron-microprobe analyses for fluorapatite (APAT-ERZ-2020). The data are presented as Excel (xlsx) and tab-delimited text (txt) formats. The content of the tables and further information on the granites and regional geology are provided in the data description file.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-12-23
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2021-01-21
    Description: New apatite fission track (AFT) and (U–Th)/He (AHe) data from two sections recording Cretaceous-Cenozoic clastic successions (La Flecha - La Troya Sur creeks) in the northern sector of the Central Precordillera of Argentina are presented. The results show that the Ciénaga del Río Huaco, Puesto la Flecha and Vallecito Fms. would have crossed the 60 °C isotherm during burial, while the middle sector of the Vinchina Fm. would not have reached temperatures higher than 55 °C. Multimethod inverse thermal modeling suggests that the AFT ages of all the studied levels would not have been completely reset and allow inferring that the partial retention zone for the AHe system (AHe-PRZ) would have been reached during the Miocene in levels between the Vallecito and Vinchina Fms. Our 1D-modeling results for the Ciénaga del Río Huaco, Puesto la Flecha and Vallecito Fms. show that the maximum temperature would have been reached at ~15 Ma, with a sedimentary thickness of ~2750 m and a heat flow of 65 mW/m2. From these data, a geothermal gradient of ~27 °C/km at this time could be inferred. In turn, the Vinchina and Zapallar Fms. would have reached their maximum temperature at ~2 Ma, under a cooler thermal regime (20 mW/m2) and with an estimated geothermal gradient of 〈15 °C/km. Thus, a complex time-temperature trajectory is proposed. Maximum and cooling temperatures reached by each unit do not correspond in all cases to the maximum burial and exhumation times. Comparison of the thermal modelling from this work with those carried out by other authors for sections immediately to the north allows us to infer that the thermal regime within the Vinchina basin has important lateral variations. Finally, AFT and AHe analyzes carried out in this work constitute a baseline database of the thermal regime, which is necessary for future multiproxies studies that are being done to evaluate the preservation of primary thermal signals, and thus check their reliability for pealeoclimatic and paleoenvironmental interpretations.
    Language: English
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-01-22
    Description: Soil Carbon (C) is central to the functioning of ecosystems and climate change mitigation. It represents the largest terrestrial pool and much of it, is stored in forest soils. Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) in a forest varies not only laterally, but also vertically (i.e., with depth). However, the SOC content of forest soil horizons has not been investigated over large scales, despite its importance for framing our understanding of soil function. Visible–Near Infrared (vis–NIR) reflectance spectroscopy enables rapid and cost-effective examination of forest SOC distribution, both laterally and vertically. This study aims to evaluate the potential of vis–NIR spectroscopy for classifying and predicting the SOC concentration of organic and mineral horizons in forests of the Czech Republic. We investigated 1080 forest sites across the country, each with five soil horizons, representing the Litter (L), Fragmented (F), and Humus (H) organic horizons, as well as the A1 (depth of 2–10 cm) and A2 (depth of 10–40 cm) mineral horizons. We, then, used Support Vector Machines (SVMs) to classify the soil horizons based on their spectra and also to model the SOC concentration of (i) the profile (organic and mineral horizons together), (ii) only the organic horizons, (iii) only the mineral horizons, and (iv) each individual horizon separately. The models were validated using 10-repeated 10-fold cross-validation. Results show that the SVM with radial basis kernel could accurately classify the soil horizons (Correct Classification Rate (CCR) of 70% and Kappa coefficient of 0.63). The SOC model developed for the soil profile performed well (R2 = 0.76 and RMSE = 1.63%). The model of the combined organic horizons was considerably more accurate than that of the combined mineral horizons (R2 = 0.78 and R2 = 0.53, respectively). Estimates of SOC in the individual soil horizons had R2 values greater than 0.63 but those of the F and A1 models were better with R2 〉 0.70. The study indicates that vis–NIR spectroscopy can effectively characterize the SOC concentration of the highly variable forest soil horizons in the Czech Republic.
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-01-29
    Description: The International Geodynamics and Earth Tide Service (IGETS) was established in 2015 by the International Association of Geodesy (IAG). IGETS continues the activities of the Global Geodynamics Project (GGP, 1997-2015) to provide support to geodetic and geophysical research activities using superconducting gravimeter (SG) data within the context of an international network. The Membach station is located near the river Vesdre. It consists of a 130 m long gallery excavated in the side of the valley that rises to the Hautes Fagnes plateau. At the end of the gallery, there are two rooms, located at ~45 m below the ground surface. Room 1 is dedicated to absolute gravity and seismic measurements; room 2 houses the superconducting gravimeter. The structure of the gallery and the rooms is in reinforced concrete. It was built in the early 1970s to monitor the seismic activity in the vicinity of the Gileppe and Eupen water reservoirs. Works were performed contemporeanously with the raising of the Gileppe dam. The gallery has been excavated in low-porosity argillaceous sandstone with quartzitic beds. As a function of rainfall and seasonal effects, gravity variations up to 40 nms-2 have been observed, and are mostly due to groundwater changes in the vadose zone above the underground laboratory (Van Camp et al., 2006). Strong rainfall induces rapid gravity decreases (Meurers et al 2007; Delobbe et al., 2019). At the surface, a beech forest. Absolute gravity measurements have been performed on average every month since 1996, using the FG5#202 gravimeter and the station is also the reference point for the Belgian gravity network. The SG GWR#C021 has been operating continuously since 1995 August so that, since 2017 September 18, it holds both records for the longest continuous time spent measuring gravity variations in the same place and for the longest superconducting levitation of an artefact (Van Camp et al., 2017). For high precision works like Earth tides analysis on long time series, data should not be used before 1998 June 12, when the original "TIDE" card in the SG electronics was replaced by the "GGP" one. Filters are different, and so are the transfer functions. Moreover, in this early period, the SG suffered from numerous technical issues, causing several changes in the amplitude and phase calibrations and making it difficult to ensure that the data are as reliable as after 1998 June.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
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  • 8
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    GFZ Data Services
    Publication Date: 2021-01-28
    Description: This package provides a set of tools to read, manipulate and convert seismic waveforms generated by DAS systems. In particular, the ones saved in TDMs format: - dasconv: This utility lets you convert and manipulate seismic waveforms in TDMs format and export them into MiniSEED. - tdmsws (experimental) - a stand-alone implementation of the FDSN Dataselect web service, which is able to serve miniSEED data extracted from a folder with TDMS files.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/other
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-02-01
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/other
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 10
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    In:  Social Indicators Research
    Publication Date: 2021-02-03
    Description: Are countries at a low level of socio-economic development catching up with developed countries over time or rather falling further behind? Existing work on the subject is not conclusive, partially due to methodological differences. The aim of the paper is to carry out a broader analysis with longer time series and a more diverse set of indicators. The study divides countries of the world into 21 developed “benchmark” countries and 156 developing countries. The distance between the benchmark and developing countries is measured using the “time lags” method, applied here to nine indicators covering topics such as the economy, health, education and the environment. The study further utilizes a probabilistic approach to extrapolate missing historical data for developing countries, so that the analysis can cover a full century starting in 1920 and ending with short-term projections to year 2020. The study finds that a majority of developing countries, and the population-weighted developing world as a whole, has reduced its lag in most indicators between 1920 and 2020. Progress was unevenly distributed, with East Asian and European countries converging the most with the benchmark, while most African countries have diverged along with some American ones. Catch-up in education attainment and life expectancy has been more successful than in infant survival rate, GDP per capita or technology adoption. The findings are put in context of United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals, showing how the time lag method could improve setting targets for some of the goals. Further, time lags are used to analyze the current demographic, economic and political situation of developing countries, identifying opportunities and risks for future catch-up with developed countries.
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