ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • Data  (5,070)
  • 1990-1994  (5,070)
Collection
Keywords
Years
Year
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-05-06
    Keywords: Area/locality; Heat flow; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Method comment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 13 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Oppo, Delia W; Fairbanks, Richard G; Gordon, Arnold L; Shackleton, Nicholas J (1990): Late Pleistocene Southern Ocean d13C variability. Paleoceanography, 5(1), 43-54, https://doi.org/10.1029/PA005i001p00043
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: Variations in the contribution of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW), relative to North Pacific Deep Water (NPDW), to the Southern Ocean, are assessed by comparing delta13C records from the mid-depth North Atlantic, deep Southern Ocean, and deep equatorial Pacific Ocean. In general, the relative contribution of NADW was greater during interglaciations than glaciations of the past 550,000 years. An increase in the NADW flux to the Southern Ocean since the last glaciation was proposed to have resulted in higher atmospheric CO2 in the Holocene (Broecker and Peng, 1989, doi:10.1029/GB003i003p00215). Glacial-interglacial variations in the proportion of NADW in the Southern Ocean may have also influenced atmospheric CO2 levels over the past 550,000 years. The greatest relative flux of NADW to the Southern Ocean occurred during interglacial stage 11. Faunal data suggest that the North Atlantic polar front and southern Indian Ocean subtropical convergence zone were located farthest poleward during stage 11. Warmth in these locations and a strong southward flux of NADW during stage 11 may be causally linked by the NADW formation process/warm water return route (Gordon, 1986, doi:10.1029/JC091iC04p05037). Time series analysis indicates that delta13C variations in the deep Southern Ocean occur at the same frequencies as the Earth's orbital variations and are coherent and in phase with delta18O. At most, 50% of the glacial-interglacial delta13C amplitude in the Southern Ocean is due changes in the contribution of NADW. The remainder is probably due to mean ocean delta13C changes.
    Keywords: 81-552A; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Glomar Challenger; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; Leg81; North Atlantic/PLATEAU; PC; Piston corer; RC13; RC13-22; RC13-229; Robert Conrad
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Oppo, Delia W; Fairbanks, Richard G (1990): Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation of the last 150,000 years: relationship to climate and atmospheric CO2. Paleoceanography, 5(3), 277-288, https://doi.org/10.1029/PA005i003p00277
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: The high-resolution delta18O and delta13C records of benthic foraminifera from a 150,000-year long core from the Caribbean Sea indicate that there was generally high delta13C during glaciations and low delta13C during interglaciations. Due to its 1800-m sill depth, the properties of deep water in the Caribbean Sea are similar to those of middepth tropical Atlantic water. During interglaciations, the water filling the deep Caribbean Sea is an admixture of low delta13C Upper Circumpolar Water (UCPW) and high delta13C Upper North Atlantic Deep Water (UNADW). By contrast, only high delta13C UNADW enters during glaciations. Deep ocean circulation changes can influence atmospheric CO2 levels (Broecker and Takahashi, 1985; Boyle, 1988 doi:10.1029/JC093iC12p15701; Keir, 1988 doi:10.1029/PA003i004p00413; Broecker and Peng, 1989 doi:10.1029/GB003i003p00215). By comparing delta13C records of benthic foraminifera from cores lying in Southern Ocean Water, the Caribbean Sea, and at several other Atlantic Ocean sites, the thermohaline state of the Atlantic Ocean (how close it was to a full glacial or full interglacial configuration) is characterized. A continuum of circulation patterns between the glacial and interglacial extremes appears to have existed in the past. Subtracting the deep Pacific (~mean ocean water) delta13C record from the Caribbean delta13C record yields a record which describes large changes in the Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation. The delta13C difference varies as the vertical nutrient distribution changes. This new proxy record bears a striking resemblance to the 150,000-year-long atmospheric CO2 record (Barnola et al., 1987 doi:10.1038/329408a0). This favorable comparison between the new proxy record and the atmospheric CO2 record is consistent with Boyle's (1988a) model that vertical nutrient redistribution has driven large atmospheric CO2 changes in the past. Changes in the relative contribution of NADW and Pacific outflow water to the Southern Ocean are also consistent with Broecker and Peng's (1989) recent model for atmospheric CO2 changes.
    Keywords: 81-552A; CH8X; CHN82-24; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; GLAMAP; Glomar Challenger; Jean Charcot; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; Leg81; North Atlantic/PLATEAU; PC; Piston corer; V28; V28-127; Vema
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Morley, Joseph J; Heusser, Linda E; Shackleton, Nicholas J (1991): Late Pleistocene/Holocene radiolarian and pollen records from sediments in the sea of Okhotsk. Paleoceanography, 6(1), 121-131, https://doi.org/10.1029/90PA02031
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: In two cores with oxygen isotope stratigraphy from the southern Okhotsk Sea, marine pollen and siliceous microfauna record concurrent late glacial through Holocene variations in regional terrestrial and marine environments. Glacial vegetation around the southern Okhotsk basin, which resembles the present tundra/steppe of the northwest coast of this marginal sea, yields to spruce-dominated boreal forests during the glacial/interglacial transition. Temperate forest components, such as oak, peak during the mid-Holocene. Decreasing oak accompanied by increasing spruce reflects the effect of global cooling on local vegetation during the last 4 kyr. Although the radiolarian fauna in the Okhotsk Sea samples is similar to that present in the northwest Pacific, the dominant species in both regions differ. Concentrations of radiolarians are low in latest glacial samples, with higher concentrations occurring above and below this interval. Cycladophora davisiana, the dominant radiolarian species in the majority of Holocene Okhotsk Sea sediments, is present at lower percentages in late glacial samples from our two sites. Thus, this species' Holocene/latest Pleistocene abundance pattern in Sea of Okhotsk sediments is the reverse of that recorded in high-latitude open ocean sites. The combined marine pollen and radiolarian records indicate changes in the Sea of Okhotsk's physical oceanographic conditions and surrounding vegetation during the late glacial which were associated with this region's response to global climate change.
    Keywords: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; PC; Piston corer; V32; V32-159; V32-161; Vema
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Charles, Christopher D; Froelich, Philip N; Zibello, Michael A; Mortlock, Richard A; Morley, Joseph J (1991): Biogenic opal in southern ocean sediments over the last 450,000 years: implications for surface water chemistry and circulation. Paleoceanography, 6(6), 697-728, https://doi.org/10.1029/91PA02477
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: We present records of biogenic opal percentage and burial rate in 12 piston cores from the Atlantic and Indian sectors of the Southern Ocean. These records provide a detailed, quantitative description of changing patterns of opal deposition over the last 450 kyr. The striking regional coherence of these records suggests that dissolution in the deep sea and sediment pore waters does not obscure the surface productivity signal, and therefore these opal time series can be used in combination with other surface water tracers to make inferences about the chemistry and circulation of the Southern Ocean under different global climate conditions. Three broad depositional patterns can be distinguished. Northernmost records (39°-42°S latitude) are characterized by enhanced opal burial during glacial periods and strong 41 kyr periodicity. Records from cores just north of the present Antarctic Polar Front (46°-49°S) show even larger increases in opal burial rate during glacial intervals, but have variance concentrated in the 100 and 23 kyr bands. Southernmost records (51°-55°S) are completely out of phase with those to the north, with greatly reduced opal burial rates during glacial periods. Taken as a whole, the opal records show no evidence for the increased total Antarctic productivity predicted by recent geochemical models of atmospheric CO2 variability. The areal expansion of Southern Ocean sea ice over the present zone of high siliceous productivity provides one plausible explanation for the glacial-interglacial opal patterns. The excess silica not taken up in this zone during glacial periods would contribute to greater nutrient availability and thus higher productivity in the subantarctic region. However, local circulation changes may act to modify this basic signal, possibly accounting for the observed differences in the opal variance spectra.
    Keywords: ELT45; ELT45.029-TC; ELT49; ELT49.017-PC; ELT49.018-PC; ELT49.019-PC; ELT49.023-PC; Eltanin; GC; Gravity corer; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; PC; Piston corer; RC11; RC1112; RC11-120; RC13; RC13-254; RC13-259; RC13-271; RC15; RC15-93; RC15-94; Robert Conrad; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; V22; V22-108; Vema
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 12 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Broecker, Wallace S; Lao, Yong; Klas, Mieczyslawa; Clark, Elizabeth; Bonani, Georges; Ivy, Susan; Chen, Chin (1993): A search for an early Holocene CaCO3 preservation event. Paleoceanography, 8(3), 333-339, https://doi.org/10.1029/93PA00423
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: The CO2 record for air bubbles from the Byrd Station ice core suggest a drawdown in the ocean-atmosphere carbon reservoir during the early Holocene. Such a drawdown would require a corresponding increase in the CO3= ion concentration in the deep sea. We report here the results of a search in Atlantic sediments for evidence that the lysocline showed a corresponding deepening. While both the pteropod and the calcite preservation records we have obtained are consistent with expectation, they are not conclusive.
    Keywords: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; PC; Piston corer; RC16; RC16-55; RC16-63; Robert Conrad; V30; V30-60; V31; V31-135; V32; V32-67; Vema
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Lyle, Mitchell W; Zahn, Rainer; Prahl, Frederick G; Dymond, Jack R; Collier, Robert W; Pisias, Nicklas G; Suess, Erwin (1992): Paleoproductivity and carbon burial across the California current: the multitracer transect 42°N. Paleoceanography, 7(3), 251-272, https://doi.org/10.1029/92PA00696
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: The Multitracers Experiment studied a transect of water column, sediment trap, and sediment data taken across the California Current to develop quantitative methods for hindcasting paleoproductivity. The experiment used three sediment trap moorings located 120 km, 270 km, and 630 km from shore at the Oregon/California border in North America. We report here about the sedimentation and burial of particulate organic carbon (Corg) and CaCO3. In order to observe how the integrated CaCO3 and Corg burial across the transect has changed since the last glacial maximum, we have correlated core from the three sites using time scales constrained by both radiocarbon and oxygen isotopes. By comparing surface sediments to a two-and-a-half year sediment trap record, we have also defined the modern preservation rates for many of the labile sedimentary materials. Our analysis of the Corg data indicates that significant amounts (20-40%) of the total Corg being buried today in surface sediments is terrestrial. At the last glacial maximum, the terrestrial Corg fraction within 300 km of the coast was about twice as large. Such large fluxes of terrestrial Corg obscure the marine Corg record, which can be interpreted as productivity. When we corrected for the terrestrial organic matter, we found that the mass accumulation rate of marine Corg roughly doubled from the glacial maximum to the present. Because preservation rates of organic carbon are high in the high sedimentation rate cores, corrections for degradation are straightforward and we can be confident that organic carbon rain rate (new productivity) also doubled. As confirmation, the highest burial fluxes of other biogenic components (opal and Ba) also occur in the Holocene. Productivity off Oregon has thus increased dramatically since the last glacial maximum. CaCO3 fluxes also changed radically through the deglaciation; however, they are linked not to CaCO3 production but rather to changes in deepwater carbonate chemistry between 18 Ka and now.
    Keywords: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; PC; Piston corer; TC; Trigger corer; W8709A; W8709A-1; W8709A-13; W8709A-13TC; W8709A-8; W8709A-8TC; Wecoma
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 12 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Oppo, Delia W; Rosenthal, Yair (1994): Cd/Ca changes in a deep Cape Basin core over the past 730,000 years: Response of circumpolar deepwater variability to northern hemisphere ice sheet melting? Paleoceanography, 9(5), 661-676, https://doi.org/10.1029/93PA02199
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: A comparison of cadmium/calcium (Cd/Ca) records of benthic foraminifera from a deep Cape Basin and a deep eastern equatorial Pacific core suggests that over the past 400,000 years, the nutrient concentration of Circumpolar Deep Water (CPDW) has always been lower than that of the deep Pacific. The data further suggest that at the 100,000- and 23,000-year orbital periods, the contribution of North Atlantic Deep Water to CPDW is at a maximum during periods of ice growth and at a minimum during periods of ice decay. These results are not in agreement with results based on carbon isotope records of benthic foraminifera, which suggest intervals of CPDW nutrient enrichment relative to the deep Pacific and an approximately in-phase relationship between CPDW nutrient concentration and ice volume. Resolution of the apparent conflict between delta13C and Cd/Ca data may provide important constraints on past deep-ocean circulation and nutrient variability.
    Keywords: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; PC; Piston corer; RC13; RC13-229; Robert Conrad
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Verardo, David J; McIntyre, Andrew (1994): Production and destruction: Control of biogenous sedimentation in the tropical Atlantic 0-300,000 years B.P. Paleoceanography, 9(1), 63-86, https://doi.org/10.1029/93PA02901
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: Late Pleistocene signals of calcium carbonate, organic carbon, and opaline silica concentration and accumulation are documented in a series of cores from a zonal/meridional/depth transect in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean to reconstruct the regional sedimentary history. Spectral analysis reveals that maxima and minima in biogenous sedimentation occur with glacial-interglacial cyclicity as a function of both (1) primary production at the sea surface modulated by orbitally forced variation in trade wind zonality and (2) destruction at the seafloor by variation in the chemical character of advected intermediate and deep water from high latitudes modulated by high-latitude ice volume. From these results a pattern emerges in which the relative proportion of signal variance from the productivity signal centered on the precessional (23 kyr) band decreases while that of the destruction signal centered on the obliquity (41 kyr) and eccentricity (100 kyr) periods increases below ~3600-m ocean depth.
    Keywords: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; PC; Piston corer; RC16; RC16-66; RC24; RC24-1; RC24-12; RC24-16; RC24-7; Robert Conrad; V25; V25-56; Vema
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Farrell, John W; Prell, Warren L (1991): Pacific CaCO3 preservation and d18O since 4 Ma: paleoceanic and paleoclimatic implications. Paleoceanography, 6(4), 485-498, https://doi.org/10.1029/91PA00877
    Publication Date: 2024-05-02
    Description: The Pliocene-Pleistocene history of CaCO3 preservation in the central equatorial Pacific is reconstructed from a suite of deep-sea cores and is compared to fluctuations in global ice volume inferred from delta18O records. The results are highlighted by: (1) a strong covariation between CaCO3 preservation and ice volume over 104 to 106 year time scales; (2) a long-term increase in ice volume and CaCO3 preservation since 3.9 Ma demonstrated by a deepening of the lysocline and the carbonate critical depth; (3) a dramatic shift to greater CaCO3 preservation at 2.9 Ma; (4) distinctive ice-volume growth and CaCO3 preservation events at 2.4 Ma, which are associated with the significant intensification of northern hemisphere glaciation; (5) a mid-Pleistocene transition to 100-kyr cyclicity in both CaCO3 preservation and ice volume; and (6) a 600-kyr Brunhes dissolution cycle superimposed on the late Pleistocene glacial/interglacial 100-kyr cycles. CaCO3 preservation primarily reflects the carbonate chemistry of abyssal waters and is controlled by long-term (106 year) and short-term (104 to 105 year) biogeochemical cycling and by distinct paleoclimatic events. We attribute the long-term increase in CaCO3 preservation primarily to a fractionation of CaCO3 deposition from continental shelf to ocean basin, and secondarily to a gradual rise in the riverine and glaciofluvial flux of Ca++. On shorter time scales, the fluctuations in CaCO3 preservation slightly lag ice volume fluctuations and are attributed to climatically induced changes in the circulation and chemistry of Pacific deep water.
    Keywords: 85-572A; 85-572C; 85-573A; 85-574; Albatross IV (1963); core_59; core_60; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; GC; Glomar Challenger; Gravity corer; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University; LDEO; Leg85; Melville; MN76-01, Pleiades; NODC-0418; North Pacific; North Pacific/TROUGH; Pacific Ocean; PC; Piston corer; PLDS-130P; PLDS-4; RC11; RC1112; RC11-209; RC11-210; RC12; RC12-63; RC12-65; RC12-66; Robert Conrad; SDSE_090; SDSE_092; SwedishDeepSeaExpedition; V24; V24-55; V24-58; V24-59; V24-62; V28; V28-179; Vema; W8402A; W8402A-14; Wecoma
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 19 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...