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  • GSA, Geological Society of America  (1)
  • Grzybowski Foundation  (1)
  • American Geophysical Union (AGU)
  • 1
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    Grzybowski Foundation
    In:  In: Contributions to the micropaleontology and paleoceanography of the northern North Atlantic (collected results from the GEOMAR Bungalow Working Group). , ed. by Hass, H. C. and Kaminski, M. A. Grzybowski Foundation, Krakow, pp. 227-243.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-19
    Description: The present investigation was initiated to report on species compositions and dynamics in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea during low production phases in spring and early summer. Thus, the distribution patterns of living coccolithophores during June to July, 1990, February and May, 1991, and March to April, 1995 were investigated. In general, the seasonal development of the phytoplankton started after the yearly dark period and coccolithophores increased in abundance when the water column was more stratified and both temperatures and insolation increased. Cell densities reached a maximum of 207x10~c occospheres/l in the southeastern part of the studied area. However, these high cell densities probably resulted from ,,old" populations, drifted to the Norwegian-Greenland Sea from the North Atlantic. Some of the collected samples did not contain any coccolithophores. In total, 15 coccolithophore species were identified. The diversity was generally higher in the eastern part of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea and to the west the coccolithophore communities often were monospecific. Emiliania huxleyi is the dominant species, but Calciopappus caudatus and Algirosphaera robusta also considerably contribute to the communities. High cell densities of C. caudatus were interpreted as the result of a bloom or more probably close to bloom conditions during the general low productive period. In addition, many of the E. huxleyi coccolith from the surface waters of the southeastern Norwegian-Greenland Sea were heavily corroded. These specimens may have drifted within the Atlantic water for a longer time.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: An exceptionally large cold-water coral mound province (CMP) was recently discovered extending over 80 km along the Namibian shelf (offshore southwestern Africa) in water depths of 160-270 m. This hitherto unknown CMP comprises 〉2000 mounds with heights of up to 20 m and constitutes the largest CMP known from the southeastern Atlantic Ocean. Uranium-series dating revealed a short but intense pulse in mound formation during the early to mid-Holocene. Coral proliferation during this period was potentially supported by slightly enhanced dissolved oxygen concentrations compared to the present Benguela oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). The subsequent mid-Holocene strengthening of the Benguela Upwelling System and a simultaneous northward migration of the Angola-Benguela Front resulted in an intensification of the OMZ that caused the sudden local extinction of the Namibian corals and prevented their reoccurrence until today.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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