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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-01-04
    Description: The recent expansion of Atlantic waters into the Arctic Ocean represents undisputable evidence of the rapid changes occurring in this region. Understanding the past variability of this “Atlantification” is thus crucial in providing a longer perspective on the modern Arctic changes. Here, we reconstruct the history of Atlantification along the eastern Fram Strait during the past 800 years using precisely dated paleoceanographic records based on organic biomarkers and benthic foraminiferal data. Our results show rapid changes in water mass properties that com-menced in the early 20th century—several decades before the documented Atlantification by instrumental records. Comparison with regional records suggests a poleward expansion of subtropical waters since the end of the Little Ice Age in response to a rapid hydrographic reorganization in the North Atlantic. Understanding of this mechanism will require further investigations using climate model simulations.INTRODUCTIONClimate reconstructions of the Common Era are fundamental bench-marks to place human-induced changes into the context of natural climatic change (1, 2). This is particularly relevant for the Arctic, which is currently warming faster than any other region (3). Arctic warming has been associated with rapid sea ice decline and expan-sion of Atlantic waters (AWs) into the Arctic basin (4, 5) — a phenomenon commonly referred to as “Atlantification” (6). While in situ observations and satellite images provide high-resolution records of anomalies in water mass properties and sea ice since the 1930s and 1980s (4, 7–10), respectively, little is known about this phenomenon in pre- and early-industrial times. Because natural archives preserve evidence of past climate variability, they can offer a longer-term perspective on Atlantification in this region.The Fram Strait represents an important oceanographic gateway that allows the exchange of Arctic and AW masses (11). Low-resolution paleoceanographic records suggest that the summer temperatures of the AW inflow moving along the eastern Fram Strait may have increased before the instrumental record (12). Although this change in AW properties hints at a possible early sign of Atlantification, the lack of a reliable chronology for these records limits the integration with regional high-resolution proxy reconstructions to determine the physical mechanisms at play. Recently, it has been argued that the Atlantic subpolar gyre (SPG) has weakened since the 20th century (13). This, in turn, might have conditioned the water masses routed toward the Arctic. However, a survey of the recent literature shows that our
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 2
  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-06-02
    Description: Among the many sources used by Boccaccio in his scholarly work Genealogia deorum gentilium, there are also the Homeric poems, made available to the author thanks to Leonzio Pilato’s Latin translation. What is interesting is that besides the Latin text of Iliad and Odyssey, he makes use also of Leonzio’s glosses written in the margins of his autograph manuscripts. In the wake of Agostino Pertusi’s pioneering study, this paper traces a link between Leonzio’s glosses on the Odyssey (Venezia, Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana, gr. IX 29) and many passages of the Genealogia where Leonzio is quoted as a source. The analysis is structured in three parts, i.e. the quotation of Boccaccio’s passage, the text of the source and a detailed commentary on its use.
    Keywords: Leonzio Pilato ; Genealogia deorum gentilium ; Venezia ; Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana gr. IX 29 ; Odyssey Agostino Pertusi
    Language: Italian
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2022-06-02
    Description: Giovanni Boccaccio used prologues and epilogues of his Latin works to discuss relevant topics such as the finding of reliable sources or the dissamination of the knowledge. Francesco Petrarca faced the same issues when he wrote his scholarly and historical works. This paper aims at enlightening the intertextuality between prologues and epilogues of Boccaccio’s Genealogia and De montibus and the prologue of Petrarca’s De viris illustribus, showing that the formers were probably inspired by the latter.
    Keywords: Prologues ; epilogues ; Genealogia deorum gentilium ; De montibus ; De viris illustribus
    Language: Italian
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-03-24
    Description: Giovanni Boccaccio used prologues and epilogues of his Latin works to discuss relevant topics such as the finding of reliable sources or the dissamination of the knowledge. Francesco Petrarca faced the same issues when he wrote his scholarly and historical works. This paper aims at enlightening the intertextuality between prologues and epilogues of Boccaccio’s Genealogia and De montibus and the prologue of Petrarca’s De viris illustribus, showing that the formers were probably inspired by the latter.
    Keywords: Prologues ; epilogues ; Genealogia deorum gentilium ; De montibus ; De viris illustribus ; thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies
    Language: Italian
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