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  • 1
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Gukov, Aleksander Yu; Dudarev, Oleg V; Semiletov, Igor P; Charkin, Alexander N; Gorshkova, Ya S (2005): Distribution of macrobenthos biomass and bottom biocoenoses in the southern East Siberian Sea. Translated from Okeanologiya, 2005, 45(6), 889-896, Oceanology, 45(6), 741-748
    Publication Date: 2023-09-23
    Description: Macrobenthos biomass and bottom biocoenoses were studied in the sublittoral zone of the southern East Siberian Sea. The macrobenthos is characterized by relatively high abundance (from 30 to 2680 #/m**2), biomass (from 0.25 to 578.8 g/m**2), and diversity (83 species in total). Lateral distribution of macrobenthos biomass correlates with a substrate type and salinity and is substantially higher in areas washed by the Arctic water mass than in estuaries with mixed fresh and Arctic waters and shows a tendency to decreasing in the convergence zone of different water masses. The highest macrobenthos biomass is observed in cores of water masses in the Long Strait area and in the eastern part of the sea.
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; East Siberian Sea; Grab; GRAB; IK2003-9-1; IK2003-9-10; IK2003-9-11; IK2003-9-12; IK2003-9-13; IK2003-9-14; IK2003-9-15; IK2003-9-16; IK2003-9-17; IK2003-9-18; IK2003-9-19; IK2003-9-2; IK2003-9-20; IK2003-9-21; IK2003-9-22; IK2003-9-23; IK2003-9-24; IK2003-9-25; IK2003-9-26; IK2003-9-27; IK2003-9-28; IK2003-9-29; IK2003-9-3; IK2003-9-30; IK2003-9-31; IK2003-9-32; IK2003-9-33; IK2003-9-34; IK2003-9-35; IK2003-9-36; IK2003-9-37; IK2003-9-38; IK2003-9-39; IK2003-9-4; IK2003-9-40; IK2003-9-41; IK2003-9-42; IK2003-9-43; IK2003-9-44; IK2003-9-5; IK2003-9-6; IK2003-9-7; IK2003-9-8; IK2003-9-9
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Vetrov, Alexander A; Semiletov, Igor P; Dudarev, Oleg V; Peresypkin, Valery I; Charkin, Alexander N (2008): Composition and genesis of the organic matter in the bottom sediments of the East Siberian Sea. Geochemistry International, 46(2), 156-167, https://doi.org/10.1134/S0016702908020055
    Publication Date: 2023-09-23
    Description: The chemical composition of organic matter (Corg, Norg, d13C, d1SN, and n-alkanes) was studied in the top layer of bottom sediments of the East Siberian Sea. Possible ways were proposed to estimate the amount of the terrigenous component in their organic matter (OM). The fraction of terrigenous OM estimated by the combined use of genetic indicators varied from 15% in the eastern part of the sea, near the Long Strait, to 95% in the estuaries of the Indigirka and Kolyma rivers, averaging 62% over the sea area.
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Carbon, organic, total; Carbon/Nitrogen ratio; Carbon Preference Index, n-Alkanes; Continuous Flow Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry (CF/IRMS); DEPTH, sediment/rock; East Siberian Sea; Elevation of event; Event label; Gas chromatography; i-C19/C17 ratio; i-C19/i-C20 ratio; i-C20/C18 ratio; IK04-102; IK04-106; IK04-112; IK04-25; IK04-30; IK04-34; IK04-38; IK04-40; IK04-44; IK04-46; IK04-49; IK04-51; IK04-55; IK04-60; IK04-62; IK04-64; IK04-66; IK04-68; IK04-72; IK04-MT04; Ivan Kireev-2004; Ivan Kireyev; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; n-Alkane, total per unit sediment mass; Nitrogen, total; Sediment type; Station label; Sum(C10-C22)/sum(C23-C40) n-alkanes ratio; Sum even numbered n-alkanes; Sum n-alkanes C10-C17; Sum n-alkanes C10-C22; Sum n-alkanes C18-C22; Sum n-alkanes C20-C24; Sum n-alkanes C23-C35; Sum n-alkanes C23-C40; Sum odd numbered n-alkanes; van Veen Grab; VGRAB; Water content, dry mass; δ13C; δ15N
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 457 data points
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-09-23
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; CTD, Neil Brown; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, top/min; DEPTH, water; East Siberian Sea; Elevation of event; Event label; Grab; GRAB; IK2003-9-1; IK2003-9-10; IK2003-9-11; IK2003-9-12; IK2003-9-13; IK2003-9-14; IK2003-9-15; IK2003-9-16; IK2003-9-17; IK2003-9-18; IK2003-9-19; IK2003-9-2; IK2003-9-20; IK2003-9-21; IK2003-9-22; IK2003-9-23; IK2003-9-24; IK2003-9-25; IK2003-9-26; IK2003-9-27; IK2003-9-28; IK2003-9-29; IK2003-9-3; IK2003-9-30; IK2003-9-31; IK2003-9-32; IK2003-9-33; IK2003-9-34; IK2003-9-35; IK2003-9-36; IK2003-9-37; IK2003-9-38; IK2003-9-39; IK2003-9-4; IK2003-9-40; IK2003-9-41; IK2003-9-42; IK2003-9-43; IK2003-9-44; IK2003-9-5; IK2003-9-6; IK2003-9-7; IK2003-9-8; IK2003-9-9; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Oxygen; Salinity; Temperature, water
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 220 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-09-23
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Benthic biomass, wet weight; Benthos; Benthos, biomass, wet mass; Counting; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; East Siberian Sea; Elevation of event; Event label; Grab; GRAB; IK2003-9-1; IK2003-9-10; IK2003-9-11; IK2003-9-12; IK2003-9-13; IK2003-9-14; IK2003-9-15; IK2003-9-16; IK2003-9-17; IK2003-9-18; IK2003-9-19; IK2003-9-2; IK2003-9-20; IK2003-9-21; IK2003-9-22; IK2003-9-23; IK2003-9-24; IK2003-9-25; IK2003-9-26; IK2003-9-27; IK2003-9-28; IK2003-9-29; IK2003-9-3; IK2003-9-30; IK2003-9-31; IK2003-9-32; IK2003-9-33; IK2003-9-34; IK2003-9-35; IK2003-9-36; IK2003-9-37; IK2003-9-38; IK2003-9-39; IK2003-9-4; IK2003-9-40; IK2003-9-41; IK2003-9-42; IK2003-9-43; IK2003-9-44; IK2003-9-5; IK2003-9-6; IK2003-9-7; IK2003-9-8; IK2003-9-9; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Species
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 220 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-09-23
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; East Siberian Sea; Elevation of event; Event label; Grab; GRAB; IK2003-9-1; IK2003-9-10; IK2003-9-11; IK2003-9-12; IK2003-9-13; IK2003-9-14; IK2003-9-15; IK2003-9-16; IK2003-9-17; IK2003-9-18; IK2003-9-19; IK2003-9-2; IK2003-9-20; IK2003-9-21; IK2003-9-22; IK2003-9-23; IK2003-9-24; IK2003-9-25; IK2003-9-26; IK2003-9-27; IK2003-9-28; IK2003-9-29; IK2003-9-3; IK2003-9-30; IK2003-9-31; IK2003-9-32; IK2003-9-33; IK2003-9-34; IK2003-9-35; IK2003-9-36; IK2003-9-37; IK2003-9-38; IK2003-9-39; IK2003-9-4; IK2003-9-40; IK2003-9-41; IK2003-9-42; IK2003-9-43; IK2003-9-44; IK2003-9-5; IK2003-9-6; IK2003-9-7; IK2003-9-8; IK2003-9-9; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Sediment type
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 132 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-02-10
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Carbon, organic, total; Chukchi Sea; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Element analysis, neutron activation (NAA); Elevation of event; Event label; Gold; Grab; GRAB; IK-103; IK-113; Iridium; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Opal, biogenic silica; Osmium; PKH46-15; PKH46-19; PKH46-21; PKH46-23; PKH46-25; PKH46-29; PKH46-30; PKH46-32; PKH46-35; PKH52-062; PKH52-085; PKH52-106; PKH52-13; PKH52-15; PKH52-17; PKH52-18; PKH52-20; PKH52-22; PKH52-23; PKH52-25; PKH52-27; Platinum; Ruthenium; Sediment type; Silver; Wet chemistry
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 258 data points
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Astakhov, Anatolii S; Kolesov, Gennady M; Dudarev, Oleg V; Ivanov, M V; Kolesnik, Alexander N (2010): Noble metals in the bottom sediments of the Chukchi Sea. Translated from Geokhimiya, 2010, 48(12), 1289-1301, Geochemistry International, 48(12), 1208-1219, https://doi.org/10.1134/S0016702910120050
    Publication Date: 2024-02-10
    Description: Abundance of noble metals and bulk chemical composition have been studied in bottom sediments of the Chukchi Sea. Distribution of noble metals and their correlation with major and trace elements in the sediments have been analyzed using multicomponent statistics. It was established that average contents of noble metals in the bottom sediments of the Chukchi Sea significantly exceed those both in shelf terrigenous sediments and stratisphere. Osmium and iridium enrich mixed and pelitic sediments relative to shallow-water sediments and their influx is presumably determined by erosion of coastal and bottom unconsolidated deposits. High Ag, Ru, Au, and Pt contents were identified in clayey sediments enriched in biogenic elements in the some areas of the Southern Chukchi plain (Chukchi Sea) confined to intersection zones of submeridional and sublatitudinal structures of the graben-rift system, which formed in Mesozoic and activated in Late Cenozoic.
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-02-10
    Keywords: Aluminium; Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Atomic absorption analyzer with pyrolitic system (PA-915+); Atomic emission spectroscopy (AES); Barium; Calcium; Chromium; Chukchi Sea; Cobalt; Copper; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Elevation of event; Event label; Grab; GRAB; Iron; Lanthanum; Latitude of event; Lead; Longitude of event; Magnesium; Manganese; Mercury; Nickel; PKH46-15; PKH46-19; PKH46-21; PKH46-23; PKH46-25; PKH46-29; PKH46-30; PKH46-32; PKH46-35; PKH52-062; PKH52-085; PKH52-106; PKH52-13; PKH52-15; PKH52-17; PKH52-18; PKH52-20; PKH52-22; PKH52-23; PKH52-25; PKH52-27; Sediment type; Silicon; Strontium; Titanium; Vanadium; Ytterbium; Yttrium; Zinc; Zirconium
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 503 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2017-10-11
    Description: It has been suggested that increasing freshwater discharge to the Arctic Ocean may also occur as submarine groundwater discharge (SGD), yet there are no direct observations of this phenomenon in the Arctic shelf seas. This study tests the hypothesis that SGD does exist in the Siberian-Arctic shelf seas but its dynamics may be largely controlled by complicated geocryological conditions such as permafrost. The field-observational approach in the southeast Laptev Sea used a combination of hydrological (temperature, salinity), geological (bottom sediment drilling, geoelectric surveys) and geochemical (224Ra, 223Ra and 222Rn) techniques. Active SGD was documented in the vicinity of the Lena River delta with two different operational modes. In the first system, groundwater discharges through tectonogenic permafrost talik zones was registered in both wintertime and summertime seasons. The second SGD mechanism was cryogenic squeezing out of brine and water-soluble salts detected on the periphery of ice hummocks in the wintertime season. The proposed mechanisms of groundwater transport and discharge in the arctic land-shelf system is elaborated. Through salinity versus 224Ra and 224Ra/223Ra diagrams, the three main SGD-influenced water masses were identified and their end-member composition was constrained. Further studies should apply these techniques to a broader scale with the objective to reach an estimate of the relative importance of the SGD transport vector relative to surface freshwater discharge for both the water balance and aquatic components such as dissolved organic carbon, carbon dioxide, methane, and nutrients.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2015. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Biogeosciences 12 (2015): 4841-4860, doi:10.5194/bg-12-4841-2015.
    Description: Hydrolyzable organic carbon (OC) comprises a significant component of sedimentary particulate matter transferred from land into oceans via rivers. Its abundance and nature are however not well studied in Arctic river systems, and yet may represent an important pool of carbon whose fate remains unclear in the context of mobilization and related processes associated with a changing climate. Here, we examine the molecular composition and source of hydrolyzable compounds isolated from sedimentary particles derived from nine rivers across the pan-Arctic. Bound fatty acids (b-FAs), hydroxy FAs, n-alkane-α,ω-dioic acids (DAs) and phenols were the major components released upon hydrolysis of these sediments. Among them, b-FAs received considerable inputs from bacterial and/or algal sources, whereas ω-hydroxy FAs, mid-chain substituted acids, DAs, and hydrolyzable phenols were mainly derived from cutin and suberin of higher plants. We further compared the distribution and fate of suberin- and cutin-derived compounds with those of other terrestrial biomarkers (plant wax lipids and lignin phenols) from the same Arctic river sedimentary particles and conducted a benchmark assessment of several biomarker-based indicators of OC source and extent of degradation. While suberin-specific biomarkers were positively correlated with plant-derived high-molecular-weight (HMW) FAs, lignin phenols were correlated with cutin-derived compounds. These correlations suggest that, similar to leaf-derived cutin, lignin was mainly derived from litter and surface soil horizons, whereas suberin and HMW FAs incorporated significant inputs from belowground sources (roots and deeper soil). This conclusion is supported by the negative correlation between lignin phenols and the ratio of suberin-to-cutin biomarkers. Furthermore, the molecular composition of investigated biomarkers differed between Eurasian and North American Arctic rivers: while lignin dominated in the terrestrial OC of Eurasian river sediments, hydrolyzable OC represented a much larger fraction in the sedimentary particles from Colville River. Hence, studies exclusively focusing on either plant wax lipids or lignin phenols will not be able to fully unravel the mobilization and fate of bound OC in Arctic rivers. More comprehensive, multi-molecular investigations are needed to better constrain the land–ocean transfer of carbon in the changing Arctic, including further research on the degradation and transfer of both free and bound components in Arctic river sediments.
    Description: X. Feng acknowledges support from the Chinese National Key Development Program for Basic Research (2014CB954003, 2015CB954201). The ISSS program is supported by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, headquarters of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Swedish Research Council, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Russian Foundation of Basic Research (#13-05-12028, 13-05-12041), the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat and the Nordic Council of Ministers (Arctic Co-Op and TRI-DEFROST programs). Collection of the Mackenzie sediment samples was supported by Fisheries and Oceans Canada and Indian and Northern Affairs Canada as part of the NOGAP B.6 project. Ö. Gustafsson acknowledges an Academy Research Fellow grant from the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences. I. P. Semiletov and O. V. Dudarev thank the Government of the Russian Federation (#2013-220-04-157) for support as well as A. I. Khanchuk personally. T. I. Eglinton acknowledges support from Swiss National Science foundation (SNF) grant no. 200021_140850, and grants OCE-9907129, OCE-0137005, and OCE-0526268 from the US National Science Foundation (NSF), the Stanley Watson Chair for Excellence in Oceanography, and ETH Zurich. J. E. Vonk is thankful for support from NWO Rubicon (#825.10.022) and Veni (#863.12.004). B. E. van Dongen is thankful for support from the UK NERC (NE/I024798/1). R. M. Holmes acknowledges support from NSF 0436118, NSF 0732555, and NSF 1107774. X. Feng thanks WHOI for a postdoctoral scholar fellowship and for postdoctoral support from ETH Zurich.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
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