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  • 2000-2004  (38)
  • 1980-1984  (3)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; BI64; BI64-17; Chlorite; Chukchi Sea; DEPTH, sediment/rock; East Siberian Sea; Event label; GC; Grab; GRAB; Gravity corer; Illite; Kaolinite; Laptev Sea; Northwind; NW362; NW362-62; NW362-70; NW63; NW63-101; NW63-103; NW63-107; NW63-115; NW63-118; NW63-119; NW63-122; NW63-125; NW63-128; NW63-130; NW63-134; NW63-136; NW63-139; NW63-14; NW63-141; NW63-143; NW63-146; NW63-148; NW63-149; NW63-151; NW63-153; NW63-157; NW63-160; NW63-161; NW63-166; NW63-18; NW63-188; NW63-19; NW63-193; NW63-197; NW63-21; NW63-25; NW63-26; NW63-27; NW63-28; NW63-29; NW63-32; NW63-34; NW63-37; NW63-39; NW63-40; NW63-41; NW63-42; NW63-44; NW63-46; NW63-50; NW63-51; NW63-52; NW63-54; NW63-57; NW63-60; NW63-64; NW63-67; NW63-77; NW63-80; NW63-82; NW63-87; NW63-88; NW63-94; NW63-95; NW63-97; NW63-99; Smectite; X-ray diffraction, clay fraction
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 260 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Keywords: Aluminium; Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; BI64; BI64-10; BI64-11; BI64-17; BI64-31; BI64-34; BI64-38; BI64-48; BI64-52; BI64-53; BI64-55; BI64-59; Cerium; Chukchi Sea; DEPTH, sediment/rock; East Siberian Sea; Event label; GC; Grab; GRAB; Gravity corer; Lanthanum; Laptev Sea; Magnesium; Neodymium; Northwind; NW362; NW362-62; NW362-70; NW362-72; NW362-77; NW362-78; NW362-79; NW362-80; NW63; NW63-101; NW63-103; NW63-107; NW63-112; NW63-115; NW63-118; NW63-119; NW63-122; NW63-125; NW63-130; NW63-134; NW63-136; NW63-139; NW63-14; NW63-141; NW63-143; NW63-146; NW63-148; NW63-149; NW63-151; NW63-153; NW63-157; NW63-160; NW63-161; NW63-166; NW63-18; NW63-188; NW63-19; NW63-193; NW63-197; NW63-21; NW63-25; NW63-26; NW63-27; NW63-28; NW63-29; NW63-32; NW63-34; NW63-37; NW63-39; NW63-40; NW63-41; NW63-42; NW63-44; NW63-46; NW63-50; NW63-52; NW63-54; NW63-57; NW63-60; NW63-64; NW63-67; NW63-74; NW63-77; NW63-80; NW63-82; NW63-87; NW63-88; NW63-94; NW63-95; NW63-97; NW63-98; NW63-99; Potassium; Silicon; Strontium
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 648 data points
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Keywords: Aluminium; Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS), Perkin-Elmer; BI64; BI64-10; BI64-11; BI64-17; BI64-31; BI64-34; BI64-38; BI64-48; BI64-52; BI64-53; BI64-55; BI64-59; Cerium; Chukchi Sea; DEPTH, sediment/rock; East Siberian Sea; Event label; GC; Grab; GRAB; Gravity corer; Inductively coupled plasma - mass spectrometry (ICP-MS); Lanthanum; Laptev Sea; Magnesium; Neodymium; Northwind; NW362; NW362-62; NW362-70; NW362-72; NW362-77; NW362-78; NW362-79; NW362-80; NW63; NW63-101; NW63-103; NW63-107; NW63-112; NW63-115; NW63-118; NW63-119; NW63-122; NW63-125; NW63-130; NW63-134; NW63-136; NW63-139; NW63-14; NW63-141; NW63-143; NW63-146; NW63-148; NW63-149; NW63-151; NW63-153; NW63-157; NW63-160; NW63-161; NW63-166; NW63-18; NW63-188; NW63-19; NW63-193; NW63-197; NW63-21; NW63-25; NW63-26; NW63-27; NW63-28; NW63-29; NW63-32; NW63-34; NW63-37; NW63-39; NW63-40; NW63-41; NW63-42; NW63-44; NW63-46; NW63-50; NW63-52; NW63-54; NW63-57; NW63-60; NW63-64; NW63-67; NW63-74; NW63-77; NW63-80; NW63-82; NW63-87; NW63-88; NW63-94; NW63-95; NW63-97; NW63-98; NW63-99; Potassium; Silicon; Strontium
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 648 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Keywords: Barcelona Coast; Carbon, inorganic, particulate, flux; Carbon, organic, particulate, flux; DEPTH, water; MULT; Multiple investigations; Opal, flux; PAP; Pertuis Charentais; Porcupine Abyssal Plain; Taranto Mare Piccolo
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 9 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Keywords: Carbon, inorganic, particulate, flux; Carbon, organic, particulate, flux; DEPTH, water; Duration, number of days; Opal, flux; POOZ; POOZ_trap; Southern Ocean - Indian sector; Trap, sediment; TRAPS
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 8 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Keywords: 54-424; 54-424A; 54-424B; Albite; Birnessite; Calcite; Comment; Comment 2 (continued); Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Event label; Glomar Challenger; Leg54; Nontronite; North Pacific/MOUND; Quartz; Sample, optional label/labor no; Sample code/label; Todorokite; X-ray diffraction (XRD)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 83 data points
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Keywords: 54-424; 54-424A; 54-424B; Aluminium; Antimony; Arsenic; Barium; Calcium carbonate; Cerium; Chromium; Cobalt; Copper; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Europium; Event label; Glomar Challenger; Hafnium; Iron; Lanthanum; Leg54; Lutetium; Manganese; Neodymium; Nickel; North Pacific/MOUND; Percentage; Samarium; Sample, optional label/labor no; Sample code/label; Scandium; Silicon; Terbium; Thorium; Ytterbium; Zinc
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 275 data points
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  • 8
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Viscosi-Shirley, C; Mammone, K; Pisias, Nicklas G; Dymond, Jack R (2003): Clay mineralogy and multi-element chemistry of surface sediments on the Siberian Arctic shelf: implications for sediment provenance and grain size sorting. Continental Shelf Research, 23(11-13), 1175-1200, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0278-4343(03)00091-8
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Description: Clay mineral and bulk chemical (Si, Al, K, Mg, Sr, La, Ce, Nd) analyses of terrigenous surface sediments on the Siberian-Arctic shelf indicate that there are five regions with distinct, or endmember, sedimentary compositions. The formation of these geochemical endmembers is controlled by sediment provenance and grain size sorting. (1) The shale endmember (Al, K and REE rich sediment) is eroded from fine-grained marine sedimentary rocks of the Verkhoyansk Mountains and Kolyma-Omolon superterrain, and discharged to the shelf by the Lena, Yana, Indigirka and Kolyma Rivers. (2) The basalt endmember (Mg rich) originates from NE Siberia's Okhotsk-Chukotsk volcanic belt and Bering Strait inflow, and is prevalent in Chukchi Sea Sediments. Concentrations of the volcanically derived clay mineral smectite are elevated in Chukchi fine-fraction sediments, corroborating the conclusion that Chukchi sediments are volcanic in origin. (3) The mature sandstone endmember (Si rich) is found proximal to Wrangel Island and sections of the Chukchi Sea's Siberian coast and is derived from the sedimentary Chukotka terrain that comprises these landmasses. (4) The immature sandstone endmember (Sr rich) is abundant in the New Siberian Island region and reflects inputs from sedimentary rocks that comprise the islands. (5) The immature sandstone endmember is also prevalent in the western Laptev Sea, where it is eroded from sedimentary deposits blanketing the Siberian platform that are compositionally similar to those on the New Siberian Islands. Western Laptev can be distinguished from New Siberian Island region sediments by their comparatively elevated smectite concentrations and the presence of the basalt endmember, which indicate Siberian platform flood basalts are also a source of western Laptev sediments. In certain locations grain size sorting noticeably affects shelf sediment chemistry. (1) Erosion of fines by currents and sediment ice rafting contributes to the formation of the coarse-grained sandstone endmembers. (2) Bathymetrically controlled grain size sorting, in which fines preferentially accumulate offshore in deeper, less energetic water, helps distribute the fine-grained shale and basalt endmembers. An important implication of these results is that the observed sedimentary geochemical endmembers provide new markers of sediment provenance, which can be used to track sediment transport, ice-rafted debris dispersal or the movement of particle-reactive contaminants.
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; BI64; BI64-10; BI64-11; BI64-17; BI64-31; BI64-34; BI64-38; BI64-48; BI64-52; BI64-53; BI64-55; BI64-59; Chukchi Sea; East Siberian Sea; GC; Grab; GRAB; Gravity corer; Laptev Sea; Northwind; NW362; NW362-62; NW362-70; NW362-72; NW362-77; NW362-78; NW362-79; NW362-80; NW63; NW63-101; NW63-103; NW63-107; NW63-112; NW63-115; NW63-118; NW63-119; NW63-122; NW63-125; NW63-128; NW63-130; NW63-134; NW63-136; NW63-139; NW63-14; NW63-141; NW63-143; NW63-146; NW63-148; NW63-149; NW63-151; NW63-153; NW63-157; NW63-160; NW63-161; NW63-166; NW63-18; NW63-188; NW63-19; NW63-193; NW63-197; NW63-21; NW63-25; NW63-26; NW63-27; NW63-28; NW63-29; NW63-32; NW63-34; NW63-37; NW63-39; NW63-40; NW63-41; NW63-42; NW63-44; NW63-46; NW63-50; NW63-51; NW63-52; NW63-54; NW63-57; NW63-60; NW63-64; NW63-67; NW63-74; NW63-77; NW63-80; NW63-82; NW63-87; NW63-88; NW63-94; NW63-95; NW63-97; NW63-98; NW63-99
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 9
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Ragueneau, Olivier; Tréguer, Paul; Leynaert, Aude; Anderson, Robert F; Brzezinski, Mark A; DeMaster, David J; Dugdale, Richard; Dymond, Jack R; Fischer, Gerhard; Francois, Roger; Heinze, Christoph; Maier-Reimer, Ernst; Martin-Jézéquel, Véronique; Nelson, David M; Quéguiner, Bernard (2000): A review of the Si cycle in the modern ocean: recent progress and missing gaps in the application of biogenic opal as a paleoproductivity proxy. Global and Planetary Change, 26(4), 317-365, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0921-8181(00)00052-7
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Description: Due to the major role played by diatoms in the biological pump of CO2, and to the presence of silica-rich sediments in areas that play a major role in air-sea CO2 exchange (e.g. the Southern Ocean and the Equatorial Pacific), opal has a strong potential as a proxy for paleoproductivity reconstructions. However, because of spatial variations in the biogenic silica preservation, and in the degree of coupling between the marine Si and C biogeochemical cycles, paleoreconstructions are not straitghtforward. A better calibration of this proxy in the modern ocean is required, which needs a good understanding of the mechanisms that control the Si cycle, in close relation to the carbon cycle. This review of the Si cycle in the modern ocean starts with the mechanisms that control the uptake of silicic acid (Si(OH)4) by diatoms and the subsequent silicification processes, the regulatory mechanisms of which are uncoupled. This has strong implications for the direct measurement in the field of the kinetics of Si(OH)4 uptake and diatom growth. It also strongly influences the Si:C ratio within diatoms, clearly linked to environmental conditions. Diatoms tend to dominate new production at marine ergoclines. At depth, they also succeed to form mats, which sedimentation is at the origin of laminated sediments and marine sapropels. The concentration of Si(OH)4 with respect to other macronutrients exerts a major influence on diatom dominance and on the rain ratio between siliceous and calcareous material, which severely impacts surface waters pCO2. A compilation of biogenic fluxes collected at about 40 sites by means of sediment traps also shows a remarkable pattern of increasing BSi:Corg ratio along the path of the "conveyor belt", accompanying the relative enrichment of waters in Si compared to N and P. This observation suggests an extension of the Si pump model described by Dugdale and Wilkerson (1989, doi:10.1038/34630), giving to Si(OH)4 a major role in the control of the rain ratio, which is of major importance in the global carbon cycle. The fate of the BSi produced in surface waters is then described, in relation to Corg, in terms of both dissolution and preservation mechanisms. Difficulties in quantifying the dissolution of biogenic silica in the water column as well as the sinking rates and forms of BSi to the deep, provide evidence for a major gap in our understanding of the mechanisms controlling the competition between retention in and export from surface waters. The relative influences of environmental conditions, seasonality, food web structure or aggregation are however explored. Quantitatively, assuming steady state, the measurements of the opal rain rate by means of sediment traps matches reasonably well those obtained by adding the recycling and burial fluxes in the underlying abyssal sediments, for most of the sites where such a comparison is possible. The major exception is the Southern Ocean where sediment focusing precludes the closing of mass balances. Focusing in fact is also an important aspect of the downward revision of the importance of Southern Ocean sediments in the global biogenic silica accumulation. Qualitatively, little is known about the duration of the transfer through the deep and the quality of the material that reaches the seabed, which is suggested to represent a major gap in our understanding of the processes governing the early diagenesis of BSi in sediments. The sediment composition (special emphasis on Al availability), the sedimentation rate or bioturbation are shown to exert an important control on the competition between dissolution and preservation of BSi in sediments. It is suggested that a primary control on the kinetic and thermodynamic properties of BSi dissolution, both in coastal and abyssal sediments, is exerted by water column processes, either occuring in surface waters during the formation of the frustules, or linked to the transfer of the particles through the water column, which duration may influence the quality of the biogenic rain. This highlights the importance of studying the factors controlling the degree of coupling between pelagic and benthic processes in various regions of the world ocean, and its consequences, not only in terms of benthic biology but also for the constitution of the sediment archive. The last section, first calls for the end of the "NPZD" models, and for the introduction of processes linked to the Si cycle, into models describing the phytoplankton cycles in surface waters and the early diagenesis of BSi in sediments. It also calls for the creation of an integrated 1-D diagnostic model of the Si:C coupling, for a better understanding of the interactions between surface waters, deep waters and the upper sedimentary column. The importance of Si(OH)4 in the control of the rain ratio and the improved parametrization of the Si cycle in the 1-D diagnostic models should lead to a reasonable incorporation of the Si cycle into 3-D regional circulation models and OGCMs, with important implications for climate change studies and paleoreconstructions at regional and global scale.
    Keywords: Barcelona Coast; ORFOIS; Origin and Fate of Biogenic Particle Fluxes in the Ocean; Pertuis Charentais; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; Taranto Mare Piccolo
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 10
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Dymond, Jack R; Corliss, John B; Cobler, Richard; Muratli, Charlotte Meredith; Chou, Christin; Conard, Roberta (1980): Composition and origin of sediments recovered by deep drilling of sediment mounds, Galapagos Spreading Center. In: Rosendahl, BR; Hekinian, R; et al. (eds.), Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project (U.S. Govt. Printing Office), 54, 377-385, https://doi.org/10.2973/dsdp.proc.54.113.1980
    Publication Date: 2023-08-15
    Description: The sediments recovered on Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 54 appear to be mixtures of the normal pelagic sediments of the area and hydrothermally produced manganese and iron phases. The latter are mineralogically and chemically very similar to phases recovered from surficial sampling of the mounds. The hydrothermal nontronite which is approximately 15 meters thick in the three holes is essentially free of carbonate or detrital contaminants. The basal sediments are similar to the carbonate oozes presently being deposited in the region, but are enriched in Mn and Fe. This enrichment appears to be the result of hydrothermal deposition that took place at or near the spreading center and may not be associated with the mounds formation. Three different hypotheses for the formation of the nontronite layer and the mounds deposits are considered. An initial deposition of a widespread nontronite layer and subsequent diapiric-like movement of the layer into carbonates could account for the observed stratigraphy; however, if this be correct, analogous deposits should be present in other DSDP sites. The second hypothesis - replacement of the normal sediments by nontronite - may be feasible, but the high purity of the nontronite requires dissolution and removal of refractory elements. The third hypothesis, metal deposition in an advancing oxidation gradient, is compatible with submersible observations of the mounds; however, it can account only for the high purity of the nontronite by very rapid deposition of the hydrothermal phases.
    Keywords: 54-424; 54-424A; 54-424B; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Glomar Challenger; Leg54; North Pacific/MOUND
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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