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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-04-25
    Description: This dataset includes a global compilation of new and published 14C measurements of benthic foraminifera and deep-sea corals (from 0-to 49872 years BP). We synthesized this new dataset into basin-average 14C ventilation age values over the 25,000 years, along density surfaces associated with the upper and lower cells of global ocean overturning circulation (27.5 and 28 kg m^-3, respectively). The published datasets are from all ocean basins, even those not utilized in our synthesis. We also provide the basin-average estimates for the Atlantic, Southern, and Pacific Oceans as produced by the Rafter et al. 2022 study.
    Keywords: 0050PG; 0066PG; 145-883; 145-887; 146-893A; 167-1019A; 202-1240; 202-1242A; 341-U1419; 35MF20120125, OISO_21, INDIEN SUD 2; 47396B; 50-37KL; 64-480; 90b; AII125-8-55; AII125-8-56; Akademik M.A. Lavrentiev; ALV-3887-1549-004-007; ALV-3887-1549-004-009; ALV-3887-1549-004-012; ALV-3890-1407-003-001; ALV-3891-1459-003-002; ALV-3891-1758-006-003; AMOCINT, IMAGES XVII; ANT-XI/4; ANT-XXIII/9; ANT-XXVI/2; Argentine Basin; ARK-II/5; ARK-X/2; Azores; B34-91; BC; Bering Sea; Binary Object; BO04-PC11; Box corer; Brazil Basin; Burdwood_Bank; CALYPSO; CALYPSO2; Calypso Corer; Calypso Corer II; Calypso square corer; Calypso Square Core System; Canarias Sea; Cape_Horn; Caribbean Sea; CASQ; CASQS; CD159; CD159-10; CD159-15; CD159-17; CD38-17P; Celtic Sea; Cenderawasih Bay; Central Pacific; CH84-14; Charles Darwin; CHAT_10k; CHAT_16k; CHAT-3K; CHAT-5K; Chatham Rise; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Conrad Rise; Core; CORE; Core1471; Core2088; Core21210009; Core2307; Core2631; Core2657; Core2706; Core2774; Core47396; Core654; Core660; Core936; Corner Rise; Denmark Strait; Drake Passage; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Eastern Equatorial Pacific; Eastern slope of Kurile Basin; East Pacific; Emperor Seamounts; EN06601; EN066-39GGC; Endeavor; Equatorial East Pacific; ESTASE1; EW0408; EW0408-26JC; EW0408-85JC; EW0408-87JC; Exp341; F2-92-P3; F8-90-G21; File content; Galapagos; Galápagos Islands; GC; GC_POI; GeoB1503-1; GeoB2104-3; GeoB7149-2; GeoB7162-6; GeoB7163-7; GeoB7167-6; GGC; GGC5; gh02-1030; Giant box corer; Giant gravity corer; Giant piston corer; GIK17940-1; GIK23243-2 PS05/431; GKG; Glomar Challenger; GPC; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Gravity corer (POI); GS07-150-17/1GC-A; GS07-150-20/2A; Gulf of Alaska; Gulf of California; H209; H213; HH12-946MC; HU72-021-7; HU89038-8PC; IMAGES III - IPHIS; IMAGES IV-IPHIS III; IMAGES V; IMAGES VIII - MONA; IMAGES VII - WEPAMA; IMAGES XII - MARCO POLO; IMAGES XV - Pachiderme; Indian Ocean; INOPEX; Interim_Seamount; Japan Trench; Jean Charcot; JM-FI-19PC; Joides Resolution; JPC; JPC30; JT96-09; JT96-09PC; Jumbo Piston Core; KAL; KALMAR II; Kasten corer; KL; KN_USA; KN11002; KN159-5; Knorr; KNR073-04-003; KNR110-50; KNR110-66; KNR110-82a; KNR110-82GGC; KNR140; KNR140-01JPC; KNR140-02JPC; KNR140-12JPC; KNR140-2-12JPC; KNR140-2-22JPC; KNR140-22JPC; KNR140-2-30GGC; KNR140-2-51GGC; KNR140-26GGC; KNR140-30GGC; KNR140-37JPC; KNR140-39GGC; KNR140-43GGC; KNR140-50GGC; KNR140-51GGC; KNR140-56GGC; KNR140-66GGC; KNR159-5; KNR159-5-36GGC; KNR159-5-78GGC; KNR176-17GC; KNR178; KNR178-2GGC; KNR178-32JPC; KNR195-5-CDH23; KNR195-5-CDH26; KNR195-5-CDH41; KNR195-5-GGC43; KNR197-10; KNR197-10CDH42; KNR197-10-CDH42; KNR197-10-CDH46; KNR197-10-GGC17; KNR197-10-GGC36; KNR197-10-GGC5; KNR198-CDH36; KNR198-GGC15; KNR31GPC5; KNR733P; KNR734P; KNR736P; KOL; KOMEX; KOMEX II; KR02-15-PC06; Kronotsky Peninsula; KT89-18-P4; Lakshadweep Sea; Laurentian fan; Leg145; Leg146; Leg167; Leg202; Leg64; Le Suroît; LPAZ21P; LV27/GREGORY; LV27-2-4; LV29-114-3; LV29-2; M16/2; M23/2; Marion Dufresne (1972); Marion Dufresne (1995); Maurice Ewing; Mazatlan; MCSEIS; MD012378; MD01-2378; MD012386; MD01-2386; MD012416; MD01-2416; MD012420; MD01-2420; MD022489; MD02-2489; MD022519; MD02-2519; MD03-2697; MD03-2707; MD052896; MD05-2896; MD052904; MD05-2904; MD07-3076; MD07-3076Q; MD07-3088; MD08-3169; MD08-3180; MD09-3256; MD09-3256Q; MD09-3257; MD106; MD111; MD114; MD122; MD12-3396Cq; MD126; MD13; MD134; MD147; MD159; MD168; MD173; MD189; MD77-176; MD972106; MD97-2106; MD972120; MD97-2120; MD972121; MD97-2121; MD972138; MD97-2138; MD982165; MD98-2165; MD982181; MD98-2181; MD99-2334; ME0005A; ME0005A-24JC; ME0005A-43JC; Melville; Meteor (1986); ML1208-01PC; MONITOR MONSUN; MR01-K03; MR06-04_PC04A; MUC; Multichannel seismics; MultiCorer; MV99-GC38; MV99-MC17/GC32/PC10; MV99-MC19/GC31/PC08; NEMO; Nesmeyanov25-1-GGC15; Nesmeyanov25-1-GGC18; Nesmeyanov25-1-GGC20; Nesmeyanov25-1-GGC27; New_England_Seamounts; North Atlantic; North Greenland Sea; North Pacific/Gulf of California/BASIN; North Pacific Ocean; Northwest Atlantic; Norwegian Sea; OCE326-GGC14; OCE326-GGC26; OCE326-GGC5; off Chile; off Nova Scotia; OSIRIS III; Pacific Ocean; PALEOCINAT; PC; Philippine Sea; PICABIA; Piston corer; Piston corer (BGR type); Piston corer (Kiel type); PLDS-007G; PLDS-1; Pleiades; Polarstern; PS05; PS1243-2; PS2606-6; PS2644-2; PS30; PS30/144; PS31; PS31/160; PS69; PS69/907-2; PS69/912-3; PS69/912-4; PS75/059-2; PS75/100-4; PS75/104-1; PS75 BIPOMAC; PUCK; RAPiD-10-1P; RAPiD-15-4P; RAPiD-17-5P; RBDASS05; RC24; RC24-8GC; RC27; RC27-14; RC27-23; Remote operated vehicle; RETRO-2; RNDB-GGC15; RNDB-GGC5; RNDB-PC11; RNDB-PC13; Robert Conrad; ROV; RR0503-36JPC; RR0503-41JPC; RR0503-64JPC; RR0503-79JPC; RR0503-831C; RR0503-83GC; S67-FFC15; S794; S931; Sakhalin shelf and slope; Sars_Seamount; Scotia Sea; Sea of Okhotsk; SEDCO; Sediment corer; Shackleton_Fracture_Zone; SHAK03-6K; SHAK05-3K; SHAK06-4K; SHAK06-5K; SHAK10-10K; SHAK14-4G; Shirshov Ridge; SK129-CR2; SL; Smithsonian_48735.1; SO156/2; SO156/3; SO161/3; SO161/3_22; SO178; SO178-13-6; SO201/2; SO201-2-101; SO201-2-12KL; SO201-2-77; SO201-2-85; SO202/1; SO202/1_18-6; SO213/2; SO213/2_76-2; SO213/2_79-2; SO213/2_82-1; SO213/2_84-1; SO95; Sonne; SOPATRA; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; South China Sea; Southern Alaska Margin: Tectonics, Climate and Sedimentation; South of Iceland; South Pacific Ocean; South Tasman Rise; Southwest Pacific Ocean; SPOC; Station 6, MD189-3396; SU90-08; Thomas G. Thompson (1964); Thomas Washington; Timor Sea; TNO57-21; TR163-22; TR163-23; TR163-31; TT154-10; TTN13-18; TTXXX; U938; V34; V34-98; V35; V35-5; V35-6; Vema; Vigo; VINO19-4-GGC17; VINO19-4-GGC37; VM21-29; VM21-30; VM23-81; VM28-122; VM28-238; VNTR01; VNTR01-10GC; W8709A; W8709A-13; Wecoma
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 8 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The US Coast Guard Cutter "Healy" and the German research vessel "Polarstern" surveyed and sampled the Gakkel Mid-Ocean Ridge (MOR) as part of a joint US-German effort to understand the largely unexplored Arctic Ocean; the Mid-Ocean Ridge Expedition (AMORE) from August to October 2001. In addition to geologic sampling, both ships acquired multibeam bathymetry: Seabeam 2112 from USCGC Healy and Hydrosweep DS-2 from RV Polarstern. The bathymetric results from this expedition are an outstanding success far exceeding the expectations of either group. Favorable ice and weather conditions allowed Healy and Polarstern to operate separately during much of the expedition, providing more than three ships months of total data. The surveyed region covers ~1000km from the Lena Trough at 8°W to 88°E, significantly increasing bathymetric coverage along the axial and near-axis regions and providing the first data for the western Gakkel Ridge. At current data collection rates it is estimated that the AMORE cruise will contribute 14 million bathymetricsoundings, nearly doubling the present Arctic bathymetric database. The resolution of these data is significantly better than previouslyexisting bathymetry and reveals geologic detail critical to understanding the segmentation and processes of this ultra-slow spreadingMOR. The new bathymetry data show three distinct magmatic-tectonic regions. The western segment [8°W - 3°E] contains a series of five elongate volcanic highs that are quasi-continuous, and separated by short regions, most of which are populated by small volcanic cones. This clear volcanic and bathymetric segmentation is almost perfectly linear and occurs in the absence of any ridge offsets, suggesting that magmatic segmentation is occuring independently of offsets and may therefore be controlled by mantle processes. The central segment[3°E - 11°E] displays little bathymetric evidence of volcanism, and dredging recovered virtually little to no basalt. The axial depth increasessignificantly compared to the western segment, while the bounding fault walls become high-angle fault planes with vertical throws in excess of 1000 m. Further eastward, beginning about 15°E, punctuated volcanism occurs throughout the region, forming large localisedvolcanic centers with little significant lateral extent along strike. These volcanic centers are separated by lengthy ridge sections of highly faulted and tectonised seafloor. This variable behavior of the Gakkel Ridge is apparent only through a combination of bathymetry and geologic sampling. In the central region, domal features believed to be volcanic turned out to be peridotite, and many fault exposures believed to be "peridotite walls" gave rise to only basalt in the dredge. There is an important juxtaposition of tectonic and volcanicproducts and processes throughout the entire surveyed area of the ridge. Because spreading rate decreases progressively eastward, these irregular variations along the ridge suggest that spreading rate alone is not the controlling parameter of volcanism and tectonics within this region.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The Arctic Mid-Ocean Ridge Expedition (AMORE 2001) returned in early October 2001 after an incredibly sucessful ten-week study of the Gakkel Ridge and its surrounding basins in the high Arctic. AMORE 2001 was an international effort involving two icebreakers: PFS Polarstern, from the Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven, Germany and the new U.S. icebreaker, USCGC Healy. It was Healy's maiden scientific voyage, and she proved to be an excellent icebraker and scientific platform. This historic and highly sucessful expedition far exceeded anyone's expectations and went well beyond the goals set forth by InterRidge (Vol. 10 (1), 2001) in charting and sampling the Gakkel Ridge. Some of the highlights of the expedition are:1. Basalts and peridotites were recovered from over 200 sites within and near the axis of Gakkel Ridge, about three times as many sites as were planned. 2. Hydrothermal plumes were discovered and sampled along this ultraslow spreading ridge. 3. A high-resolution, well-navigated map of the ridge was unexpectedly produced using two hull-mounted multibeam sonar systems, which worked far better in the ice than anticipated. 4. Sucessful seismic measurements showed that crustal thickness varies strongly along the axis of Gakkel Ridge, most likely according to distinct volcanic centers. 5. The crustal thickness in the Nansen Basin does not follow theoretical models, which predict thin crust at slow spreading rates. The crust thickens towards the Gakkel Ridge.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , notRev
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: 〈/td〉〈/tr〉〈tbody〉 〈/tbody〉〈/table〉〈p〉〈br〉〈br〉〈/p〉〈/td〉〈/tr〉〈/tbody〉〈/table〉〈/td〉〈/tr〉〈/tbody〉〈/table〉〈!-- End Outermost table for setting grey background --〉〈/td〉〈/tr〉〈/tbody〉〈/table〉〈/BODY〉〈/HTML〉
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: A high-resolution mapping and sampling study of the Gakkel ridge was accomplished during an international ice-breakerexpedition to the high Arctic and North Pole in summer 2001. For this slowest-spreading endmember of the global mid-ocean-ridgesystem, predictions were that magmatism should progressively diminish as the spreading rate decreases along the ridge, and thathydrothermal activity should be rare. Instead, it was found that magmatic variations are irregular, and that hydrothermal activity isabundant. A 300-kilometre-long central amagmatic zone, where mantle peridotites are emplaced directly in the ridge axis, liesbetween abundant, continuous volcanism in the west, and large, widely spaced volcanic centres in the east. These observationsdemonstrate that the extent of mantle melting is not a simple function of spreading rate: mantle temperatures at depth or mantlechemistry (or both) must vary significantly along-axis. Highly punctuated volcanism in the absence of ridge offsets suggests thatfirst-order ridge segmentation is controlled by mantle processes of melting and melt segregation. The strong focusing of magmaticactivity coupled with faulting may account for the unexpectedly high levels of hydrothermal activity observed.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: It has been more than two decades since White (1985) and Zindler and Hart (1986) proposed that the observed range of Sr-Nd-Pb isotope ratios of oceanic basalts can be described as mixtures of depleted mantle (DMM) with a limited number of enriched global endmember components (HIMU, EMI, EMII). There is no doubt that the global endmembers in isotope space represent extremes of the timing and magnitude of chemical fractionation processes in the Earths mantle. However, it remains a matter of debate how the intermediate isotopic compositions often evident on the local scale of individual islands are formed: (1) Do they represent mixtures between the limited number of global endmembers, or (2) do they reflect processes intermediate to the ones forming the global endmembers, or (3) does each individual ocean island basalt suite provide us with information about the timing and kind of geochemical differentiation forming that single source? Each possibility has important geodynamic implications. The Earths mantle is continuously differentiating through partial melting and remixing through plate tectonic recycling and convection, suggesting variable timing and composition of mantle sources. However, mantle sources might be formed by mixed lithologies and thus melt compositions might reflect mixtures of sources of more extreme compositions, possibly representing the global endmembers. We further address these questions based on two examples. Grande Comore Island is located on 140 Ma Indian Ocean lithosphere and its lavas reflect plume-lithosphere interaction. The Grande Comore plume component has Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions intermediate between HIMU and EMI. Its extreme Os isotope ratios are among the highest measured in shield building-stage lavas of oceanic islands, giving further support for generally radiogenic Os isotope ratios in the EMI and HIMU compositions. A lack of correlation between OIB with high Os isotope ratios with inferred lithospheric thickness implies that they are not solely controlled by melt dynamics of a pyroxenite-peridotite source, but require variable proportions of pyroxenite in individual sources. New isotope data from the second example, the Discovery Seamounts in the South Atlantic, reveal a continuum in compositions between the extreme EMI composition of Walvis Ridge DSDP 525A and the LOMU extreme of the Discovery ridge anomaly (Douglass et al., 1999) and require a range of extreme composition outside the mixing tetrahedron of the global endmembers. In the global context, each individual island or volcano with enriched mantle affinity seems to form a trend towards its own unique enriched mantle endmember, inconsistent with mixing between narrowly defined global endmembers. The spectrum of enriched mantle endmembers is consistent with a dynamic Earth, continuously recycling varying proportions of oceanic crust, sediment and some continental lower crust or mantle. Douglass, J., Schilling, J.-G. and Fontignie, D., 1999. J. Geophys. Res., 104: 2941-2962.White, W.M., 1985. Geology, 13: 115-118.Zindler, A. and Hart, S., 1986. Ann. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci., 14: 493-571.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1520-5126
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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