ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • Articles
  • Other Sources  (4,033)
  • Articles (OceanRep)  (4,033)
  • 2000-2004  (3,258)
  • 1975-1979  (775)
Collection
  • Articles
  • Other Sources  (4,033)
Years
Year
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-01-04
    Description: Tropical South America is one of the three main centres of the global, zonal overturning circulation of the equatorial atmosphere (generally termed the 'Walker' circulation1). Although this area plays a key role in global climate cycles, little is known about South American climate history. Here we describe sediment cores and down-hole logging results of deep drilling in the Salar de Uyuni, on the Bolivian Altiplano, located in the tropical Andes. We demonstrate that during the past 50,000 years the Altiplano underwent important changes in effective moisture at both orbital (20,000-year) and millennial timescales. Long-duration wet periods, such as the Last Glacial Maximum—marked in the drill core by continuous deposition of lacustrine sediments—appear to have occurred in phase with summer insolation maxima produced by the Earth's precessional cycle. Short-duration, millennial events correlate well with North Atlantic cold events, including Heinrich events 1 and 2, as well as the Younger Dryas episode. At both millennial and orbital timescales, cold sea surface temperatures in the high-latitude North Atlantic were coeval with wet conditions in tropical South America, suggesting a common forcing.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-01-04
    Description: Long sediment cores recovered from the deep portions of Lake Titicaca are used to reconstruct the precipitation history of tropical South America for the past 25,000 years. Lake Titicaca was a deep, fresh, and continuously overflowing lake during the last glacial stage, from before 25,000 to 15,000 calibrated years before the present (cal yr B.P.), signifying that during the last glacial maximum (LGM), the Altiplano of Bolivia and Peru and much of the Amazon basin were wetter than today. The LGM in this part of the Andes is dated at 21,000 cal yr B.P., approximately coincident with the global LGM. Maximum aridity and lowest lake level occurred in the early and middle Holocene (8000 to 5500 cal yr B.P.) during a time of low summer insolation. Today, rising levels of Lake Titicaca and wet conditions in Amazonia are correlated with anomalously cold sea-surface temperatures in the northern equatorial Atlantic. Likewise, during the deglacial and Holocene periods, there were several millennial-scale wet phases on the Altiplano and in Amazonia that coincided with anomalously cold periods in the equatorial and high-latitude North Atlantic, such as the Younger Dryas.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research
    In:  The Journal of Foraminiferal Research, 9 (3). pp. 250-269.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-11
    Description: Benthic foraminifera from surface Sediments of the Ross Sea were studied to determine modern distributions of important assemblages. Factor analysis of the raw data distinguished nine significant factor assemblages which account for 86% of the raw data. These factor assemblages provide a means of understanding modern oceanographic and ecologic conditions because they show the response of this faunal group to different environments. Environmental conditions are in turn controlled by the modern climatic regime of the region. Four benthic assemblages from the relatively shallow (500 to 700 m) eastern Ross Sea Continental shelf are predominantly arenaceous. This may be because the relatively late seasonal breakup of pack ice inhibits productivity in the surface waters and permits a buildup of CO, thus causing the CCD to occur at shallow depths. On the Western part of the Continental shelf, three assemblages are composed primarily of calcareous species even though water depths are often greater there than they are in the east. One of these calcareous assemblages occurs in samples from water depths as great as 755 m in the southwestern part of the region, below the CCD as defined for the Ross Sea by previous workers. We relate this depressed CCD to early seasonal breakup of pack ice in the Western Ross Sea. Within the eastern arenaceous and Western calcareous regions on the Continental shelf, distributions of benthic assemblages are probably related to water depth and other ecologic variables. Two benthic assemblages from the Continental slope north of the Ross Sea also are calcareous. We attribute their distributions to high rates of productivity in the overlying surface waters, where the interface between eastward-flowing Circumpolar Deep Water and Ross Sea water masses is marked by a narrow zone of intense upwelling.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: Eine bei vielen küstenmorphologischen und sedimentologischen Untersuchungen interessierende Frage gilt der Sedimentbilanz. Da sie ein Produkt der lokalen topographischen und hydrologi­schen Komponenten ist und (bisher) nicht ohne weiteres vorher­sagbar, sind Messungen und deren Auswertungen für einzelne Gebiete von allgemeinem Interesse. Für die »Anse de Kernic«, eine Lagune im Bereich der sehr großen Gezeiten an der Nordküste der Bretagne (Abb. 1) wurden im Laufe mehrerer Jahre flächenmäßig Höhendaten zu­sammengetragen. Ihre Auswertung und vergleichende Gegen­überstellung werden im folgenden vorgestellt.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Western Australian Museum
    In:  Records of the Western Australian Museum, 7 (2). pp. 111-212.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-04
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique
    In:  Bulletin / Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique: Biologie, 50 (9). pp. 1-10.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-14
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Springer
    In:  In: Competition and Coexistence. , ed. by Sommer, U. and Worm, B. Ecological Studies, 161 . Springer, Berlin, Germany, pp. 207-218. ISBN 978-3-642-62800-9
    Publication Date: 2017-01-26
    Description: Modern competition research started with G.E. Hutchinson’s, Homage to Santa Rosalia, and his now-famous question “why are there so many species?” (Hutchinson 1959,1961). This confronted observed species richness with the competitive exclusion principle, a principle that had been derived from theory and from highly artificial experiments. It would always have been easy to point at the “artificial” character of the competitive exclusion principle. Indeed many researchers have refused to deal with Hutchinson’s question because they considered it a pseudo-problem, which arose from a contradiction between overly simplified theory and complicated reality. However, those who took Hutchinson’s challenge seriously have gained fundamental insights into how competition plays out in nature, how species coexist, and how communities function. In this final chapter we attempt to synthesize these insights as they have been presented in this book. We focus on six key topics: - Identification of major trade-off axes (Sect. 8.1) - Confirmation of the “intermediate disturbance hypothesis”, and detection of interactions among competition, resource supply, predation and disturbance in field experiments (Sect. 8.2) - The interplay of space colonization, dispersal and neighborhood competition in sessile communities (Sect. 8.3) - Potential for chaotic, self-generated heterogeneity in communities (Sect. 8.4) - Role of exclusive resources in competition among mobile animals (Sect. 8.5) - Coexistence by slow exclusion (Sect. 8.6)
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Micropaleontology Press
    In:  In: Progress in Mircropaleontology: Selected Papers in Honor of Prof. Kiyoshi Asano. , ed. by Takayanagi, Y. and Saito, T. Micropaleontology Press, New York, pp. 27-35.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-26
    Description: The Lushanian Stage, now known to represent a greater part of the so-called Slate Formation in the Central Range of Taiwan, is essentially correlative with Blow's Zone N.8, including small parts of zones upward and downward, and is directly underlain either by the Discocyclina-Nummulites-bearing Pilushanian Stage or by older formations, the normally intervening Oligocene and Aquitanian being missing altogether.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Geological Magazine, 140 (3). pp. 245-252.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: Markedly different cooling histories for the hanging- and footwall of theVari detachment on Syros and Tinos islands, Greece, are revealed by zircon and apatite fission-track data. The Vari/Akrotiri unit in the hangingwall cooled slowly at rates of 5–15 ◦CMyr−1 since Late Cretaceous times. Samples from the Cycladic blueschist unit in the footwall of the detachment on Tinos Island have a mean zircon fission-track age of 10.0±1.0 Ma, which together with a published mean apatite fission-track age of 9.4±0.5 Ma indicates rapid cooling at rates of at least ∼60 ◦CMyr−1. We derive a minimum slip rate of ∼6.5 kmMyr−1 and a displacement of 〉∼20 km and propose that the development of the detachment in the thermally softened magmatic arc aided fast displacement. Intra-arc extension accomplished the final ∼6–9 km of exhumation of the Cycladic blueschists from ∼60 km depth. The fast-slipping intra-arc detachments did not cause much exhumation, but were important for regionalscale extension and the formation of the Aegean Sea.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Mineralogical Society of America
    In:  Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry, 43 (1). pp. 579-605.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-22
    Description: The ocean accounts for over 90% of the active pools of carbon on the Earth’s surface, with over 95% of marine carbon in the form of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) (Hedges and Keil 1995). Organic carbon dissolved in the ocean, suspended as particles or cells, and accumulating in sediments together constitute the other significant fractions of marine carbon, with organic carbon in the water column similar in quantity to the current atmospheric inventory of carbon dioxide. Isotopic partitioning among various inorganic and organic carbon phases reflects biological, physical and chemical processes, and the resulting fractionations are important tools in the study of modern and ancient carbon cycling. The focus of this review is on the isotopic geochemistry of marine organic carbon. It will begin by setting the stage with the isotopic patterns of DIC in the modern oceans. As will be discussed below, the distribution of inorganic carbon and related nutrient concentrations as well as DIC isotopic compositions are important influences on the quantity and isotopic character of organic carbon produced in marine surface waters. The remainder of the review will discuss isotope fractionation associated with the production and preservation of marine organic carbon. The combination of organic matter composition and 13C content is a potentially powerful approach for addressing the nature and pace of ecological and environmental change both in the modern and ancient ocean. This work reviews biogeochemical processes that generate, transform and ultimately preserve such signatures in marine sediments.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...