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  • 1
    Call number: AWI S6-18-91709
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 116 S. , graph. Darst. , 220 mm x 170 mm, 214 gr.
    Edition: 1. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3837012743 (Pb.) , 9783837012743 (Pb.)
    Series Statement: Ratgeber
    Language: German
    Note: INHALTSVERZEICHNIS: Abbildungs- und Tabellenverzeichnis. - 1 Das Thema dieses Buches. - 2 Aufbau wissenschaftlicher Arbeiten: Seminar-, Examens- und Doktorarbeit. - 2.1 Der Vorspann der Arbeit. - 2.1.1 Titel der Arbeit. - 2.1.2 Vorwort und Dank. - 2.1.3 Inhaltsverzeichnis. - 2.1.4 Verzeichnis der Visualisierungen. - 2.1.5 Abkürzungsverzeichnis. - 2.2 Die eigentliche Handlung. - 2.2.1 Einführung in die Untersuchung. - 2.2.2 Hauptteil und Höhepunkt der Arbeit. - 2.2.3 Schlussteil der Arbeit. - 2.3 Der Nachspann. - 2.3.1 Literatur-und Quellenverzeichnis. - 2.3.2 Anhang. - 3 Texte sprachlich korrekt gestalten. - 3.1 Themenfindung, -eingrenzung und Titelformulierung. - 3.2 Terminologien und Synonyme. - 3.2.1 Einleitung. - 3.2.2 Hauptteil. - 3.2.3 Höhepunkt. - 3.2.4 Schlussteil. - 3.3 Sach- in Sprachlogik überführen. - 3.3.1 Konjunktionen und Aufzählungen. - 3.3.2 Passiv und Aktiv. - 3.3.3 Nominal- und Verbalstil. - 3.3.4 Haupt- und Nebensatz. - 4 Visualisierungen: Ergebnisse im Gedächtnis des Lesers verankern. - 4.1 Äußere Form. - 4.2 Schriftarten und -größen. - 4.3 Überschriften. - 4.4 Kopf- und Fußzeilen. - 4.5 Farben und Farbflächen. - 5 Zeitmanagement und Planungsschritte einer wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. - 5.1 Texte zeitnah verfassen. - 5.2 Gesamtplanung einer Arbeit: Zeitmodell entwickeln und Zeitplan aufstellen. - 5.2.1 Seminararbeit. - 5.2.2 Examensarbeit. - 5.2.3 Doktorarbeit. - 5.3 Detailplanung: Wochen- und Tagesplan aufstellen. - 6 Schreibblockaden überwinden. - 6.1 Einstieg zum Schreiben finden. - 6.2 Einen Schlussstrich ziehen und Wichtiges von Unwichtigem trennen. - 6.3 Gliederung und Struktur in den Text bringen. - 6.4 Schreiben mit der Hand und am PC. - 6.5 Aufräumen der Gefühle und Erforschung der sinnlichen Wahrnehmung. - 7 Die vier Segmente der Schreibbalance. - 7.1 Topic. - 7.2 Family and values. - 7.3 People. - 7.4 Space. - 8 Fangen Sie jetzt an, erfolgreich zu schreiben!. - ANHANG - Checkliste zum Überarbeiten wissenschaftlicher Texte. - Allgemeine Literatur zum wissenschaftlichen Schreiben.
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  • 2
    Call number: AWI G2-18-91730
    In: Revista del Museo de La Plata. Nueva Serie; T. 4, Sección Geología
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: S. 125-178
    Language: Spanish
    Note: In span. Sprache
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  • 3
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Copenhagen : [s.n.]
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92074
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 68 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: Flight plan 1998. - C130 schedule. - NGRIP 1998 schedule. - Overview of 1998 schedule. - Camp setup. - Quartering and buildings. - Number of field participants. - NGRIP 1998 sub programs. - SITREP. - Term of reference for the NG RIP field work. - Accidents and illness. - Mail to NGRIP participants. - Cargo shipments to Greenland. - Personnel transport 1998. - Booze and drugs. - Vacation in Greenland. - Shipping boxes. - Welcome to the NGRIP camp. - List of participants. - NGRIP camp load. - Kangerlussuaq and the surrounding area. - Thule Air Base, Greenland, Base Operations. - Other useful information for Thule passengers. - Uplift 1998. - Typical specifications for LC-130 and Twin Otter. - Useful data. - Coordination of C-130 in Kangerlussuaq. - Aviation weather reports. - Typical communication plan. - Summary of frequencies used in Greenland. - Phonetic alphabet. - Personal field equipment. - Operation of NERA lnmarsat M terminal. - Map of NGRIP camp. - NGRIP trenches. - Map of NGRIP area. - Map of Greenland. - Map of the ice divide north of GRIP. - Map of the magnetic declination in Greenland. - Density vs temperature of hole liquid. - Surface measurements near NGRIP. - Positions in Greenland. - Relevant distances and directions. - List of NGRIP addresses.
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  • 4
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Boulder, Colo. : University Corp. for Atmospheric Research
    Call number: AWI A1-19-92163
    Description / Table of Contents: "Our changing climate is the fourth in a series of publication on climate and global change intended for public education. The documents are a collaborative effort of the UCAR Joint Office for Science Support and NOAA Office of Global Programs, for the purpose of raising the level of public awareness of issues dealing with global environmental change."
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 24 Seiten , Illustrationen , 28 cm
    Series Statement: Reports to the nation on our changing planet 4
    Language: English
    Note: Table of Contents: Climate and American People. - Earth's climate: A dynamic system. - Why does earth's climate change?. - Can we change the climate?. - The Greenhouse Effect. - Why are Greenhouse gas amounts increasing?. - Aerosols: Sunscreen for the planet?. - How has climate changed in the past century?. - Can we predict climate change?. - What do climate models tell us about our future?. - Where do we go from here?
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  • 5
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Hamburg : Max-Planck-Institut für Meteorologie
    Call number: AWI A3-19-92156
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 73 Seiten
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: Foreword / Klaus Hasselmann. - GROUP HASSELMANN. - Improving the SIAM Economy Module / Volker Barth. - A Nonlinear Impulse Response Model of the Coupled Carbon Cycle-Ocean-Atmosphere Climate System / Georg Hooß. - Potential Impact of Uncertainty and Natural Climate Variability in the Design of Optimal Climate Protection Policies / Victor Ocaña. - Climate Change Detection for the Annual Cycle of Temperature and Precipitation / Reiner Schnur. - Estimating the Sensitivity of a Regional Atmospheric Model to a Sea State Dependent Roughness Using Ensemble Calculations / Ralph Weisse, Hauke Heyen, and Hans von Storch. - CLIMATE MODEL AND DATA SECTION DKRZ. - Modellbetreuungsgruppe - An Update / Ulrich Cubasch. - Prediction of Global Change Using Different Models: An Intercomparison / Ulrich Cubasch. - The ECHO-G Coupled Climate Model on the NEC SX-4 / Stephanie Legutke. - Data Group Activities and Status / Hans Luthardt. - GROUP GRAF. - The Possible Effect of Biomass Burning on Local Precipitation and Global Climate / Hans-F. Graf. - The Leading Variability Mode of the Coupled Troposphere-Stratosphere Winter Circulation in Different Climate Regimes / Judith Perlwitz. - Numerical Simulation of Scavenging Processes in Explosive Volcanic Eruption Clouds / Christiane Textor. - Three-dimensional Simulation of Stratospheric Aerosol / Claudia Timmreck. - GROUP LATIF. - Oceanic Control of Decadal North Atlantic Sea Level Pressure Variability in Winter / Mojib Latif, Klaus Arpe, and Erich Roeckner. - Climatology and Variability in the Tropical Pacific in the Coupled GCM ECHO-G / Astrid Baquero. - Large-scale Air-sea Interactions in the Midlatitudes / Dietmar Dommenget. - ENSO Prediction Experiments with the Coupled GCM ECHO-G / Anselm Grötzner, Mojib Latif, and Stephan Venzke. - Simulating the Response of an Ocean General Circulation Model to North Atlantic Oscillation-type Forcing / Helmuth Haak. - The Role of Indian Ocean Sea Surface Temperature in Forcing East African Climate Anomalies / Mojib Latif, Dietmar Dommenget, and Mihai Dima. - A Circulation Model for Paleoclimate Studies: Model Description and First Applications / Gerrit Lohmann. - Southern Ocean Investigations with the HOPE Model / Simon J. Marsland. - The Atmospheric Response to SST Anomalies in Midlatitudes / Ute Merkel. - Equatorial Pacific Thermocline Circulation and Decadal Climate Variability / Keith Rodgers. - Ocean Model Intercomparison Project / Frank Röske. - Assimilation of Topex/Poseidon Altimeter Data into an Ocean GCM to Improve ENSO Forecasts / Sigrid Schöttle. - GROUP MIKOLAJEWICZ. - Development of the new C-HOPE OGCM / Uwe Mikolajewicz. - The Atlantic Thermohaline Circulation: Large Scale and Small Scale Aspects / Johann Jungclaus. - The Global Ocean Assimilation System GOAS / Detlev Müller. - Study of the Climate Variability in the Northern European and Arctic Seas Using Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Models / Dmitry Sein. - GROUP MAIER-REIMER. - Modeling of Marine Biogeochemistry / Ernst Maier-Reimer. - (1) Optimisation of a Marine Silicon Cycle Model and (2) Artificial Sediment Cores / Christoph Heinze. - Modeling Stable Water Isotopes and Vapor Source Regions over Greenland and Antarctica / Martin Werner. - OTHERS. - Ongoing Work in the Bengtsson Department / Marco Giorgetta. - E-journals and Databases for MPG Scientists: How to's / Carola Kauhs. - INDEX OF AUTHORS. -
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  • 6
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Copenhagen : [s.n.]
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92129
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 62 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: Draft
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: Flight plan 1996. - C130 schedule. - NGRIP 1996 Schedule. - Overview of 1996 schedule. - Camp Layout. - Buildings. - Number of field participants. - NGRIP 1996 Sub programs. - CARDS Radar test. - KMS Elevation measurements. - SITREP. - Terms of Reference during the field operation. - Accidents and Illness. - Mail to NGRIP participants. - Cargo shipments to Greenland. - Personnel transport 1996. - Booze and drugs. - Vacation in Greenland. - Shipping boxes. - Welcome to the NGRIP camp. - List of participants. - NGRIP camp load. - Kangerlussuaq and Surrounding Area. - Thule Air Base, Greenland, Base Operations. - Other useful information for Thule passengers. - Uplift 1996. - Typical specs for LC-130 and Twin Otter. - Useful data. - Coordination of C-130 in Kangerlussuaq. - Aviation weather reports. - Typical communication plan. - Summary of frequencies used in Greenland. - Phonetic alphabet. - Personal field equipment. - Map of GRIP camp. - NGRIP, Maps of one and two line set up. - NGRIP trenches. - Map of Greenland. - Map of north Greenland. - Map of ice divide north of GRIP. - Map of magnetic declination in Greenland. - Positions in Greenland. - Relevant distances and directions. - 1996 Twin Otter hours. - List of NGRIP addresses.
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  • 7
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Copenhagen : [s.n.]
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92076
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 67 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: Flight plan 1997. - C130 schedule. - NGRIP 1997 schedule. - Overview of 1997 schedule. - Camp layout. - Quartering and buildings. - Number of field participants. - NGRIP 1997 sub programs. - CARDS Radar test. - KMS elevation measurements. - SITREP. - Terms of reference during the field operation. - Accidents and illness. - Mail to NGRIP participants. - Cargo shipments to Greenland. - Personnel transport 1997. - Booze and drugs. - Vacation in Greenland. - Shipping boxes. - Welcome to the NGRIP camp. - List of participants. - NGRIP camp load. - Kangerlussuaq and the surrounding area. - Thule Air Base, Greenland, Base Operations. - Other useful information for Thule passengers. - Uplift 1997. - Typical specifications for LC-130 and Twin Otter. - Useful data. - Coordination of C-130 in Kangerlussuaq. - Aviation weather reports. - Typical communication plan. - Summary of frequencies used in Greenland. - Phonetic alphabet. - Personal field equipment. - Map of NGRIP camp. - NGRIP, Central Camp. - NGRIP trenches. - Map of NGRIP area. - Map of Greenland. - Map of the ice divide north of GRIP. - Map of the magnetic declination in Greenland. - Positions in Greenland. - Relevant distances and directions. - 1997 Twin Otter hours. - List of NGRIP addresses.
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  • 8
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    München : Institut für Allgemeine und Angewandte Geophysik der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
    Call number: AWI G5-18-92079
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 99 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: German
    Note: Diplomarbeit, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 1998 , Inhaltsverzeichnis: 1 Einführung. - 1.1 Eiskerne - ein Paläoklimaarchiv. - 1.1.1 Datierung der Eiskerne. - 1.1.2 Verschiedene Eiskernbohrungen. - 1.2 Zielsetzung der Arbeit. - 2 Eigenschaften von Eis. - 2.1 Physikalische Eigenschaften. - 2.1.1 Kristallstruktur von Eis Ih. - 2.1.2 Das Wassermolekül. - 2.2 Chemische Eigenschaften von polarem Eis. - 2.2.1 Isotopenverhältnisse. - 2.2.2 Gaseinschlüsse und Spurenstoffe im Eis. - 3 Elektrische Eigenschaften von Eis. - 3.1 Das Jaccard Modell. - 3.1.1 Ladungsträger im Eis. - 3.1.2 Defekte im Eiskristall. - 3.2 Frequenzabhängigkeiten. - 3.2.1 Elektrische Parameter. - 3.2.2 Meßtechnische Effekte. - 3.3 Messungen an polaren Eiskernen. - 3.3.1 Meßmethoden für die elektrischen Leitfähigkeiten. - 3.3.2 Reproduzierbarkeit von Gleichstrom-Messungen. - 4 Aufbau einer Vierpunkt-Meßbank. - 4.1 Meßmethode. - 4.2 Eiskernanalysebänke. - 4.2.1 Am AWI vorhandene Analysebänke. - 4.2.2 Vierpunkt-Meßbank. - 4.3 Meßgeräte. - 4.3.1 Gleichspannungsmessung. - 4.3.2 Wechselspannungsmessung. - 4.4 Meßdatenerfassung. - 4.4.1 Beschreibung des Meßprogramms. - 4.4.2 Das verwendete Betriebsystems- Linux. - 5 Ergebnisse. - 5.1 Ermittlung des Geometriefaktors. - 5.2 Messung mit Gleichspannung. - 5.2.1 Standard Meßgeräte. - 5.2.2 Ergebnisse. - 5.3 Messung mit niederfrequenter Wechselspannung. - 5.3.1 Ergebnisse. - 5.3.2 Standard-Meßgeräte. - 5.3.3 Messung mit Geoelektrik-Vierpunktapparatur. - 5.3.4 Verbesserungsvorschläge. - 6 Zusammenfassung. - Danksagung.
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  • 9
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : [Verlag nicht ermittelbar]
    Call number: AWI P4-19-92238
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 16 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
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  • 10
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : [Verlag nicht ermittelbar]
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92324
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 23 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: 1. Personnel at DC. - 2. Summary timetable of events for EPICA personnel. - 3. Transport to/from DC for EPICA personnel. - 4. Building period. - 5. Scientific activity - equipment layout. - 6. Science processing line. - 7. Results from this season. - 8. General comments on communications, logistics and general status of the camp. - 9. Tasks that EPICA personnel need to do next season. - 10. Recommendations for 1998/99. - 11. Acknowledgements.
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  • 11
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Zürich : World Glacier Monitoring Service
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92411
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 88 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9789280728989
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Foreword by UNEP Foreword by WGMS Summary 1 Introduction 2 Glaciers and climate 3 Global distribution of glaciers and ice caps 4 Glacier fluctuation series 5 Global glacier changes 6 Regional glacier changes 6.1 New Guinea 6.2 Africa 6.3 New Zealand 6.4 Scandinavia 6.5 Central Europe 6.6 South America 6.7 Northern Asia 6.8 Antarctica 6.9 Central Asia 6.10 North America 6.11 Arctic Islands 7 Conclusions References Appendix 1 - National Correspondents of the WGMS Appendix 2 - Meta-data on available fluctuation data
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  • 12
    Call number: AWI G1-19-92510
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 592 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 84-920268-6-3
    Language: Spanish , English
    Note: ÍNDICE PRÓLOGO INTRODUCCIÓN El estudio científico de las cavidades kársticas y las Ciencias Geológicas. Una buena alianza / J.J. Durán. KARST, TECTÓNICA Y SISMICIDAD Evidencias tectónicas y sísmicas a partir del estudio de espeleotemas: conocimiento actual y desarrollo futuro / P. Forti Evolución tectosedimentaria del entorno de la Cueva de Nerja durante el Plio-Cuatemario. / A. Guerra-Merchán, D. Ramallo y F. Serrano Análisis de la fracturación reciente en los espelotemas de la Cueva de Nerja, Málaga. / P. Gumiel, J.J. Durán, J. López-Martínez, J.M. González-Casado, B. Andreo y F. Carrasco La fracturación en la Cueva de los Enebralejos, Segovia, borde norte del Sistema Central. / J. Barea, J.J. Durán, J. Giner, J.M. González-Casado y J. López-Martínez Control estructural de la cavidad kárstica "La Cuevona" (Ribadesella, Asturias) / J. L. Alonso, J. G. García-Ramos y M. Gutiérrez-Claverol El karst de la Alquería (Vélez-Rubio, Almería) / A. González y J.A. Martínez The influence of tectonics on karstification of Permian-Carboniferous limestone from westem Serbia. / P. Pavlovic and D. Stojiljkovic Estudio preliminar de la Cueva de Castelar (Ciudad Real). El ejemplo español de karst en rocas cristalinas / C. J. Gavilán, l. Alonso y J.J. Durán REGISTROS SEDIMENTARIOS KÁRSTICOS Y RECONSTRUCCIONES PALEOAMBIENTALES Endokarstic sedimentary records and paleo-environmental reconstructions in caves / D. C. Ford Speleothem records of environmental changes and the past-bases and potential. / Y. Y. Shopov, L. Tsankov, L. N Georgiev, C.J Yonge, H.P.R. Krouse and A.J.T. Jull Significance of Luminescent spelothem records for determination of orbital variations, glaciations and timing of termination-II. / Y.Y. Shopov, D. Stoykova, M. Sanambria, L. Tsankov, D. Ford, L. Georgiev and D. Georgieva Dataciones isotópicas de espeleotemas procedentes de cuevas costeras de Mallorca. Estado actual de las investigaciones / A. Ginés, J. Ginés, J.J. Fornós y P. Tuccimei Estudio isotópico sobre las condiciones de precipitación de "calcitas flotantes" actuales procedentes de tres cuevas en la isla de Mallorca / C. Jiménez de Cisneros y E. Caballero Geoquimica de travertinos procedentes de una fuente termal. Estimaciones sobre su velocidad de formación. / E. Caballero, C. Jiménez de Cisneros y C. Jiménez Travertinos asociados a los manantiales del borde occidental de la Sierra de la Alfaguara (Granada, Sur de España) / B. Andreo, M. Martín-Martín, A. Martín-Algarra y R. Julia Espeleotemas y morfogénesis exokárstica. El ejemplo de la Sierra del Endrinal (Grazalema, Cádiz) / J Rodríguez Vidal, G. Alvarez, L. M. Cáceres, A. Martínez Aguirre y J. M. Alcaraz La evolución de los materiales de acumulación en el Altiplano carbonatado de Cantanhede (NO de Coimbra-Portugal) / A. De Marco y L. A. Dimuccio Cave genesis in karst regions of Balkan Península / D. Vasileva Skocjanske Jame, Slovenia: development of caves related to rock characteristics and rock relief / M. Knez and T. Slabe Facies mineralógicas de las arenas de los rellenos kársticos de la Sierra de Atapuerca (Burgos) / T. Aleixandre y A. Pérez González Mineralogy of cave deposits from Bihor Mountains (Romanía) / L. Ghergari and T. Tamas Análisis polínico de sedimentos en cavidades kársticas: hacia un nuevo desarrollo conceptual / J. S. Carrión, C. Navarro y M. Munuera El karst de la Espluga de Francolí: características fisicas e hidrogeológicas. Interés en la educación ambiental / J M Cervelló, M Monterde, J Ramoneda y A. Freixes Análisis sistemático y ecológico de los roedores del Pleistoceno Superior procedentes de la Cueva de las Ventanas (Granada, España) / A. Ruiz-Bustos y J A. Riquelme Cantal Geology, geomorphology, tectonics and geological map ofthe Cave of Riomurtas (Narcao, Southwest Sardinia). J De Waele and A. Muntoni CONSERVACIÓN DE CAVIDADES: EL IMPACTO ANTRÓPICO La dynamique du milieu souterrain, concepts de base servant a la conservation des grottes / A. Mangin, D. D 'Hulst et F. Bourges L' eclairage et la protection des grottes / F. Bourges, A. Mangin et D. D'Hulst Análisis de las concentraciones de 222Rn del aire de la Cueva de Nerja / C. Dueñas, M.C. Fernández, J Carretero, E. Liger y S. Cañete El medio ambiente subterráneo de la Cueva de Nerja (Málaga). Modificaciones antrópicas / F. Carrasco, B. Andreo, I Vadillo, J.J. Durán y C. Liñán EL AGUA Y EL KARST Recharge and behaviour of karst aquifers. Examples from Southeastem France / J Mudry, Y. Guglielmi, A. Chalumeau, A. Reynaud and Y. Paquette ¿Pueden las teorías sobre el desarrollo del karst contribuir al mejor conocimiento de la moderna hidrogeología del karst? / J Silar Behaviour of the epikarst aquifer: signal analysis and flow analysis. Si te of Lascaux Cave. / R. Lastennet, A. Denis, Ph. Malaurent and J Vouvé Primeros datos sobre la variabilidad estacional de la infiltración en la Cueva del Agua (lznalloz, Granada) / F. Sánchez-Martos, J. M Calaforra y M J González-Ríos Primeros resultados sobre la caracterización hidroquímica y evolución espacial de las aguas del sistema kárstico de Valporquero, Cordillera Cantábrica / JJ Durán, M Vallejo, l. Herráez y J López-Martínez Hidrodinámica e hidroquímica de las aguas de goteo de la Cueva de Nerja / C. Liñán, B. Andreo, F Carrasco e l. Vadillo Modelización de los procesos hidrogeoquímicos que afectan al agua de goteo de la Cueva de Nerja / J. Cardenal, J. Benavente, B. Andreo y F. Carrasco Algunos procesos hidrogeoquímicos en la Cueva de Canalobre y en el acuífero del Cabeçó D'Or (Alicante) / J. M Andreu, J.C. Cerón, A. Pulido-Bosch y A. Estévez Tracing technique as a contribution to karstology: past experience, new directions / Ph. Meus and C. Ek Ensayos de trazadores en acuíferos kársticos: desarrollo histórico y anecdotario / J. G. Yélamos Trazados en la Unidad Hidrogeológica Izarraitz (País Vasco): consideraciones sobre la complejidad estructural y dinámica del medio kárstico / l. Mugerza, T. Morales, l. Antigüedad, J.A. Uriarte, l. Fernández de Valderrama, J.M Gonzalo y P. Bezares d18O and average recharge-altitude relationships in karstic springs / Th. Herold, S.M. Bernasconi, P. Jordan and F. Zwahlen Concentración inicial de radiocarbono en agua subterránea del karst de Bohemia central / J. Silar y K. Záhrubsky Los sistemas kársticos del Parque Natural del Cadí-Moixeró (Pirineo oriental, Catalunya) / J. Ramoneda, A. Freixes, M. Monterde, J. P. Morin y L. Gourcy Hidroquímica de la Sierra de Guara / J. A. Cuchí, J.A. Manso, M. Subías y J. Buera Nuevas aportaciones sobre el funcionamiento hidrogeológico del acuífero kárstico multicapa del Calar del Mundo (Provincias de Albacete y Jaén) / T. Rodríguez-Estrella Posible contribución del karst de Los Berros (Argentina) para el abastecimiento a la industria de la región / C. Wetten y O.A. Damiani Karst groundwater quality in Austria / M. Kralik Modelo numérico del flujo subterráneo de un acuífero kárstico en Yucatán, México. Implicaciones hidrogeológicas / R. González, l. Sánchez y J. Gamboa Aprovechamiento de manantiales kársticos de carácter intermitente mediante operaciones de recarga artificial de acuíferos. Las Ufanes de Gabellí (Mallorca) / J. M Murillo, C.J. Gavilán, J.A. de la Orden The karstic aquifer ofthe Izhora Plateau (Russia) and problems ofits use under anthropogenic pressure / A. N Voronov, NA. Vinograd and A.A. Shvarts Aspects of groundwater vulnerability mapping in karst regions with the help of GIS / P.S. Bezrukov Natural and anthropogenic influences as threats to pits in the Debeli Namet Glacier (Durmitor National Park, Montenegro) / P. Djurovic Carbon inorganic total dissolved origine, repartition and it's karstification impact / C. Emblanch, H. Celle, B. Blavoux and J. M. Puig , Beiträge teilweise in spanischer, teilweise in englischer Sprache
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  • 13
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Bremerhaven : Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Associated volumes
    Call number: ZSP-994(1996/1997)
    In: Zweijahresbericht / Stiftung Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung, 1996/1997
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 262 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISSN: 0940-4546 , 1618-3703
    Series Statement: Zweijahresbericht / Stiftung Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung 1996/1997
    Language: German
    Note: Inhaltsverzeichnis Organe der Stiftung Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar-und Meeresforschung 1. Das Alfred-Wegener-Institut und sein Beitrag zur Polar-und Meeresforschung in Deutschland 2. Ausgewählte Forschungsthemen Rekonstruktion eines Asteroideneinschlages in das Südpolarmeer (Gersonde, Abelmann, Diekmann, Kuhn) Jahreszeitliche Veränderungen einer Permafrostlandschaft in Sibirien (Boike, Hagedorn, Friedrich) Sedimentbohrungen im Baikalsee (Eckert, Müller, Schwab, Demske) Auf den Spuren eines uralten Gebirges (Schlindwein, Meyer) Reaktionen benthischer Tiefsee-Lebensgemeinschaften auf mechanische Störungen der Sedimente (Thiel, Ahnert, Bluhm, Borowski, Vopel) Die Ruderfußkrebse im Arktischen Ozean (Scherzinger, Hirche, Kattner) Diatomeenblüten an Fronten im Antarktischen Zirkumpolarstrom (Bathmann, Hense, Rutgers van der Loeff, Strass, Smetacek) Besiedlungsverhältnisse am Lomonossowrücken (Deubel, Rachor) Organischer Kohlenstoff in der Laptewsee und auf dem Lomonossowrücken (Fahl, Nöthig, Stein) Sterole und ihr Schicksal im Weddellmeer (Mühlebach, Weber) Schwierige Spurensuche (Bijma, Zeebe, Wolf-Gladrow) Die Nordgrönlandtraverse (Kipfstuhl, Schwager) Ein Reinluft-Meßlabor in der Antarktis (Minikin, Weller) Spurengase in der Atmosphäre der Polargebiete (Notholt, Lehmann) Erwärmt sich das Bodenwasser in der Grönlandsee? (Budeus, Schneider) Die JoJo-Sonde (Budeus, Ohm) Offene Wasserflächen beeinflussen die Windverhältnisse über den Polarmeeren (Birnbaum) Eistransport im Weddellmeer (Strass, Fahrbach) Die Meereisverteilung in einem gekoppelten Eis-Ozean-Modell des Südlichen Ozeans (Timmermann, Beckmann, Hellmer) Hochleistungscomputer am AWI (Hiller, Rakowsky, Beckmann) 3. Berichte der wissenschaftlichen Arbeitsgruppen 3.1 Ozeanische und atmosphärische Prozesse in den Polargebieten 3.2 Modeliierung von Prozessen und Zirkulationssystemen im Ozean 3.3 Meeresphysikalische Messungen und Instrumentenentwicklung 3.4 Physik und Chemie der polaren Atmosphäre 3.5 Der Untergrund der polaren Teile des Atlantik und seiner kontinentalen Umrandung 3.6 Glaziologie 3.7 Meeresgeologie 3.8 Geowissenschaftliche Studien in Eisrandgebieten 3.9 Ökologie und Ökophysiologie 3.10 Biologische Meereskunde 3.11 Tiefseeforschung 3.12 Meereisforschung 3.13 Der Kohlenstoffkreislauf 4. Großgeräte, Expeditionen und Landstationen 4.1 "Polarstern" 4.2 "Victor Hensen" 4.3 Polarflugzeuge 4.4 Landexpeditionen 4.5 Landstationen 5. Logistik 6. Nationale und internationale Zusammenarbeit 7. Zentrale Einrichtungen 7.1 Rechenzentrum 7.2 Bibliothek 7.3 Presse-und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit 8. Personeller Aufbau und Haushaltsentwicklung 8.1 Personal 8. 2 Haushalt 8.3 Bericht der Frauenbeauftragten 9. Veröffentlichungen Anhang I. Personal II. Wissenschaftliche Veranstaltungen III. Abgeschlossene Examensarbeiten
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  • 14
    Call number: AWI A3-20-93434
    In: Meteorologische Abhandlungen / Institut für Meteorologie und Geophysik der Freien Universität Berlin, Band XXXII, Heft 1
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 121 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Meteorologische Abhandlungen / Institut für Meteorologie und Geophysik der Freien Universität Berlin 32,1
    Language: German
    Note: Zugleich: Dissertation, Freie Unversität Berlin, [ca. 1963] , INHALTSVERZEICHNIS PROBLEMSTELLUNG UND ZIELSETZUNG 1. BEMERKUNGEN ZUM BEOBACHTUNGSGELÄNDE UND ZUM BEOBACHTUNGSMATERIAL 1.1 Das Beobachtungsgelände 1.2 Das Beobachtungsmaterial 2. HOMOGENITÄTSBETRACHTUNGEN 2.1 Temperatur 2.2 Niederschlag 2.3 Wind 2.4 Sonnenschein und Bewölkung 3. TEMPERATURVERHÄLTNISSE 3.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 3.2 Tageswerte 3.3 Pentadenwerte 3.4 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 3.5 Interdiurne Veränderlichkeit 3.6 Der tägliche Gang 3.7 Vorkommen bestimmter Schwellenwerte 3.71 Frost- und Eistage 3.72 Sommer- und Tropentage 4. DER WASSERGEHALT DER LUFT 4.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 4.2 Tageswerte 4.3 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 4.4 Interdiurne Veränderlichkeit 4.5 Der tägliche Gang 5. BEWÖLKUNGSVERHÄLTNISSE 5.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 5.2 Tageswerte 5.3 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 5.4 Der tägliche Gang 5.5 Heitere und trübe Tage 5.6 Nebel 6. SONNENSCHEIN 6.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 6.2 Tageswerte 6.3 Der tägliche Gang 7. NIEDERSCHLAGSVERHÄLTNISSE 7.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 7.2 Niederschlagsbereitschaft 7.3 Tageswerte 7.4 Der tägliche Gang 7.5 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 7.6 Niederschlags- und Trockenperioden 7.7 Niederschlag und Wind· 7.8 Schneeverhältnisse 7.81 Schneefall und Schneedecke 7.82 Schneehöhe 7.9 Gewitter 8. WINDVERHÄLTNISSE 8.1 Windrichtung 8.2 Windgeschwindigkeit 8.21 Der jährliche Gang 8.22 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 8.23 Sturmtage und Windstillen 8.24 Der tägliche Gang 9.ZUSAMMENFASSUNG VERZEICHNIS DER TEXTTABELLEN VERZEICHNIS DER ABBILDUNGEN LITERATURVERZEICHNIS TABELLENANHANG
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  • 15
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI A7-20-93527
    In: Cambridge atmospheric and space science series
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVIII, 316 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: Transferred to digital printing
    ISBN: 0521380529 , 0521467454
    Series Statement: Cambridge atmospheric and space science series
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface Symbols Abbreviations 1 The atmospheric boundary layer 1.1 Introduction 1.2 History 1.3 Observing the ABL 1.4 ABL modelling 1.5 Applications 1.6 Scope of the book 1.7 Nomenclature and some definitions Notes and bibliography 2 Basic equations for mean and fluctuating quantities 2.1 Turbulence and flow description 2.2 Governing equations for mean and fluctuating quantities 2.3 The simplified mean equations 2.4 The turbulence closure problem 2.5 The second-moment equations 2.6 Turbulent kinetic energy and stability parameters Notes and bibliography 3 Scaling laws for mean and turbulent quantities 3.1 The wind profile: simple considerations 3.2 Wind profile laws: the neutral case 3.3 Monin-Obukhov similarity theory: the non-neutral surface layer 3.4 Generalized ABL similarity theory 3.5 Similarity theory and turbulence statistics Notes and bibliography 4 Surface roughness and local advection 4.1 Aerodynamic characteristics of the land 4.2 Scalar roughness lengths 4.3 The vegetation canopy 4.4 Flow over the sea 4.5 Local advection and the internal boundary layer Notes and bibliography 5 Energy fluxes at the land surface 5.1 Surface energy balance and soil heat flux 5.2 Radiation fluxes 5.3 Evaporation 5.4 Condensation Notes and bibliography 6 The thermally stratified atmospheric boundary layer 6.1 The convective boundary layer 6.2 The stable (nocturnal) boundary layer 6.3 The marine atmospheric boundary layer 6.4 Mesoscale flow and IBL growth Notes and bibliography 7 The cloud-topped boundary layer 7.1 General properties of the CTBL 7.2 Observations 7.3 Radiation fluxes and cloud-top radiative cooling 7.4 Entrainment and entrainment instability 7.5 Numerical modelling of the CTBL Notes and bibliography 8 Atmospheric boundary-layer modelling and parameterization schemes 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Surface temperature 8.3 Surface humidity (soil moisture) 8.4 Canopy parameterization 8.5 Surface fluxes 8.6 Rate equation for ABL depth 8.7 Turbulence closure schemes 8.8 ABL cloud parameterization Notes and bibliography 9 The atmospheric boundary layer, climate and climate modelling 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Sensitivity of climate to the ABL and to land surface 9.3 Research priorities Notes and bibliography Appendices References Index
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  • 16
    Call number: AWI Bio-21-94345
    In: Bibliotheca diatomologica, 36
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 382 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3443570275
    Series Statement: Die cymbelloiden Diatomeen 1
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt Vorwort Foreword 1. Allgemeiner Teil 1.1 Einleitung 1.2 Methodik 1.2.1 Terminologie 1.2.2 Material 1.2.3 Bemerkungen zur Darstellung 1.2.4 Bemerkungen zur REM-Technik 1.2.5 Statistik in der taxonomischen Methodik 1.2.6 Taxonomisches Konzept 1.2.7 Bemerkungen zur Bestimmungstechnik 1.3 Merkmale und ihre Bewertung 1.3.1 Allgemeines 1.3.2 Schalenlänge 1.3.3 Schalenbreite 1.3.4 Relation Schalenlänge/Schalenbreite, Umriß, Schalenenden 1.3.5 Alveolen/Transapikalstreifen 1.3.6 Areolen/Punkte, Zahl und Form im LM und REM 1.3.7 Raphe 1.3.8 Stigmata und Stigmoide 1.3.9 Zellgürtel 1.3.10 Sonstige Merkmale, Habitus 1.3.11 Konvergenzen und Parallelitäten 1.4 Teilungszyklen, Verteilungen 1.4.1 Theoretische und tatsächliche Verteilungen 1.4.2 Variabilität von Erstlingszellen 1.4.3 Assoziationen mit ähnlichen syntopen und synchronen Arten 1.5 Ökologie 1.6 Die Gattung Cymbella sensu lato 2. Spezieller Teil 2.1 Encyonema Kützing 1833 2.1.1 Bemerkungen zu den folgenden Beschreibungen 2.1.2 Beschreibungen der Taxa 3. Lateinische Beschreibungen der neuen Taxa 3.1 Neue Gattungen 3.2 Neue Encyonema-Arten und -Varietäten Bildbeschriftungen der Taxa Index
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  • 17
    Call number: AWI Bio-21-94355
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 168 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9783906166568
    Series Statement: Diatom monographs 9
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS ABSTRACT 1. INTRODUCTION 2. AIMS AND SCOPE 3. NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC ACIDIFICATION AND ITS ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES 3.1. The role of water pH 3.2. Description of natural and anthropogenic acid sources 3.3. Anthropogenic acidification and its ecological consequences 3.4. Diatoms as indicators of water acidity and related factors 4. MATERIAL AND METHODS 4.1. Field samples 4.2. Laboratory methods 4.3. Data analysis 5. DESCRIPTION OF THE STUDY AREAS 6. RESULTS 6.1. Diatom community patterns vs. water chemistry in relation to different water types 6.2. Diatom community patterns in relation to altitude 6.3. Diatom community patterns in relation to dijf'erent geographical regions in Poland and Finland 6.4. Diatoms as indicators of pH, alkalinity and TOC 6.5. Restoration and recovery of acidified aquatic ecosystems 6.5.1. Diatoms as indicators of restoration: effect of water neutralization 6.5.2. Diatoms as indicators of lake recovery 7. DISCUSSION 8. NOTES ON AUTECOLOGY OF SELECTED DIATOM TAXA 9. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS REFERENCES APPENDIX (Codes of diatom taxa used in the graphs and tables) PLATES
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  • 18
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    New Dehli : New Age International Publishers
    Call number: AWI Bio-22-94883
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XI, 349 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: Reprint 2005
    ISBN: 0470213590 , 085226240X , 81-224-1343-9
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Foreword, by Professor Dr. Martin Bopp Preface Acknowledgements 1. EXPERIMENTS ON SPORES AND GEMMAE Spore Germination in Liverwort - Jungermanniales, Marchantiales, Anthocerotales, Sphaerocarpales; Types of Spore Germination in Mosses - Sphagnales, Andreaeales, Tetraphidales, Bryales Factors Affecting Spore Germination - Light, Temperature, Sugars, Minerals, Growth Regulators, Hydrogen-ion concentration (pH), OtheT Factors Mechanism of Spore Germination Experiments on Gemmae - light, Temperature, Humidity and other Physical Factors, Growth Regulators, Nitrogenous Substances, Hydrogen-ion concentration (pH), Other Chemical Factors References 2. PROTONEMAL DIFFERENTIATION AND BUD FORMATION IN MOSSES Protonemal Differentiation Bud Formation Factors Affecting Bud Formation - Light, Temperature, Auxins, Cytokinins, Gibberellins, Adenosine 3', 5'-cyclic monophosphate, Adenine and Amino Acids, Minerals and Chelates Vitamins, Abscisic Acid, Sugars, pH, Influence of Other Organisms References. 3. REGENERATION Potentialities of Various Organs for Regeneration - Regeneration from Leaves, Regeneration from Setae Morphology of Régénérants Factors Affecting Regeneration - Light. Radiation, pH, Season, Humidity. Wounding, Temperature, Size of the Fragment Reserve Food Material. Location in the Plant, Age, Correlative Inhibition. Polarity and Apical Dominance Changes Occurring in Regenerating Cells References 4. REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY Factors Affecting Gametangial Induction - Light Duration, Light Level, Light Quality. Temperature, Temperature-Photoperiod Interaction. Humidity. Hydration. Carbohydrates. Nitrogenous Substances, Growth Regulators, Chelating Agents, pH and Other Factors References 5. ALTERNATIVE PATHWAYS IN LIFE CYCLE Apogamy - Occurrence of Apogamy in Diplophase and Haplophase, Spore Production in Apogamous Sporophytes, Differentiation of Apogamous Sporophytes from Callus, Factors Controlling Differentiation of Apogamous Sporophytes: Exogenous Factors, Endogenous Factors, Differentiation of Sporophyte and Gametophyte, Role of Calyptra in Sporogon Development Apospory Callus Formation and its Differentiation - Formation of Callus. Differentiation in Callus Controls in Differentiation Alternation of Generations References 6. PHOTOMORPHOGENESIS Spore Germination - Liverworts, Mosses Growth - Liverworts, Mosses Vegetative Propagation - Liverworts, Mosses Metabolism - Liverworts. Mosses; Senescence Bud Induction in Mosses Tropic Responses - Liverworts, Mosses References. 7. ULTRASTRUCTURAL STUDIES Spore Protonema Stem Leaf Gametangia - Antheridium Gametogenesis - Spermatogenesis, Oogenesis Sporogenesis - Spore Sac or Tapetum. Fluctuation in Plastid Number, Structural Changes in Plastids, Cytoplasm, and Other Organelles. Meiosis. Spore Wall Formation Sporophyte-Ganietophyte Junction Seta Histoenzymological Studies - Localization of Enzymes in the Haustorial Foot References 8. CHEMICAL CONSTITUENTS OF BRYOPHYTES Antibiotics Growth Substances - Specified Growth Substances, Non-specified Growth Substances Lipids - Alkanes, Fatty Acids, Cuticular Components Terpenoids - Monoterpenoids, Sesquiterpenoids, Ditetpenoids, Triterpenoids and Sterols Flavonoids - Flavones, Isoflavones, Flavonols, Dihydrofiavonoids and Biflavonyls, Aurones and Chalcones, Acylated Flavonoids, Anthocyanins and Proanthocyanidins, Sphagnorubins Lignins; Other Constitutents - Carotenoids, Carbohydrates, Organic Acids, Dihydrostilbenes, Enzymes, Amino Acids and Quinones, Inorganic Compounds, Miscellaneous, Antitumour Activities, Allergenic Activities References 9. BRYOPHYTES AS INDICATORS OF POLLUTION Heavy Metals - Lead, Cadmium, Zinc, Mercury, Arsenates, Chromium, Nickel. Vanadium Stability Pattern of Metal Ions Metal Tolerance - Copper Mosses, Peat Mosses Gaseous Pollutants - Sulphur dioxide. Fluorides, Ozone Radionuclides (Radio Isotopes) - Cesium. Strontium, Uranium; Radiations References. 10. PROTOPLAST CULTURE Isolation of Protoplasts - Mechanical Method, Enzymatic Method, Source Material for Protoplasts, Factors Affecting Protoplast Isolation: Culture of Protoplasts—Liquid Culture Agar Plating of Protoplasts: Regeneration of Protoplasts - Factors Affecting Regeneration Protoplast Fusion and Somatic Hybrids Induction and Isolation of Mutants References. 11. CONDUCTION IN BRYOPHYTES External Conduction - Gametophyte. Sporophyte, Significance of External Conduction Internal Conduction - Cells Involved in Conduction, Anatomy of the Horizontal Axis, Midribs and Leaf Traces. Conducting Strand in Seta and Capsule, Development and Structure of Mature Conducting Tissues. The Interphase, Internal Conduction of Water, Conduction of Organic Compounds; Evolutionary Trends in the Conducting Strands References. 12. WATER RELATIONS Absorption and Conduction of Water - Endohydric.' Ectohydric, Myxohydric Water Holding Capacity and Growth Rate Desiccation and Rehydration Mechanism of Damage Growth-Forms References SUBJECT INDEX PLANT INDEX AUTHOR INDEX
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  • 19
    Call number: AWI G3-23-94993
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 24 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
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  • 20
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Waterloo, Ont. : University of Waterloo
    Call number: AWI G3-23-95003
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xviii, 181 Seiten , Illustrationen , 28 cm
    Language: English
    Note: Masterarbeit, University of Waterloo, 1995 , TABLE OF CONTENTS TITLE PAGE AUTHOR'S DECLARATION BORROWER'S PAGE ABSTRACT ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS DEDICATION LIST OF TABLES LIST OF FIGURES LIST OF PLATES CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 INTRODUCTION 1.2 PURPOSE 1.3 OBJECTIVES CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE REVIEW 2.1 INTRODUCTION 2.2 THERMAL REGIME 2.3 INHERENT PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS 2.4 HYDROLOGICAL REGIME 2.5 INTEGRATED STUDIES 2.6 SUMMARY CHAPTER 3 STUDY SITE LOCATION 3.1 INTRODUCTION 3.2 REGIONAL CLIMATE 3.3 GEOLOGY 3.4 VEGETATION 3.5 COLOUR LAKE BASIN CHAPTER4 INHERENT PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ACTIVE LAYER 4.1 INTRODUCTION 4.2 METHODS 4.3 RESULTS 4.4 DISCUSSION 4.4.1 SS, EIF and GC Transects 4.4.2 Permafrost Transects 4.5 SUMMARY CHAPTER 5 THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ACTIVE LAYER 5.1 lNTRODUCTION 5.2 THEORY 5.2.1 Energy Balance 5.2.2 Active Layer Development 5.3 METHODS 5.3.1 Energy Balance 5.3.2 Ground Thermal Regime 5.3.3 Predicting of Active Layer Depths 5.4 RESULTS 5.4.1 Energy Balance 5.4.2 Ground Thermal Regime 5.4.3 Predicting Active Layer Depths 5.5 DISCUSSION 5.S.1 Energy Balance 5.5.2 Ground Temperatures and Ground Heat Flux 5.5.3 Predicting Active Layer Depths 5.6 SUMMARY CHAPTER 6 HYDROLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ACTIVE LAYER 6.1 INTRODUCTION 6.2 THEORY 6.2.1 Moisture Distribution 6.2.2 Maximum Storage within the Active Layer 6.3 METHODS 6.3.1 Moisture Profiles Using TDR 6.3.2 Precipitation and Evaporation 6.3.3 Changes in Water Storage in the Active Layer 6.3.4 Maximum Water Storage in the Active Layer 6.4 RESULTS 6.4.1 Moisture Distribution 6.4.1.1 Water Content Peaks 6.4.1.2 Apparent Unfrozen Water Content 6.4.1.3 Temporal Trends of a Typical Moisture Profile 6.4.1.4 Deviations from a Typical Site 6.4.1.5 Moisture Distribution Along a Hillslope 6.4.2 Precipitation Infiltration 6.4.3. Water Storage 6.5 DISCUSSION 6.5.1 Effect of Hydrology on Active Layer Development 6.5.1.1 Precipitation 6.5.1.2 Ice and Water Content 6.5.1.3 Seasonal Changes in Soil Moisture Distribution 6.5.2 Effect of Active Layer on Hydrology 6.5.2. 1 Impermeable Boundary 6.5.2.2 Subsurface Ponding 6.5.2.3 Permafrost/Active Layer Boundary Topography 6.5.2.4 Effect of Active Layer Hydrology on Surface Water 6.6 SUMMARY CHAPTER 7 CLIMATE CHANGE AND ACTIVE LAYER DEVELOPMENT 7.1 INTRODUCTION 7.2 SUMMARY 7.3 CLIMATE CHANGE 7.3.1 Introduction 7.3.2 Increase of Temperature 7.3.3 Changing Precipitation 7.4 REMOTE SENSING 7.5 RECOMMENDATION FOR FuRTHER RESEARCH APPENDIX A PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS APPENDIX A.1: ACTIVE LAYER DEPTHS APPENDIX B THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS APPENDIX B.1: BASE CAMP METEOROLOGICAL STATION OBSERVATIONS APPENDIX B.2: DAILY ENERGY-BALANCE SUMMARY APPENDIX B.3: MONTHLY AVERAGES FROM THE DESERT RESEARCH INSTITUTE METEOROLOGICAL STATION APPENDIX B.4: EXAMPLE OF DIURNAL FLUCTUATIONS IN TEMPERATURE AND ENERGY BALANCE COMPONENTS APPENDIX B.5: SOIL TEMPERATURES AT THE INTENSIVE STUDY SITES APPENDIX B.6: ACCUMULATED THAWING DEGREE DAYS APPENDIX B.7: CURVE FOR FENWALL THERMISTORS APPENDIX B.8: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN √ADDT AND √TT APPENDIX C HYDROLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS APPENDIX C.1: VOLUMETRIC WATER CONTENT VALUES APPENDIX C.2: POTENTIAL INFILTRATION REFERENCES , Englisch
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  • 21
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Malden, Mass. [u.a.] : Blackwell
    Call number: AWI G3-23-95310
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVIII, 261 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten
    ISBN: 140512976X , 1-4051-2976-X , 978-1-4051-2976-3
    Series Statement: Environmental systems and global change series 1
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface 1 The evidence for cryospheric change 1.1 Introduction 1.2 The geomorphic and hydrologic effects of cryospheric change 1.3 Sub-arctic and alpine hydrology 1.4 Glacier loss and mountain permafrost 1.5 Permafrost 1.6 The carbon balance of the cryosphere 1.7 River and lake ice break-up and freeze-up 1.8 Ocean circulation 1.9 The mass balance of the polar ice sheets 1.10 Sea level 1.11 Importance of sea ice. 1.12 Ecological impacts 1.13 Socio-economic effects 1.14 Conclusions (Text word count-including figure captions and tables but excluding references- 9,015) 2 The monitoring of cryospheric change 2.1 Introduction 2.2 In situ measurements 2.2.1 Land surface air temperature 2.2.2 Terrestrial snow and snow on sea ice 2.2.3 Sea ice 2.2.4 Ice sheets and alpine glaciers 2.2.5 Permafrost and seasonally frozen ground 2.2.6 River runoff 2.2.7 River and lake ice freeze-up and break-up 2.3 Conclusions 3 Processes of cryospheric change 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Snow and ice as energy regulators 3.2.1 The energetics of the snow surface 3.2.2 The energetics of the snowpack 3.2.3 The energetics of glaciers 3.2.4 The energetics of sea ice and various terrain types 3.2.5 Permafrost 3.3 Snow and ice reservoir functions 3.3.1 Mass budget for snow 3.3.2 Mass balance for glacier ice 3.3.3 The mass balance of an ice sheet 3.3.4 Mass balance of sea ice 3.4 Snowfall 3.4.1 Interception by vegetation 3.4.2 Snow accumulation 3.4.3 Snow cover structure 3.5 Snow avalanches 3.6 Snow melt, runoff and streamflow generation 3.7 Snow chemistry 3.8 Snow ecology 3.9 Glacier melt 3.10 Formation of an ice cover 3.11 River and lake ice 3.12 Sediment budgets 4 Patterns of the contemporary cryosphere at local to global scales 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Remote sensing observations 4.3 Land and sea surface temperature 4.3.1 Terrestrial snow and snow on sea ice 4.3.2 Sea ice 4.3.3 Ice sheets & glaciers: estimation of volume 4.3.4 Ice sheets & glaciers: mass balance components 4.3.5 Permafrost 4.3.6 River runoff 4.3.7 River and lake ice freeze-up/break-up 4.4 Numerical Models 4.5 Conclusions: validation, coordinated projects and climate data records 5 The evidence for past cryospheric changes 5.1 Introduction 5.2 The uniqueness of the Quaternary Period 5.3. Initiation of glacial ages 5.4 Reconstructing extent of glacial environments 5.5 Extreme events 5.6 Ice sheet modelling 5.6.1 The Antarctic Ice Sheet 5.6.2 Greenland 5.6.3 North America: Innuitian, Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets 5.6.4 British Isles, Scandinavian and Barents ice sheets 5.6.5 The Patagonian and New Zealand ice caps 5.7 Non-glacial Quaternary environments 5.7.1 Late Quaternary permafrost in North America and Europe 5.7.2 Treeline variations 5.7.3 Climatic snowline 5.7.4 Glacier fluctuations 5.7.5 Paraglaciation 6 The transience of the cryosphere and transitional landscapes 6.1 Introduction 6.1.1 The landscape as palimpsest 6.2 Glacial landscapes: macro scale 6.2.1 Cirque landscapes 6.2.2 Fjord and strandflat landscapes 6.3 Periglacial landscapes: macro-scale 6.4 Paraglacial landscapes: macro-scale 6.5 Glacial landscapes: medium-scale 6.5.1 The transition from glacial to fluvial dominance 6.6 Proglacial landscapes: medium-scale 6.6.1 Glacifluvial landforms 6.6.2 The Channeled Scablands 6.6.3 Sub-glacial channels 6.6.4 Sub-glacial, ice-marginal and supraglacial sediment-landform associations 6.7 Periglacial landscapes: medium scale 6.7.1 The transition from periglacial to fluvial dominance 6.8 Paraglacial landscapes: medium-scale 6.9 Glacial landscapes: local-scale 6.9.1 Primary glacigenic deposits 6.9.2 Small scale erosional forms 6.10 Proglacial landscapes: local-scale 6.11 Periglacial landscapes: local scale 6.13 Paraglacial landscapes: local-scale 6.13 Landscape resistance, collapse and recovery 6.14 Transitional landscapes at Quaternary, Holocene and Anthropocene timescales 7 Cryospheric change and vulnerability at Quaternary, Holocene and Anthropocene time scales 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Panarchy 7.2.1 Panarchy, sustainability and transformability 7.2.2 Collapse and the vulnerability of socio-economic systems 7.3 Changing ice cover and biomes since the Last Glacial Maximum 7.3.1 The Last Glacial Maximum 7.3.2 The Holocene Optimum 7.4 The first explorers in North America 7.5 Implications of cryospheric change/collapse 7.5.1 Snow quantity 7.5.2 Snow quality 7.5.3 River and lake ice 7.5.4 Permafrost 7.5.5 Glaciers 7.5.6 River basins 7.5.7 Sea ice 7.5.8 Ice sheets 7.5.9 Sea level change 7.5.10 Carbon sequestration 7.5.11 Vegetation 7.5.12 Polar bears 7.5.13 Human health 7.5.14 Persistent organic pollutants 7.5.15 Socio-cultural conditions and health status 7.5.16 Livelihoods and socio-economic conditions 7.5.17 Governance 7.6 Concluding thoughts References Index
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  • 22
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Sankt.Peterburg : Izdatel'stvo "Mir i Sem'ja 95", Glavnoe Agentstvo Vozdušnych Soobščenij Rossijskoj Federacii
    Call number: AWI Bio-23-95317
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 119 Seiten , Illustrationen , 1 Beilage
    ISBN: 5-90016-27-1
    Language: Russian , English , French
    Note: Zum Teil in kyrillischer Schrift. , Text in russischer, englischer und französischer Sprache
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  • 23
    Call number: AWI G3-23-95315
    Description / Table of Contents: In the monograph results of long-term ground and remote sensing experimental and theoretical investigations of heat-water exchange of typical permafrost landscapes and small river basins of Eastern Siberia and its factors situated in subarctic tundra, plain taiga and southern mountain taiga are generalized. Detailed maps of landscape structure of range grounds as well as results of analysis of wide range of parameters and variables of permafrost landscapes characterizing spatial and temporal variability of their state in daily, seasonal and long-term scales are presented. Zonal-landscape features of heat and water exchange as well as water regime of small river basins have been revealed. Spatial distribution of vertical turbulent heat and moisture flows in the boundary layer of the atmosphere above heterogeneous surface by measurements from board a plane has been investigated. Spatial and temporal analysis of thermo- and water-physical properties of perennially frozen grounds, which are applied as parameters in hydro-climatic models, has been fulfilled. Processes of interaction of surface and underground waters on plain and in the mountains have been considered, as well as cryogenic phenomena, which have considerable impact upon water regime of rivers and permafrost landscapes.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 575 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 978-5-89658-033-1 , 978-5-94789-232-1
    Language: Russian
    Note: Contents Introduction / A.G. Georgiadi, A.N. Zolotokrylin CHAPTER 1. SUBARCTIC TUNDRA 1.1. Characteristics of subarctic polygon and a complex of field experimental investigations / A.G. Georgiadi 1.2. Landscapes and their characteristics 1.2.1. Types and distribution over territory / R.V. Desyatkin, L.D. Hinzman 1.2.2. Seasonal changes of spectral characteristics of landscapes by data of remote sensing measurements / V.B. Malyshev, N. S. Ozerov 1.3. The active layer of subarctic landscapes: typology and geography 1.3.1. Spatial variabi!ity of the active layer thickness / A.G. Georgiadi, V.G. Onischenko 1.3.2. Hydrophysical characteristics of the seasonal-melting layer / A.G. Georgiadi,V.G. Onischenko 1.4. Radiation and thermal characteristics of landscapes in the summer period 1.4.1. Systematization of experimental information on albedo and surface temperature / A.N. Zolotokrylin 1.4.2. Analysis of experimental information on the surface temperature / A.N. Zolotokrylin, V.V. Vinogradova 1.5. Heat exchange in tundra landscapes 1.5.1. Structure of heat exchange and its seasonal features / A.N. Zolotokrylin 1.5.2. Theoretical analysis of the process of heat transfer in the surface thawed layer of soil grounds / A.B. Kazansky, A.N. Zolotokrylin 1.6. Features of water regime and water exchange in tundra 1.6.1. Water regime and water balance of river basins by results of experimental measurements / A.G. Georgiadi 1.6.2. Interrelationship of underground and surface waters and underground alimentation of rivers in different year seasons / V.V. Shepelev CHAPTER 2. CENTRAL PLAIN TAIGA 2.1. Geographical characteristics of Spasskaya Pad polygon / A.N. Fedorov 2.2. Types of landscapes, their distribution over territory and seasonal dynamics / A.N. Fedorov, Ya. I. Torgovkin, S.P. Varlamov 2.3. Characteristics of the active layer and its physical properties 2.3.1. Spatial and seasonal variability of the active layer thickness 2.3.1.1. Inter-landscape variability of the seasonal-thawing layer thickness / I.S. Vasiliev 2.3.1.2. Variability of the active layer thickness at experimental sites / E.Yu. Gerasimov 2.3.1.3. Freezing of the active layer / P.Ya. Konstantinov 2.3.2. Physical properties of soils of the seasonal-thawing layer under larch forest / A.G. Georgiadi, V.G. Onischenko 2.3.3. Inter-landscape differences of physical properties of the active layer / P.Ya. Konstantinov, I.S. Ugarov, R.N. Argunov 2.3.4. Features of thermal conductivity of soil grounds / V.G. Onischenko, I.S. Lisker, A.G. Georgiadi 2.4. Radiation balance and thermal regime of landscapes 2.4.1. Radiation balance and its components / I.S. Ugarov 2.4.2. Temperature regime of the active layer / P.P. Gavriliev, I.S. Ugarov, P.V. Efremov 2.4.3. Temperature regime of the upper layers of perennially frozen grounds / P.Ya. Konstantinov 2.5.Heat exchange in permafrost landscapes of plain taiga / P.P. Gavriliev 2.6. Features of heat and moisture balance in taiga-alas landscapes / R.V. Desyatkin, I. Ishii, Kh. Yabuki, A.R. Desyatkin, P.P. Fedorov, T.N. Semenova 2.7. Turbulent energy- and moisture exchange in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) over thermally heterogeneous surface (over the Lena River lowland in the Yakutsk area) / M.A. Strunin 2.7.1. Some aspects of the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) observations using the aircraft laboratory 2.7.2. Aircraft experiment of the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) observations in the Yakutsk area 2.7.2.1. Aicraft laboratory IL-18d and its instruments for investigations of ABL 2.7.2.2. Scheme and conditions of the aircraft experiment 2.7.2.3. Radiosounding, surface measurements and satellite observations 2.7.2.4. Turbulence and turbulent fluxes data processing and analyzing 2.7.3. Some features of the convective boundary layer (CBL) development over thermally heterogeneous surface 2.7.3.1. Seasonal variability of turbulent fluxes 2.7.3.2. Fine spatial ABL structure 2.7.3.3. Conditions of appearance and development of the mesoscale thermal internal boundary layer (MTIBL) inside the CBL 2.7.3.4. Appearance of the local circulation over thermal mesoscale patch on the underlying surface 2.7.3.5. The local circulation and the problem of energy balance in the atmospheric boundary layer 2.7.3.6. Conditions of applying the scaling models for the CBL developing over heterogeneous underlying surface 2.7.3.7. The spectral structure of fluxes 2.7.3.8. Flux separating into turbulent and mesoscale portions 2.7.3.9. Separating approach models for mesoscale and turbulent fluxes in the CBL 2.7.3.10. Some f eatures of mesoscale and turbulent fluxes seasonal variations 2.7.4. The main results of observations of the CBL, developing over the thermally heterogeneous surface 2.8 Moisture exchange in plain taiga landscape 2.8.1. Moisture regime of the active layer 2.8.1.1. Landscape features of moisture dynamics of the active layer / P.P. Gavriliev, I.S. Ugarov, P.V. Efremov, R.N. Argunov 2.8.1.2. Spatial and temporal distribution of moisture reserves in the active layer / A.N. Fedorov, Ya.I.Torgovkin, R.N. Arguniov, P.P. Gavriliev, I.S. Vasiliev, J.S. Ugarov, P.V. Efremov 2.8.2. Interrelationship of underground and surface waters and underground alimentation of rivers in different seasons / V.V. Shepelev CHAPTER 3. SOUTHERN MOUNTAIN TAIGA 3.1. Natural conditions of the region / V.S. Vuglinsky, M.L. Markov 3.1.1. Climate 3.1.2. Relief and geological structure 3.1.3. Permafrost and hydrogeological conditions 3.1.4. Hydrography and hydrological conditions 3.1.5. Interrelationship of surface and underground waters, underground alimentation of rivers 3.1.5.1. lntraannual dynamics of water exchange of rivers with drained aquifers 3.1.5.2. Seasonal glaciation and its impact upon formation of river runoff 3.2. Results of study of regularities of heat- and moisture exchange at an experimental SHI Mogot polygon / N.G. Vasilenko, S.A. Zhuravin 3.2.1. General characteristics of the Mogot polygon and program of investigations 3.2.2. Landscape and soil characteristics of catchments of the Mogot polygon 3.2.2.1. Landscapes of the Mogot polygon 3.2.2.2. Landscape-hydrology complexes 3.2.2.3. Types of soils and their water physical characteristics 3.2.3. Features of climate in the region of the Mogot polygon 3.2.4. Radiation and heat balances 3.2.4.1. Radiation balance 3.2.4.2. Heat balance 3.2.5. Water balance 3.2.5.1. Methods of identification of the main components of water balance 3.2.5.2. Features of fo rmation of water balance elements 3.2.5.3. Results of calculation of water balances List of literature SUPPLEMENT TO PART 2.7. INSTRUMENTS AND METHODS FOR INVESTIGATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE USING THE AIRCRAFT LABORATORY / M.A. Strunin S.2.7.1. Methods of wind speed and direction, air temperature and humidity and turbulence measurements based on aircraft data S.2.7.2. Aircraft laboratory IL-18d and its instruments for investigation of the atmosphere S.2.7.3. Database of aircraft observations and preliminary data processing S.2.7.4. Errors of turbulent fluxes calculations based on aircraft data S.2.7.5. Methods of spectral analysis of turbulence data S.2.7.6. Calculations of spectral characteristics of fluctuations based on Fourier analysis S.2.7.7. Using the wavelet-transformations for the spectral analysis List of literature to Supplement 2.7 , In kyrillischer Schrift , Einführung und Inhaltsverzeichnis in englischer Sprache
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  • 24
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Washington DC : AGU
    Call number: AWI G4-23-95321
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: Getrennte Zählung , Illustrationen, Diagramme , 28 cm
    Edition: Reprinted
    Language: German
    Note: Contents G01S91 Introduction to special section on changes in the Arctic freshwater system: identification, attribution, and impacts at local and global scales (DOI 10.1029/2007JG000615) / Charles Vörösmarty, Larry Hinzman, and Jonathan Pundsack Theme 1: Documenting the State and Trajectories of Change in Arctic Land-Ocean-Atmospheric Subsystems G04S54 The arctic freshwater system: Changes and impacts (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000353) / Daniel White, Larry Hinzman, Lilian Alessa, John Cassano, Molly Chambers, Kelly Falkner, Jennifer Francis, William J. Gutowski Jr., Marika Holland, R. Max Holmes, Henry Huntington, Douglas Kane, Andrew Kliskey, Craig Lee, James McClelland, Bruce Peterson, T Scott Rupp, Fiamma Straneo, Michael Steele, Rebecca Woodgate, Daqing Yang, Kenji Yoshikawa, and Tingjun Zhang G04S50 Recent Eurasian river discharge to the Arctic Ocean in the context of longer-term dendrohydrological records (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000333) / G. M. MacDonald, K. V. Kremenetski, L. C. Smitz, and H. G. Hidalgo G04S53 Temporal and spatial variations in maximum river discharge from a new Russian data set (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000352) / A. I. Shiklomanov, R. B. Lammers, M A. Rawlins, L. C. Smith, and T M. Pavelsky G04S47 Rising minimum daily flows in northern Eurasian rivers: A growing influence of groundwater in the high-latitude hydro logic cycle (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000327) / Laurence C. Smith, Tamlin M Pavelsky, Glen M. MacDonald, Alexander I. Shiklomanov, and Richard B. Lammers G04S59 Variability in river temperature, discharge, and energy flux from the Russian pan-Arctic landmass (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000370) / Richard B. Lammers, Jonathan W. Pundsack, and Alexander I. Shiklomanov G04S57 Nutrient (N, P) loads and yields at multiple scales and subbasin types in the Yukon River basin, Alaska (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000366) / Mark M. Dornblaser and Robert G. Striegl G04S60 Recent changes in nitrate and dissolved organic carbon export from the upper Kuparuk River, North Slope, Alaska (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000371) / J. W. McClelland, M. Stieglitz, Feifei Pan, R. M. Holmes, and B. J. Peterson Theme 2: Attribution: Sources ofHydrologic System Change in the Arctic G04S42 Response of Northern Hemisphere extratropical cyclone activity and associated precipitation to climate change, as represented by the Community Climate System Model (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000286) / Joel Finnis, Marika M. Holland, Mark C. Serreze, and John J. Cassano G04S49 Predicted changes in synoptic forcing of net precipitation in large Arctic river basins during the 21st century (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000332) / John J. Cassano, Petteri Uotila, Amanda H Lynch, and Elizabeth N. Cassano G04S45 A multimodel simulation of pan-Arctic hydrology (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000303) / A. G. Slater, T J. Bohn, J. L. McCreight, M C. Serreze, and D. P. Lettenmaier G04S43 Spring and aufeis (icing) hydrology in Brooks Range, Alaska (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000294) / Kenji Yoshikawa, Larry D. Hinzman, and Douglas L. Kane G04S46 Application ofTopoFlow, a spatially distributed hydrological model, to the Imnavait Creek watershed, Alaska (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000326) / Imke Schramm, Julia Boike, W Robert Bolton, and Larry D. Hinzman G04S44 Arctic tundra shrub invasion and soot deposition: Consequences for spring snowmelt and near-surface air temperatures (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000297) / John E. Strack, Roger A. Pielke Sr. , and Glen E. Liston G04S51 Chemical characteristics offulvic acids from Arctic surface waters: Microbial contributions and photochemical transformations (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000343) / Rose M Cory, Diane M. McKnight, Yu-Ping Chin, Penney Miller, and Chris L. Jaros G04S58 Impacts of climate warming and permafrost thaw on the riverine transport of nitrogen and phosphorus to the Kara Sea (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000369) / Karen E. Frey, James W McClelland, Robert M. Holmes, and Laurence C. Smith Theme 3: Impacts and Feedbacks from Arctic Freshwater Cycle Change G04S48 Relative sensitivity of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation to river discharge into Hudson Bay and the Arctic Ocean (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000330) / Asa K Rennermalm, Eric F. Wood, Andrew J. Weaver, Michael Eby, and Stephen J. Dery G04S41 Arctic freshwater export in the 20th and 21st centuries (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000274) / Torben Koenigk, Uwe Mikolajewicz, Helmuth Haak, and Johann Jungclaus G04S55 Projected changes in Arctic Ocean freshwater budgets (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000354) / Marika M. Holland, Joel Finnis, Andrew P. Barrett, and Mark C. Serreze G04S52 Potential impacts of a changing Arcfic on community water sources on the Seward Peninsula, Alaska (DOI 10.1029/2006JG000351) / Molly Chambers, Daniel White, Robert Busey, Larry Hinzman, Lilian Alessa, and Andrew Kliskey There is no G04S56 in this volume. Author Index
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  • 25
    Call number: ZSP-321-84
    In: GEOMAR-Report, 84
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung Die pliozänen Sedimentprofile der ODP-Bohrungen 925-929 bilden einen Tiefenwasserabschnitt im äquatorialen Westatlantik zwischen 3000 und 4400 m Wassertiefe und wurden für die Zeitscheiben 3.3-2.6 Ma und 5.1-4.4 Ma untersucht. Anhand von zeitlich hochauflösenden isotopisch-sedimentalogischen Datensätzen wurden die Zusammenhänge zwischen Änderungen im polaren Eishaushalt, ozeanischer Zirkulation, Tiefenwasserdurchlüftung, Karbonatlösung und terrigenem Sedimenteintrag vom Amazonas näher rekonstruiert. Dafür wurden die Zeitreihen an die astronomische Zeitskala von Laskar et al. ( 1993) angepaßt. Die vorliegende Studie belegt erstmals, daß die Schließung des Panama-Seeweges vor 4.6 Ma einen kritischen Grenzwert überschritt, der nachweislich zu einschneidenden Veränderungen in der thermohalinen Zirkulation und der Tiefenwasserchemie führte. Das frühe Pliozän vor 5-4.6 Ma zeichnete sich durch eine extreme Karbonatlösung und eine geringe Tiefenwasserdurchlüftung aus. Im Zuge der Schließung führte die Intensivierung des Golfstromes mit einem erhöhten Salz- und Wärmetransport in den Nordatlantik und die Anregung der dortigen Tiefenwasserbildung zu einer verstärkten thermohalinen Zirkulation und letztendlich zu einer verbesserten Tiefenwasserdurchlüftung und Karbonaterhaltung im äquatorialen Atlantik. Damit verbunden war eine Absenkung der Lysokline bis zu 1000 m. Ein pazifisch-atlantischer Vergleich von Karbonatlösungsindikatoren zeigt, daß sich die chemische Asymmetrie zwischen beiden Ozeanen, wie sie auch heute noch besteht, bereits ab 4.6 Ma entwickelte. Zeitgleich mit der Verflachung des mittelamerikanischen Seeweges vor 4.6 Ma weist ein deutlicher Anstieg in den siliziklastischen Akkumulationsraten gemeinsam mit Ergebnissen aus terrestrisch-lakustrinen Poilenprofilen auf die verstärkte Hebung der Anden hin. Mit der Intensivierung der Nordhemisphärenvereisung vor 3.15-2.6 Ma wurden die Schwankungen in den Sauerstoffisotopenkurven oberhalb 3300 m Wassertiefe (NADW = Nordatlantisches Tiefenwasser) von einem 100 ka-Zyklus dominiert, während sie darunter von dem für das Pliozän typischen 41 ka-Zyklus der Erdschiefe dominiert wurden. Möglicherweise ist das Auftreten des 100 ka-Zyklus ein typisches Phänomen für Zeitintervalle, die mit einem verstärkten Eisaufbau einhergehen, wie z. B. das Pleistozän der letzten 800 ka. Im Zuge der Vereisung nahm die Bildung von NADW ab und führte im äquatorialen Atlantik zu einer graduellen Abnahme in der Tiefenwasserdurchlüftung und Karbonaterhaltung. Während die Lysoklinentiefe in den Warmstadien in etwa der heutigen Lage entsprach ( ca. 4300 m Wassertiefe ), verlagerte sich die glaziale Lysokline in flachere Wassertiefen um etwa 3500 m. Die Schwankungen in der Lysoklinentiefe (Grenzfläche NADW/AABW) wurden dabei vom 41 ka-Zyklus dominiert, wobei die Lösungsmaximaden Maxima im Eisvolumen mit zunehmender Wassertiefe vorauseilten. Im Bereich des NADW schwankten Karbonatlösung und Eisvolumen in Phase und dokumentieren den bekannten atlantischen Karbonaterhaltungstyp. In einer Wassertiefe unterhalb 4000 m, also im Bereich der Mischzone NADW/AABW oder im AABW (=Antarktisches Bodenwasser), eilten die Karbonatlösungsmaxima den Maxima im Eisvolumen bis zu 5000 Jahren voraus, ein Phasenunterschied, der typisch für südatlantische Wassermassen ist. Die pliozäne terrigene Sedimentanlieferung von Amazonasfracht zur Ceara Schwelle wurde nach spektralanalytischen Ergebnissen nicht durch Meeresspiegelschwankungen oder kontinentale Klimaänderungen (Niederschläge, Vegetation) kontrolliert, sondern vielmehr durch strömungsbedingte Transportprozesse im Zusammenhang mit dem nordbrasilianischen Küstenstrom.
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 183 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: GEOMAR-Report 84
    Language: German
    Note: Zugleich: Dissertation, Universität Kiel, 1998
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  • 26
    Call number: AWI A13-19-92400
    Description / Table of Contents: Das Buch bietet eine Einführung in die moderne Klimatologie mit ihren Prognose- und Interpretationsmodellen. Es gibt einen Überblick über die Vorstellungen, die man heute vom Klima und von klimarelevanten Prozessen hat, und wie man diese konzeptionell und quantitativ - also mit Modellen - zu beschreiben versucht. Der Text ist allgemein verständlich geschrieben und setzt keine besonderen Kenntnisse der Mathematik und Physik voraus. Dieses Lehrbuch basiert auf einer Vorlesung am Meteorologischen Institut der Universität Hamburg und richtet sich hauptsächlich an Studenten der Geowissenschaften und Physik, daneben an ebenfalls mit Klima befaßten Disziplinen der Land-, Forst- und Umweltwissenschaften
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 273 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: Manuskript
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt 1 Einführung 1.1 Übersicht 1.2 Das moderne naturwissenschaftliche Verständnis von Klima 1.3 Die Rolle von Modellen in der Klimaforschung 2 Klimarelevante Prozesse 2.1 Energie und Strahlung 2.2 Dynamik der Atmosphäre 2.3 Die Zirkulation des Ozeans 2.4 Spurenstof-Kreisläufe 2.5 Die Kryosphäre 3 Natürliche Klimavariabilität 3.1 Jahres- und Tagesgang 3.2 Wetter 3.3 Interannuale Klimaschwankungen 3.4 Die Homogenitätsproblematik 3.5 Historische Klima-Variationen 3.6 Paläoklimatologie 4 Konzeptionelle Modelle 4.1 Klimazonen 4.2 Ein exemplarisches Energiebilanzmodell 4.3 Physikalisch orientierte Modelle 4.4 Nichtlinearität und Chaos 4.5 Fluktuationen als stochastische Vorgänge 4.6 Wechselwirkungen verschiedener Prozesse 5 Grundlagen von Strömungsmodellen 5.1 Grundgleichungen der Strömungs- und Thermodynamik 5.2 Diskretisierung 5.3 Parametrisierung und subskalige Prozesse 5.4 Numerische Integration 6 Realitätsnahe Modelle des Klimasystems 6.1 Wettervorhersagemodelle 6.2 Modelle zur Klimasimulation 6.3 Simulationen von Klimazuständen 6.4 Numerische Experimente mit Modellen 6.5 Anwendung zur Klimavorhersage 6.6 Beurteilung der Klimamodelle 7 Anthropogene Klimaänderung 7.1 Übersicht 7.2 Emissions- und Konzentrations-Szenarien 7.3 Klimaszenarien realitätsnaher Modelle 7.4 Nachweis anthropogener Klimabeeinflussung 7.5 Lokale und regionale Szenarien 8 Klima und Gesellschaft 8.1 Übersicht 8.2 Historischer Überblick: gesellschaftliche Vorstellungen zum Einfluß von Klima 8.3 Klimafolgenforschung 8.4 Ökonomische Aspekte des Klimawandels 8.5 Vorstellungen von Klimawandel 9 Résumé 10 Anhang 11 Literatur Stichwortverzeichnis
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  • 27
    Call number: ZSP-321-38
    In: GEOMAR-Report, 38
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung Im südlichen Südatlantik wurden umfassende Untersuchungen zum Bariumkreislauf durchgeführt. Sie dienen zum besseren Verständnis des Barium/Barytsignals als Produktivitäts- 'bzw. Paläoproduktivitätsanzeiger in antarktischen Sedimenten und sollen Rückschlüsse auf die Paläozeanographie im Antarktischen Zirkumpolarstrom zulassen. Dazu wurden Untersuchungen an der Wassersäule, an Sinkstofffallenmaterial, am Oberflächensediment, Porenwasser und an langen Sedimentkernen durchgeführt. Untersuchungen zum gelösten Barium im Meerwasser auf zwei Profilen im westlichen Südatlantik zeigen, daß die Bariumkonzentrationen innerhalb des Antarktischen Zirkumpolarstromes im Vergleich zu anderen Ozeanen relativ hoch sind. Die verschiedenen Wassermassen werden von den Bariumgehalten nachgezeichnet, so daß an den ozeanegraphischen Fronten ähnlich wie bei anderen ozeanegraphischen Parametern ausgeprägte Gradienten auftreten. Die vertikale Verteilung gelösten Bariums innerhalb der Wassersäule korreliert mit der Verteilung gelösten Silikates, was auf eine Kopplung von Barium an den biogenen Stoffkreislauf schließen läßt. Das gelöste Barium wird von den Hartteilen absinkender Silikatschaler aufgenommen und in der unteren Wassersäule und im Sediment wieder freigesetzt. Die Barytsedimentation ist nicht abhängig vom Gehalt gelösten Bariums innerhalb der Wassersäule. Vielmehr ist das Auftreten von Diatomeen und eine hohe Exportproduktion bei der Bildung von Baryt entscheidend. Die Barytbildung scheint an den Abbau organischen Materials innerhalb der Wassersäule gekoppelt zu sein, da das Corg/Babio-Verhältnis in den Sinkstofffallen mit zunehmender Wassertiefe abnimmt. Die Zunahme biogenen Bariums mit der Wassertiefe, die sowohl in den Sinkstofffallen als auch in Oberflächensedimenten beobachtet wurde, verdeutlicht die große Stabilität von Barium in Form von Baryt im Vergleich zu organischem Kohlenstoff, Opal und Karbonat. Im Antarktischen Zirkumpolarstrom wird innerhalb der Antarktischen Zone mengenmäßig das meiste biogene Barium akkumuliert. Dieser Bereich ist ebenfalls durch eine hohe Opalakkumulation gekennzeichnet, die ihren Ausdruck in der Ausbildung des Opalgürtels um die Antarktis findet. Diese Übereinstimmung läßt daher eine Anwendung von Barium als Produktivitätsanzeiger möglich erscheinen. Die Primärproduktivitäten, welche mit Hilfe des Flusses von biogenem Barium bestimmt wurden, bewegen sich in der Antarktischen Zone um ca. 40 gC/m2/a und sind somit deutlich niedriger als z.B. in Küstenauftriebsgebieten. Im Wechsel von Warm- und Kaltzeiten lassen sich signifikante Änderungen der Bariumkonzentrationen feststellen. Eine diagenetische Überprägung des Bariumsignals durch Barytmobilisation und anschließender Wiederausfällung kann in den untersuchten Sedimentkernen ausgeschlossen werden. Die in den Oberflächenproben beobachtete Korrelation zwischen den Akkumulationen biogenen Bariums und biogenen Opals ist ebenfalls in den Kernprofilen nachvollziehbar, wodurch die Anwendung biogenen Bariums als Proxy für Paläoproduktivitäten in antarktischen Sedimenten möglich wird. Innerhalb der Antarktischen Zone werden während der Interglazialzeiten die höchsten Akkumulationsraten von biogenem Barium beobachtet, mit maximalen Werten während der Klimaoptima im Holozän und vor ca. 125.000 Jahren. Während der Warmzeiten war daher die Hochproduktionszone in der Antarktischen Zone ausgebildet. Dagegen kommt in den Kaltzeiten nördlich der Polarfront mehr biogenes Barium zur Akkumulation. Eine nordwärtige Verschiebung der Polarfront und damit des Hochproduktionsgürtels während der Glazialzeiten kann aber ausgeschlossen werden, da die Akkumulationsraten von biogenem Barium viel niedriger sind als die warmzeitliehen Raten innerhalb der Antarktischen Zone.
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 105 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: GEOMAR-Report 38
    Language: German
    Note: Zugleich: Dissertation, Universität Kiel, 1995 , Inhaltsverzeichnis Zusammenfassung Abstract 1. Einleitung 2. Untersuchungsgebiet 2.1 Bathymetrie und tektonischer Aufbau 2.2 Ozeanische Zirkulation 2.2.1 Subtropischer Wirbel 2.2.2 Antarktischer Zirkumpolarstrom 2.2.3 Weddellwirbel 2.3 Wassermassen 2.3.1 Oberflächenwassermassen 2.3.2 Tiefenwassermassen 2.3.3 Antarktisches Bodenwasser 2.4 Meereisverbreitung 3. Probenmaterial und Probennahme 3.1 Meerwasserproben 3.2 Sinkstoffallenmaterial 3.3 Oberflächensedimentproben 3.4 Sedimentkerne 3.4.1 Lithologien 3.4.2 Stratigraphie 3.4.3 Alters-Teufen-Beziehung und Sedimentationsraten 4. Analytik 4.1 Probenaufbereitung 4.2 Säureaufschluß 4.3 Analytische Verfahren 4.3.1 Bariumbestimmung an Wasserproben mittels Graphitrohrofen-Atomabsorptionsspektrometrie (GF-AAS) 4.3.2 Sulfatbestimmung an Porenwässern mittels Ionenchromatographie 4.3.3 Bariumbestimmung an Aufschlußlösungen mittels Atomemissionsspektrometrie (ICP-AES) 4.4 Berechnung von Akkumulationsraten 5. Biogener Anteil am Bariumgehalt der Sedimente 6. Gelöstes Barium in den Wassermassen des Antarktischen Zirkumpolarstromes 6.1 Ergebnisse zur Bariumverteilung innerhalb der Wassersäule 6.2 Gelöstes Barium im Vergleich zu gelöstem Silikat und zur Hydrographie 7. Bariumfluß zum Meeresboden und Bariumakkumulation im Oberflächensediment 7.1 Ergebnisse zur Verteilung von partikulärem Barium in der Wassersäule 7.2 Rezente Bariumverteilung in den Oberflächensedimenten 7.3 Abschätzung der holozänen Sedimentationsraten 7.4 Vergleich von biogenem Barium mit anderen Produktivitätsanzeigern 7.4.1 Partikuläres Barium in der Wassersäule 7.4.2 Rezente bis subrezente Bariumsedimentation 7.5 Abhängigkeit des biogenen Bariums im Sediment vom gelösten Barium in der Wassersäule 7.6 Abhängigkeit der Bariumakkumulation von der Wassertiefe 7.7 Bariumsedimentation in Beziehung zur Ozeanographie und zur Meereisverbreitung innerhalb des Antarktischen Zirkumpolarstromes 7.8 Fluß von biogenem Barium zur Berechnung von Exportproduktivitäten 8. Diagenese von Baryt in anoxischen Sedimenten 8.1 Ergebnisse zum Bariumgehalt im Porenwasser 8.2 Diagenetisch gebildeter Baryt 9. Barium im Wechsel der Glazial-nnterglazialzeiten 9.1 Ergebnisse zum Bariumgehalt in den Sedimentkernen 9.2 Akkumulationsraten biogenen Bariums 9.3 Vergleich der Akkumulationsraten von biogenem Barium mit dem Ba/Al-Verhältnis 9.4 Bariumakkumulationsraten im Vergleich zu anderen Produktivitätsanzeigern im östlichen Südatlantik 9.5 Berechnung der Paläoproduktivität 9.6 Paläozeanographie im östlichen Südatlantik 10. Schlußfolgerungen 11. Danksagung 12. Literaturverzeichnis Anhang Abbildungs- und Tabellenverzeichnis Figure and table captions
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  • 28
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI S4-19-91819
    In: Texts in computational science and engineering, 3
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXIV, 750 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: third edition, corrected 2nd printing 2009
    ISBN: 3540739157 , 9783540739159 , 9783540739166 (electronic)
    Series Statement: Texts in computational science and engineering 3
    Language: English
    Note: Table of Contents 1 Introduction 1.1 Scripting versus Traditional Programming 1.1.1 Why Scripting is Useful in Computational Science 1.1.2 Classification of Programming Languages 1.1.3 Productive Pairs of Programming Languages 1.1.4 Gluing Existing Applications 1.1.5 Scripting Yields Shorter Code 1.1.6 Efficiency 1.1.7 Type-Specification (Declaration) of Variables 1.1.8 Flexible Function Interfaces 1.1.9 Interactive Computing 1.1.10 Creating Code at Run Time 1.1.11 Nested Heterogeneous Data Structures 1.1.12 GUI Programming 1.1.13 Mixed Language Programming 1.1.14 When to Choose a Dynamically Typed Language 1.1.15 Why Python? 1.1.16 Script or Program? 1.2 Preparations for Working with This Book 2 Getting Started with Python Scripting 2.1 A Scientific Hello World Script 2.1.1 Executing Python Scripts 2.1.2 Dissection of the Scientific Hello World Script 2.2 Working with Files and Data 2.2.1 Problem Specification 2.2.2 The Complete Code 2.2.3 Dissection 2.2.4 Working with Files in Memory 2.2.5 Array Computing 2.2.6 Interactive Computing and Debugging 2. 2.7 Efficiency Measurements 2.2.8 Exercises 2.3 Gluing Stand-Alone Applications 2.3.1 The Simulation Code 2.3.2 Using Gnuplot to Visualize Curves 2.3.3 Functionality of the Script 2.3.4 The Complete Code 2.3.5 Dissection 2.3.6 Exercises 2.4 Conducting Numerical Experiments 2.4.1 Wrapping a Loop Around Another Script 2.4.2 Generating an HTML Report 2.4.3 Making Animations 2.4.4 Varying Any Parameter 2.5 File Format Conversion 2.5.1 A Simple Read/Write Script 2.5.2 Storing Data in Dictionaries and Lists 2.5.3 Making a Module with Functions 2.5.4 Exercises 3 Basic Python 3.1 Introductory Topics 3.1.1 Recommended Python Documentation 3.1.2 Control Statements 3.1.3 Running Applications 3.1.4 File Reading and Writing 3.1.5 Output Formatting 3.2 Variables of Different Types 3.2.1 Boolean Types 3.2.2 The None Variable 3.2.3 Numbers and Numerical Expressions 3.2.4 Lists and Tuples 3.2.5 Dictionaries 3.2.6 Splitting and Joining Text 3.2.7 String Operations 3.2.8 Text Processing 3.2.9 The Basics of a Python Class 3.2.10 Copy and Assignment 3.2.11 Determining a Variable's Type 3.2.12 Exercises 3.3 Functions 3.3.1 Keyword Arguments 3.3.2 Doc Strings 3.3.3 Variable Number of Arguments 3.3.4 Call by Reference 3.3.5 Treatment of Input and Output Arguments 3.3.6 Function Objects 3.4 Working with Files and Directories 3.4.1 Listing Files in a Directory 3.4.2 Testing File Types 3.4.3 Removing Files and Directories 3.4.4 Copying and Renaming Files 3.4.5 Splitting Pathnames 3.4.6 Creating and Moving to Directories 3.4.7 Traversing Directory Trees 3.4.8 Exercises 4 Numerical Computing in Python 4.1 A Quick NumPy Primer 4.1.1 Creating Arrays 4.1.2 Array Indexing 4.1.3 Loops over Arrays 4.1.4 Array Computations 4.1.5 More Array Functionality 4.1.6 Type Testing 4.1.7 Matrix Objects 4.1.8 Exercises 4.2 Vectorized Algorithms 4.2.1 From Scalar to Array in Function Arguments 4.2.2 Slicing 4.2.3 Exercises 4.3 More Advanced Array Computing 4.3.1 Random Numbers 4.3.2 Linear Algebra 4.3.3 Plotting 4.3.4 Example: Curve Fitting 4.3.5 Arrays on Structured Grids 4.3.6 File I/O with NumPy Arrays 4.3.7 Functionality in the Numpyutils Module 4.3.8 Exercises 4.4 Other Tools for Numerical Computations 4.4.1 The ScientificPython Package 4.4.2 The SciPy Package 4.4.3 The Python- Matlab Interface 3 4.4.4 Symbolic Computing in Python 4.4.5 Some Useful Python Modules 5 Combining Python with Fortran, C, and C++ 5.1 About Mixed Language Programming 5.1.1 Applications of Mixed Language Programming 5.1.2 Calling C from Python 5.1.3 Automatic Generation of Wrapper Code 5.2 Scientific Hello World Examples 5.2.1 Combining Python and Fortran 5.2.2 Combining Python and C 5.2.3 Combining Python and C++ Functions 5.2.4 Combining Python and C++ Classes 5.2.5 Exercises 5.3 A Simple Computational Steering Example 5.3.1 Modified Time Loop for Repeated Simulations 5.3.2 Creating a P ython Interface 5.3.3 The Steering Python Script 5.3.4 Equipping the Steering Script with a GUI 5.4 Scripting Interfaces to Large Libraries 6 Introduction to GUI Programming 6.1 Scientific Hello World GUI 6.1.1 Introductory Topics 6.1.2 The First Python/Tkinter Encounter 6.1.3 Binding Events 6.1.4 Changing the Layout 6.1.5 The Final Scientific Hello World GUI 6.1.6 An Alternative to Tkinter Variables 6.1.7 About the Pack Command 6.1.8 An Introduction to the Grid Geometry Manager 6.1.9 Implementing a GUI as a Class 6.1.10 A Simple Graphical Function Evaluator 6.1.11 Exercises 6.2 Adding GUis to Scripts 6.2.1 A Simulation and Visualization Script with a GUI 6.2.2 Improving the Layout 6.2.3 Exercises 6.3 A List of Common Widget Operations 6.3.1 Frame 6.3.2 Label 6.3.3 Button 6.3.4 Text Entry 6.3.5 Balloon Help 6.3.6 Option Menu 6.3.7 Slider 6.3.8 Check Button 6.3.9 Making a Simple Megawidget 6.3.10 Menu Bar 6.3.11 List Data 6.3.12 Listbox 6.3.13 Radio Button 6.3.14 Combo Box 6.3.15 Message Box 6.3.16 User-Defined Dialogs 6.3.17 Color-Picker Dialogs 6.3.18 File Selection Dialogs 6.3.19 Toplevel 6.3.20 Some Other Types of Widgets 6.3.21 Adapting Widgets to the User's Resize Actions 6.3.22 Customizing Fonts and Colors 6.3.23 Widget Overview 6.3.24 Exercises 7 Web Interfaces and CGI Programming 7.1 Introductory CGI Scripts 7.1.1 Web Forms and CGI Scripts 7.1.2 Generating Forms in CGI Scripts 7.1.3 Debugging CGI Scripts 7.1.4 A General Shell Script Wrapper for CGI Scripts 7.1.5 Security Issues 7.2 Adding Web Interfaces to Scripts 7.2.1 A Class for Form Parameters 7.2.2 Calling Other Programs 7.2.3 Running Simulations 7.2.4 Getting a CGI Script to Work 7.2.5 Using Web Applications from Scripts 7.2.6 Exercises 8 Advanced Python 8.1 Miscellaneous Topics 8.1.1 Parsing Command-Line Arguments 8.1.2 Platform-Dependent Operations 8.1.3 Run-Time Generation of Code 8.1.4 Exercises 8.2 Regular Expressions and Text Processing 8.2.1 Motivation 8.2.2 Special Characters 8.2.3 Regular Expressions for Real Numbers 8.2.4 Using Groups to Extract Parts of a Text 8.2.5 Extracting Interval Limits 8.2.6 Extracting Multiple Matches 8.2.7 Splitting Text 8.2.8 Pattern-Matching Modifiers 8.2.9 Substitution and Backreferences 8.2.10 Example: Swapping Arguments in Function Calls 8.2.11 A General Substitution Script 8.2.12 Debugging Regular Expressions 8.2.13 Exercises 8.3 Tools for Handling Data in Files 8.3.1 Writing and Reading Python Data Structures 8.3.2 Pickling Objects 8.3.3 Shelving Objects 8.3.4 Writing and Reading Zip and Tar Archive Files 8.3.5 Downloading Internet Files 8.3.6 Binary Input/Output 8.3.7 Exercises 8.4 A Database for NumPy Arrays 8.4.1 The Structure of the Database 8.4.2 Pickling 8.4.3 Formatted ASCII Storage 8.4.4 Shelving 8.4.5 Comparing the Various Techniques 8.5 Scripts Involving Local and Remote Hosts 8.5.1 Secure Shell Commands 8.5.2 Distributed Simulation and Visualization 8.5.3 Client/Server Programming 8.5.4 Threads 8.6 Classes 8.6.1 Class Programming 8.6.2 Checking the Class Type 8.6.3 Private Data 8.6.4 Static Data 8.6.5 Special Attributes 8.6.6 Special Methods 8.6.7 Multiple Inheritance 8.6.8 Using a Class as a C-like Structure 8.6.9 Attribute Access via String Names 8.6.10 New-Style Classes 8.6.11 Implementing Get/Set Functions via Properties 8.6.12 Subclassing Built-in Types 8.6.13 Building Class Interfaces at Run Time 8.6.14 Building Flexible Class Interfaces 8.6.15 Exercises 8.7 Scope of Variables 8.7.1 Global, Local, and Class Variables 8.7.2 Nested Functions 8.7.3 Dictionaries of Variables in Namespaces 8.8 Exceptions 8.8.1 Handling Exceptions 8.8.2 Raising Exceptions 8.9 Iterators 8.9.1 Constructing an Iterator 8.9.2 A Pointwise Grid Iterator 8.9.3 A Vectorized Grid Iterator 8.9.4 Generators 8.
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  • 29
    Call number: ZSP-167-65
    In: Berichte aus dem Sonderforschungsbereich 313, Veränderungen der Umwelt - Der Nördliche Nordatlantik, Nr. 65
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: VIII, 131 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Berichte aus dem Sonderforschungsbereich 313, Veränderungen der Umwelt - Der Nördliche Nordatlantik 65
    Language: German
    Note: Zugl.: Kiel, Univ., Diss., 1996 , Inhaltsverzeichnis: 1 Einleitung. - 2 Grundlagen der Spektralanalyse. - 2.1 Begriffe. - 2.2 Auto-/Kreuzkovarianzfunktion - Auto-/Kreuzkorrelationsfunktion. - 2.3 Stationarität. - 2.4 Fourier-Transformation. - 3 Spektralanalyse univariater stationärer Prozesse. - 3.1 Autospektrum. - 3.2 Schätzen kontinuierlicher Autospektren. - 3.2.1 Spektraler Leckeffekt, Fensterfunktionen und Bandbreite. - 3.2.2 'Aliasing'-Effekte. - 3.3 Lomb-Scargle- (LS-) Methode: Fourier-Transformation nicht äquidistanter Daten. - 3.4 Thomson-Multitaper- (MT-) Methode. - 3.5 Blackman-Tukey- (BT-) Methode. - 4 Harmonische Analyse. - 4.1 Tests für harmonische Komponenten in weißem Rauschen. - 4.2 Tests für harmonische Komponenten in farbigem Rauschen. - 5 Spektralanalyse bivariater stationärer Prozesse. - 5.1 Kreuzspektrum. - 5.2 Kohärenzspektrum. - 5.3 Phasenspektrum. - 5.4 Hinweise zur Anwendung der BT- und LS-Methode. - 6 Datenvorbereitung. - 6.1 Interpolationsverfahren. - 6.2 Dezimierung. - 6.3 Tests auf Stationarität I Gegenmaßnahmen bei Nichtstationarität. - 7 Das Programm SPECTRUM. - 7.1 Allgemeines. - 7.2 Dateiformate. - 7.3 Benutzung. - 7.3.1 Univariate Spektralanalyse. - 7.3.2 Harmonische Analyse. - 7.3.3 Bivariate Spektralanalyse. - 7.3.4 Utilities. - 8 Spektralanalyse anhand von Beispielen. - 8.1 Autospektralanalyse künstlich generierter Zeitreihen. - 8.1.1 Autoregressiver Prozeß zweiter Ordnung. - 8.1.2 Varianzanteile harmonischer Signalkomponenten. - 8.1.3 Arbeitsbereiche bei der Spektralanalyse. - 8.1.4 Effekt eines linearen Trends. - 8.2 Autospektralanalyse paläoklimatischer Zeitreihen. - 8.2.1 δ180-Daten ODP Site 658. - 8.3 Harmonische Analyse anhand von Beispiele. - 8.3.1 Details zur praktischen Durchführung. - 8.3.2 Harmonische Analyse am Beispiel von Strontiumisotopenverhältnissen. - 8.3.3 Harmonische Analyse von Residuen. - 8.4 Kreuzspektralanalyse künstlich generierter Zeitreihen. - 8.4.1 Bivariater autoregressiver Prozeß erster Ordnung. - 8.4.2 Details zu Phasenspektren. - 8.5 Kreuzspektralanalyse paläoklimatischer Zeitreihen. - 8.6 Notwendige Angaben zur Beurteilung von Analyseresultaten. - 9 Evolutionäre Spektralanalyse nicht äquidistanter Zeitreihen. - 9.1 Allgemeines. - 9.2 Schätzung von Hüllkurven. - 9.2.1 Prinzip. - 9.2.2 Das Programm ENVELOPE. - 9.2.3 Plio-/Pleistozäne Entwicklung der 100 ka-Hüllkurve. - 10 Schlußfolgerungen. - 10.1 Methodik. - 10.2 Paläoklimatische Fragestellungen. - Literaturverzeichnis. - Anhang. - Danksagung.
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  • 30
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    London : Academic Press
    Call number: AWI Bio-19-92166
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 67 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Estuarine coastal and shelf science Vol. 46, Suppl. A
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: Introduction / P. J. le B. Williams. - The management and behaviour of the Mesocosms / P. J. le B. Williams and J. K. Egge. - Evolution of phytoplankton pigments in Mesocosm experiments / R. G. Barlow, R. F. C. Mantoura, D. G. Cummings, D. W. Pond and R. P. Harris. - Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate Carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) gene expression and photosynthetic activity in nutrient-enriched Mesocosm experiments / M. Wyman, J. T. Davies, K. Weston, D. W. Crawford and D. A. Purdie. - Bacterial response to blooms dominated by diatoms and Emiliania huxleyi in nutrient-enriched Mesocosms / R. Sanders and D. A. Purdie. - Population dynamics of phytoplankton and viruses in a phosphate-limited Mesocosm and their effect on DMSP and DMS production / W. H. Wilson, S. Turner and N. H. Mann. - Microplanktonic polyunsaturated fatty acid markers: a Mesocosm trial / D. W. Pond, M. V. Bell, R. P. Harris and J. R. Sargent.
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  • 31
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Bremerhaven : Alfred Wegener Institut for Polar and Marine Research
    Associated volumes
    Call number: ZSP-994(1994/1995)
    In: Zweijahresbericht / Stiftung Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung, 1994/1995
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 275 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISSN: 0940-4546 , 1618-3703
    Series Statement: Zweijahresbericht / Stiftung Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung 1994/1995
    Language: English
    Note: Contents 1. Introductory overview 2. Selected research topics Food availability and microbial activity on the continental slope: from the Siberian shelf to the Arctic basin (Boetius, Damm, Nothig) Ecology of summer sea ice (Cieitz, Kukert, Riebesell, Rutgers v. d. Loeff, Crossmann, Dieckmann) Temperature physiology of marine invertebrates and fish (Hardewig, Sartoris, Sommer, van Dijk, Zielinski, Partner) The 'multistoried' habitat on the Antarctic sea floor (Cutt) The near-surface air flow at Neumayer Station (Handorf) Simulation of atmospheric climate processes over the Arctic (Dethloff, Rinke) Coordinated ozone soundings for determination of ozone depletion rates in the Arctic and sub-Arctic winter (Rex, van der Cathen) Sunshine Simulation (Tüg) Ice-free areas in pack ice - The Northeast Water Polynya in the Greenland Sea (Budeus, Schneider, Kattner, Hirche) Exchange of deep water across the Greenland-Iceland-Scotland sills (Beckmann, Doscher) The large-scale distribution of inorganic carbon in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic (Hoppema, Fahrbach) Modelling the circulation under the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf (Determann, Cerdes, Crosfeld) Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf Programme (FRISP) (Oerter, Mayer, Hempel, Lambrecht, Nixdorf) Plate tectonics in the Bellingshausen Sea, Southeast Pacific (Cohl, Nitsche, Miller) Small-scale structures from multibeam bathymetry in the Weddell Sea (Schenke, Kuhn) Radiolarians as a paleothermometer in the Southern Ocean - reconstruction of climatic changes (Abelmann, Brathauer, Sieger) Sibiria: Region of origin for Arctic sediments (Rachold, Hoops, Hubberten) Late and postglacial vegetation and climate history of northern Central Siberia (Hahne, Harwart) SEPAN (Sediment and Paleoclimate Data Network) (Diepenbroek, Crobe, Reinke, Schlitzer, Sieger, Siems) 3. Reports by the Scientific Sections 3.1 Oceanic and atmospheric processes in polar regions 3.2 Modelling of ocean processes and circulation 3.3 Marine physics and instrument development 3.4 The bedrock of the polar regions in the Atlantic and the surrounding continental margin 3.5 Glaciology 3.6 Marine geology 3. 7 Marine ecosystem research and ecophysiology 3.8 Biological oceanography 3.9 Ceoscientific studies in ice-margin regions 3.10 Physics and chemistry of the polar atmosphere 3.11 Sea-ice research 3.12 The oceanic carbon cycle 4. Large equipment, expeditions and land-based stations 4.1 'Polarstern' 4.2 'Victor Hensen' 4.3 Polar Aircraft 4.4 Land Expeditions 4.5 Neumayer Station 4.6 Dallmannn Laboratory 4.7 Koldewey Station 4.8 Other small stations 5. Logistics 6. International and National Cooperation 6.1 National Cooperation 6.2 International Cooperation 7. Central Facilities 7.1 Computer Centre 7.2 Libraries 7.3 Public Relations 8. Personnel Structure and Budget Trends 8.1 Staff plan 8.2 Budget 8.3 On the Situation of Women at the AWl 9. Publications 9.1 Publications of the Institute 9.2 Publications of the Staff Annex I. Staff II. Scientific Events Ill. Completed Theses and Dissertations IV 'Polarstern' Expeditions , Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Einleitende Übersicht 2. Ausgewählte Forschungsthemen Vom sibirischen Schelf zur arktischen Tiefsee: Nahrungsverfügbarkeit und mikrobielle Aktivität am Meeresboden (Boetius, Damm, Nöthig) Zur Ökologie des sommerlichen Meereises (Gleitz, Kukert, Riebesell, Rutgers v. d. Loeff, Grossmann, Dieckmann) Temperaturphysiologie von marinen Invertebraten und Fischen (Hardewig, Sartoris, Sommer, van Dijk, Zielinski, Pörtner) Der "mehrstöckige" Lebensraum am Meeresboden der Antarktis (Gutt) Die bodennahe Luftströmung an der Neumayer-Station (Handorf) Die Simulation atmosphärischer Klimaprozesse über der Arktis (Dethloff, Rinke) Koordinierte Ozonsondierungen zur Bestimmung des Ozonabbaus im arktischen und subarktischen Winter (Rex, von der Gathen) Der Sonnenscheinsimulator (Tüg) Eisfreie Stellen im Packeis - Die Nordostwasser-Polynja in der Grönlandsee (Budeus, Schneider, Kattner, Hirche) Der Austausch von Tiefenwasser über die untermeerischen Schwellen zwischen Grönland und Schottland (Beckmann, Döscher) Die großräumige Verteilung des anorganischen Kohlenstoffs im atlantischen Sektor der Antarktis (Hoppema, Fahrbach) Modeliierung der Ozeanzirkulation unter dem Filchner-Ronne-Schelfeis (Determann, Gerdes, Grosfeld) Das Filchner- Ronne-Schelfeis-Projekt (Oerter, Mayer, Hempel, Lambrecht, Nixdorf) Die Plattentektonik des Bellingshausenmeeres (Gohl, Nitsche, Miller) Entdeckung neuer Strukturen auf dem Meeresboden des südlichen Weddellmeeres (Schenke, Kuhn) Radiolarien als Paläothermometer im Südpolarmeer (Abelmann, Brathauer, Sieger) Sibirien: Ursprungsregion arktischer Sedimente (Rachold, Hoops, Hubberten) Spät- und postglaziale Vegetations- und Klimageschichte des nördlichen Mittelsibiriens (Hahne, Harwart) Informationssystem SEPAN (Sediment and Paleoclimate Data Network) (Diepenbroek, Grobe, Reinke, Schlitzer, Sieger, Siems) 3. Berichte der wissenschaftlichen Arbeitsgruppen 3.1 Ozeanische und atmosphärische Prozesse in den Polargebieten 3.2 Modellierung von Prozessen und Zirkulationssystemen im Ozean 3.3 Meeresphysikalische Messungen und Instrumentenentwicklung 3.4 Der Untergrund der polaren Teile des Atlantik und seiner kontinentalen Umrandung 3.5 Glaziologie 3.6 Meeresgeologie 3.7 Marine Ökosystemforschung und Ökophysiologie (Sektion Biologie I) 3.8 Biologische Meereskunde (Sektion Biologie II) 3.9 Geowissenschaftliche Studien in Eisrandgebieten 3.10 Physik und Chemie der polaren A tmosphäre 3.11 Meereisforschung 3.12 Der Kohlenstoffkreislauf 4. Großgeräte, Expeditionen und Landstationen 4.1 "Polarstern" 4.2 "Victor Hensen" 4.3 Polarflugzeuge 4.4 Landexpeditionen 4.5 Neumayer-Station 4.6 Dallmann-Laboratorium 4.7 Koldewey-Station 4.8 Weitere kleine Stationen 5. Logistik 6. Internationale und nationale Zusammenarbeit 6.1 Nationale Zusammenarbeit 6.2 Internationale Zusammenarbeit 7. Zentrale Einrichtungen 7.1 Rechenzentrum 7.2 Bibliothek 7.3 Presse-und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit 8. Personeller Aufbau und HaushaItsentwicklung 8.1 Personal 8.2 Haushalt 8.3 Bericht der Frauenbeauftragten 9. Veröffentlichungen 9.1 Veröffentlichungen des Instituts 9.2 Veröffentlichungen der Mitarbeiter Anhang I. Personal II. Wissenschaftliche Veranstaltungen III. Abgeschlossene Examensarbeiten IV. "Polarstern"-Expeditionen
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  • 32
    Call number: AWI G6-19-92329
    In: UFZ-Bericht, 02/2005
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 173 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISSN: 0948-9452
    Series Statement: UFZ-Report 02/2005
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: Conference Programme. - Session 1: Contamination / Chairman: D. Hunkeler. - Compound-specific isotope methods in contaminant hydrogeology: State-of-the-art and challenges / D. Hunkeler, Y. Abe. - Stable isotope study of a volatile hydrocarbons contaminated landfill site, Bortfol, Switzerland / Thierry R. Oppikofer, Torsten W. Vennemann, Jorge E. Spangenberg, Markus Bill. - Application of compound-specific stable carbon and hydrogen isotope analysis to characterize organic contamination of groundwater / Jeroen Verhack, Jan Bronders, Ilse Van Keer, Rudy Swennen, Jan Schwarzbauer, Tom N.P. Bosma. - Evidences for in situ natural attenuation of Monochlorobenzene in an anaerobic contaminated aquifer / Ivonne Nijenhuis, Sylvia Uhlig, Arno Kaschl, Marcell Nikolausz, Matthias Kastner, Hans-Hermann Richnow. - Stable isotopes as expert witness in traffic accidents: assessing the likelihood between forensic samples of motor oils / Jorge E. Spangenberg, Georges Pierrini, Christophe Champod, Franco Taroni. - Isotopic investigation of dissolved and sedimentary sulfur compounds for assessing in-situ biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons in a sulfate rich urban aquifer / Kay Knoeller, Michael Schubert. - Tracing the impact of river bank filtration on the transport of xenobiotica in urban groundwater by stable isotopes / Karsten Osenbrück, Rolf Trettin, Kay Knoller, Gerhard Strauch, Hans-Reinhard Glaser, Monika Möder. - Effects of covering spoil piles on its water budget determined by environmental isotopes / Stephan M. Weise, Jutta Parnieske-Pasterkamp, Rene Vogt, Franziska Rudolph. - Session 2: Geochemistry & Water / Chairman: J. Hoefs. - Isotope fingerprints in the earth sciences: a critical discussion / Jochen Hoefs. - Stable isotope ratio measurements using the Finnigan NEPTUNE multi collector ICPMS using high mass resolution / Johannes Schwieters, Claudia Bouman. - The mineral isotope composition of two Precambrian carbotiatitc complexes from the Karelian - Kola region / Marion Tichomirowa, Gerhard Grosche, Boris Belyatski, Elena Savva, Jörg Keller, Jens Gotze, Wolfgang Todi. - Development of methods for recovery of water from fluid inclusions for stable isotope analysis / Yuri Dublyansky. - Determination of δD and δ18O in brackish and saline natural waters. Part I: The question of distillation of water samples prior to isotopic analysis / Adam Porowski, Peter Kowski. - Isotopic evidences for a new type of groundwater in the Kinnerct basin, Israel / C. Siebert, S. Geyer, P. Möller. - Geochemical and isotopic investigations of a fractured rock aquifer including embedded lakes / Elke Bozau, Gerhard Strauch. - High spatial resolution sulfur isotope analysis of sulfide minerals from the Kupferschiefer deposits of Lubin area, SW Poland / H. Roy Krouse, Jan Parafiniuk, Jaroslaw Nowak, Stan Halas. - Stable isotope composition of daily and monthly precipitation in Zagreb / Jadranka Barešic, Nada Horvatincic, Ines Krajcar Bronic, Bogomil Obelic. - Geochemical investigations of the dissolved gases in the Boom Clay pore water / Sándor Kele, Hugo Moors, Maarten Van Geet, Mieke De Craen, Staf Valkiers, Mihai Variant. - The water isotopes use for determination of water origin in karstic areas: case study / Victor Feurdean, Lucia Feurdean, Ion Stefanescu, Carmen Varlam, Mihai Gligan. - Concentration and separation of uranium and thorium from sediment in north Algerian Sahara using organophosphorus extractant and ions exchange resin / A. W. Badreddine, H. Brahimi, F. Boucheneb. - Session 3: Ecology / Chairman: L. Waasenaar. - Global application of stable hydrogen isotopes to wildlife forensics / Leonard l. Wassenaar, Keith A. Hobson, Gabriel J. Bowen. - Nitrogen isotope ratios as indicator of organic production / Hilmar Forstel, Angelika Basu, Markus Boner. - Effects of clear cutting and soil preparation on natural 15N abundance and N concentration in the needle and soil of two boreal conifer tree species / S. P. Sah, H. llvesniemi. - Carbon isotopes distribution along pine needles (Pinus nigra) / Lidia Barszczowska, Mariusz-Orion Jedrysek. - Potential of natural fouling communities for assimilation offish farm derived particulate nitrogen: a case study in Gulf of Aqaba (Red Sea) / Sonja Lojen, Timor Katz, Anat Tsemel, Ehud Spanier, Dror L. Angel. - CO2 concentration and δ13C through time in sets of monthly air samples from downtown Parma and from the Parma and Taro river valleys, Italy / Antonio Longinelli. - Carbon isotope discrimination affected by atmospheric pollutants / Ralf Wagner. - Turnover of soil organic carbon - The microbial perspective / Christiane Kramer & Gerd Gleixner. - C and O isotope working standards from C3 and C4 photosynthates / Jorge E. Spangenberg. - Use of 15N tracer technique to understand chronic responses of Daphnia magna after shortterm expose to the pyrethroid insecticide fenvalerate / Sebastian Reynaldi, Matthias Liess, Klaus Jung. - Anthropogenic lakes - negligible sources for climate relevant gases? / Horst-Michael Nitzsche, Frank W. Junge. - Effects of environmental factors on δ13C of lichens / Stela Maria Cuna, Gabriela Balas, Elza Hauer. - Online measurement of N2-fluxes from soil cores by using the zeolite KÖSTROLITH SX6® coupled to a GC-ConFlow-IRMS / O. Spott, B. Apelt, R. Russow, C. F. Stange. - Deuterium content in plants with short lifetime: preliminary results / Victor Feurdean, Lucia Feurdean, Silviu Apahidean, Maria Apahidean, Augusta Lujerdean, Mihai Gligan. - Session 4: Sedimentology / Chairman: M. E. Böttcher. - Authigenic sulfur phases as recorders for black shale-triggered anaerobic oxidation of methane: Results from ODP Leg 207 / M.E. Böttcher, H.-J. Brumsack, A. Hetzel, A. Schipper. - Microbially-derived methane in coalbed gases: compound-specific carbon-isotopic study of coalbed gases from the Illinois Basin, USA / D. Strapoc, A. Schimmelmann, M. Mastalerz. - Early diagenesis of sulphur in recent estuarine sediments (Authie Bay, N France) / Sonja Lojen, Nevenka Mikac, Cedric Gabelle, Michel Wartel. - Sulfur and oxygen isotopes of Lower Miocene nonmarine evaporites in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin / S. Halas, T.M. Peryt, I. Pluta. - Ordovician and Silurian carbon isotope trend: a state of art report based on the East Baltic data / Tonu Martma, Dimitri Kaljo. - Variations of δ13 CTOC values of clastic sediments from Thuringia related to biogeochemical carbon cycle / Karin Bräuer, Knut Hahne, Birgit Mingram, Ulrich Wand. - Basin-Scale changes in Upper Cretaceous paleosols: paleoenvironmentai implication for the Maastricht deposits, South Carpathians / Ana-Voica Bojar, Dan Grigorescu, Franz Ottner, Zoltan Csiki. - Carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen isotope fractionation during experimental formation of pirssonite / M. E. Böttcher, S.M. Bernasconi, K. Simon. - Carbon isotope fractionation of methane and CO2 during coalbed gas desorption from coal, Illinois Basin, USA / D. Strapoc, A. Schimmelmann, M Mastahrz. - Carbon istopic preliminary studies on paleoenvironmentai variations recorded in the Lower Carboniferous deposits from the Bardzkie Mountains (Sudetes, SW Poland) / Monika Majewska-Bill, Mariusz Orion Jedrysek. - Session 5: Paleoclimatology / Chairman: G. H. Schleser. - Stable isotopes as proxies for the reconstruction of past climates / G.H. Schleser. - A stable isotope record of an ice core from Akadumii Nauk ice cap, Severnaya Zemlya, Russian Arctic / Diedrich Fritzsche, Rainer Schütt, Hanno Meyer, Heinrich Miller, Frank Wilhelms, Lev M. Savatyugin. - Stable isotope investigations on tree-ring cellulose of Late Glacial pine chronology of Reichwakie (Lusatia). Effects caused by destruction of fossil woods / M. Haupt, R. Wagner, T. Boettger. - Effect of river regulation on the isotopic characteristics of river water and molluscs / István Fórizs. - Stable isotope study on the carbonate phases of the Basahare toess-paleosol profile (Hungary) / Bernadett Bajnó
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  • 33
    Call number: AWI Bio-19-92359
    In: Special publications : ESA SP / European Space Agency, 1299
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: VII, 200 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 92-9092-393-8
    ISSN: 0379-6566
    Series Statement: Special publications : ESA SP / European Space Agency 1299
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Foreword Introduction / Charles Cockell, Gerda Horneck 1. Mars Simulations - Past Studies on the Biological Response to Simulated Martian Conditions / Aviaja Anna Hansen 2. Possible Atmospheric and UV Conditions on Mars in the Past - Biological Implications / H. Lammer, Yu. N. Kulikov 3. The Microbial Case for Mars and its Implication for Human Expeditions to Mars / Gerda Horneck 4. Response of Organics to Simulated Martian Conditions / J.R.C. Garry, I.L. ten Kate, P. Ehrenfreund, B.H. Foing 5. Mars Simulation Experiments with Complex Microbial Soil Communities / Kai Finster, Aviaja A. Hansen, Lars Liengaard, Karina Mikkelsen, Tommy Kristoffersen, Jonathan Merrison, Per Nornberg, Bente Aa.Lomstein 6. Fungi From Antarctic Desert Rocks as Analogues for Martian Life / S. Onofri, L. Zucconi, L. Selbmann, G. S. de Hoog, D. Barreca, S. Ruisi, M. Grube 7. The Response of Bacillus Subtilis to Simulated Martian Conditions and to the Space Environment / Petra Rettberg 8. Photosynthetic Organisms on Mars - Prospects and Limitations / Charles S. Cockell, Andrew C. Schuerger, Daniela Billi, E. Imre Friedmann, Corinna Panitz 9. Viable Haloarchaea from Ancient Salt Sediments and their Response to Simulated Mars Conditions / Helga Stan-Lotter, Sergiu Fendrihan 10. Response of Methanogenic Archaea from Siberian Permafrost to Martian Thermophysical Conditions / Daria Morozova, Diedrich Mohlmann, Dirk Wagner 11. Adaptation of the Lichen Rhizocarpon Geographicum to Harsh High-Altitude Conditions: Relevance to a Habitable Mars / Rosa de la Torre, Leopoldo Garcia-Sancho, Gerda Horneck 12. Photosynthetic Life Support Systems in the Martian Conditions / Kirsi Lehto, Eira Kanervo, Kurt Stahle, Harry Lehto, Milja Tammi, Joni Virtanen 13. Photo-Catalytic Redox-Processes and Adsorption Water on Mars / Chr. Jung, D. Mohlmann, Chr. Sattler, R. Staudt, M. Weeks 14. Design, Building and Applications of a Portable Martian UV Simulator / C. Kolb, R. Abart, A. Berces, J.R.C. Garry, A. A. Hansen, W. Hohenau, G. Kargl, H. Lammer, MR. Patel, P. Rettberg, H. Stan-Lotter 15. Raman Spectroscopic Analysis of Extremophilic Organisms Under Martian Conditions / Howell G. M. Edwards
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  • 34
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Bern : Schweizerische Kommission für Polarforschung SKP
    Call number: AWI P7-20-93625
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 4, 4,IV Seiten , Illustrationen , 1 Beilage
    Language: German , French
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  • 35
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92931
    In: Glacier mass balance bulletin, No. 8
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 100 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Glacier mass balance bulletin 8
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS 1 INTRODUCTION 2 BASIC INFORMATION 2.1 SUMMARY TABLE (NET BALANCE, ELA, ELA0, AAR, AAR0) 2.2 CUMULATIVE SPECIFIC NET BALANCE GRAPHS 3 DETAILED INFORMATION 3.1 GLACIAR BAHIA DEL DIABLO (ANTARCTICA) 3.1.1 Topography and observational network 3.1.2 Net balance maps 2001/02 and 2002/03 3.1.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.1.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.2 MARTIAL ESTE (ARGENTINA) 3.2.1 Topography and observational network 3.2.2 Net balance maps 2001/02 and 2002/03 3.2.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.2.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.3 VERNAGTFERNER (AUSTRIA) 3.3.1 Topography and observational network 3.3.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.3.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.3.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.4 ZONGO (BOLIVIA) 3.4.1 Topography and observational network 3.4.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.4.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.4.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.5 WHITE (CANADA) 3.5.1 Topography and observational network 3.5.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.5.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.5.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.6 URUMQIHE S. NO. 1 (CHINA) 3.6.1 Topography and observational network 3.6.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.6.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.6.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.7 FONTANA BIANCA (ITALY) 3.7.1 Topography and observational network 3.7.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.7.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.7.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.8 TSENTRALNIY TUYUKSUYSKIY (KAZAKHSTAN) 3.8.1 Topography and observational network 3.8.2 Net balance map (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.8.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.8.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.9 NIGARDSBREEN (NORWAY) 3.9.1 Topography and observational network 3.9.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.9.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.9.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.10 WALDEMARBREEN (NORWAY) 3.10.1 Topography and observational network 3.10.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.10.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.10.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.11 DJANKUAT (RUSSIA) 3.11.1 Topography and observational network 3.11.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.11.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.11.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.12 MALIY AKTRU (RUSSIA) 3.12.1 Topography and observational network 3.12.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.12.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.12.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 3.13 STORGLACIÄREN (SWEDEN) 3.13.1 Topography and observational network 3.13.2 Net balance maps (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.13.3 Net balance versus altitude (2001/02 and 2002/03) 3.13.4 Accumulation area ratio (AAR) and equilibrium line altitude (ELA) versus specific net balance for the whole observation period 4 FINAL REMARKS AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 5 PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATORS AND NATIONAL CORRESPONDENTS 5.1 PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATORS 5.2 NATIONAL CORRESPONDENTS OF WGMS
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  • 36
    Call number: AWI A3-20-93434-2
    In: Meteorologische Abhandlungen / Institut für Meteorologie und Geophysik der Freien Universität Berlin, Band XXXII, Heft 2
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 218 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Meteorologische Abhandlungen / Institut für Meteorologie und Geophysik der Freien Universität Berlin 32,2
    Language: German
    Note: Zugleich: Dissertation, Freie Unversität Berlin, [ca. 1963] , INHALTSVERZEICHNIS PROBLEMSTELLUNG UND ZIELSETZUNG 1. BEMERKUNGEN ZUM BEOBACHTUNGSGELÄNDE UND ZUM BEOBACHTUNGSMATERIAL 1.1 Das Beobachtungsgelände 1.2 Das Beobachtungsmaterial 2. HOMOGENITÄTSBETRACHTUNGEN 2.1 Temperatur 2.2 Niederschlag 2.3 Wind 2.4 Sonnenschein und Bewölkung 3. TEMPERATURVERHÄLTNISSE 3.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 3.2 Tageswerte 3.3 Pentadenwerte 3.4 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 3.5 Interdiurne Veränderlichkeit 3.6 Der tägliche Gang 3.7 Vorkommen bestimmter Schwellenwerte 3.71 Frost- und Eistage 3.72 Sommer- und Tropentage 4. DER WASSERGEHALT DER LUFT 4.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 4.2 Tageswerte 4.3 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 4.4 Interdiurne Veränderlichkeit 4.5 Der tägliche Gang 5. BEWÖLKUNGSVERHÄLTNISSE 5.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 5.2 Tageswerte 5.3 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 5.4 Der tägliche Gang 5.5 Heitere und trübe Tage 5.6 Nebel 6. SONNENSCHEIN 6.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 6.2 Tageswerte 6.3 Der tägliche Gang 7. NIEDERSCHLAGSVERHÄLTNISSE 7.1 Monats- und Jahreswerte 7.2 Niederschlagsbereitschaft 7.3 Tageswerte 7.4 Der tägliche Gang 7.5 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 7.6 Niederschlags- und Trockenperioden 7.7 Niederschlag und Wind· 7.8 Schneeverhältnisse 7.81 Schneefall und Schneedecke 7.82 Schneehöhe 7.9 Gewitter 8. WINDVERHÄLTNISSE 8.1 Windrichtung 8.2 Windgeschwindigkeit 8.21 Der jährliche Gang 8.22 Häufigkeitsbetrachtungen 8.23 Sturmtage und Windstillen 8.24 Der tägliche Gang 9.ZUSAMMENFASSUNG VERZEICHNIS DER TEXTTABELLEN VERZEICHNIS DER ABBILDUNGEN LITERATURVERZEICHNIS TABELLENANHANG
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  • 37
    Dissertations
    Dissertations
    Potsdam : Universität Potsdam
    Call number: AWI G3-22-94736
    Type of Medium: Dissertations
    Pages: IX, 190 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: Dissertation, Universität Potsdam, 2008 , Table of contents Kurzfassung Abstract Chapter 1: Introduction 1.1 Scientific background 1.1.1 Arctic environmental dynamics 1.1.2 Freshwater ostracods and their use in palaeoenvironmental studies 1.1.3 Permafrost and periglacial environment 1.2 Aims and approaches 1.3 Study region 1.3.1 Study sites 1.3.2 Geological characteristics 1.3.3 Climate 1.3.4 Periglacial freshwaters 1.4 Synopsis Chapter 2: Arctic freshwater ostracods from modern periglacial environments in the Lena River Delta (Siberian Arctic, Russia): geochemical applications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions 2.1 Abstract 2.2 Introduction 2.3 Study area and types of water bodies 2.4 Materials and methods 2.5 Results 2.5.1 Physico-chemical characteristics of the ostracod habitats 2.5.2 Ostracod taxonomy and environmental ranges of their habitats 2.5.3 Ostracod geochemistry 2.6 Discussion 2.6.1 Taxonomy and ecology of ostracods 2.6.2 Element ratios in ostracods and ambient waters 2.6.3 Stable isotopes in ostracods and ambient waters 2.7 Conclusions Chapter 3: Evaporation effects as reflected in freshwaters and ostracod calcite from modern environments in Central and Northeast Yakutia (East Siberia, Russia) 3.1 Abstract 3.2 Introduction 3.3 Study area 3.4 Material and methods 3.4.1 Field work 3.4.2 Water analyses 3.4.3 Ostracod analyses 3.5 Results 3.5.1 Physico-chemical characteristics of the lakes and ponds 3.5.2 Ostracod taxonomy and environmental ranges 3.5.3 Stable isotopes in host waters and ostracod calcite 3.5.4 Element ratios in host waters and ostracod calcite 3.6 Discussion 3.6.1 Physico-chemical characteristics of the lakes and ponds 3.6.2 Ostracod taxonomy, biogeography, and environmental ranges 3.6.3 Stable isotopes in ostracod calcite 3.6.4 Element ratios in ostracod calcite 3.7 Conclusions Chapter 4: Eemian and Late Glacial/Holocene palaeoenvironmental records from permafrost sequences at the Dimitri Laptev Strait (NE Siberia, Russia) 4.1 Abstract 4.2 Introduction 4.3 Regional setting 4.4 Material and methods 4.4.1 Field methods and cryolithology 4.4.2 Geochronology 4.4.3 Sedimentology and stable isotopes 4.4.4 Palaeoecological proxies 4.5 Results 4.5.1 Geochronology, lithostratigraphy, sedimentology, and cryolithology 4.5.1.1 Eemian sequences 4.4.1.2 Late Glacial/Holocene sequences 4.5.2 Stable isotope ground ice records 4.5.3 Pollen studies 4.5.3.1 Eemian sequences 4.5.3.2 Late Glacial/Holocene sequences 4.5.4 Ostracod studies 4.5.4.1 Eemian sequences 4.5.4.2 Late Glacial/Holocene sequences 4.6 Discussion and Interpretation 4.6.1 Local palaeoenvironmental changes during the Eemian 4.6.2 Local palaeoenvironmental changes during the Late Glacial/Holocene 4.6.3 Palaeoenvironmental interpretation of ostracod calcite δ18O data 4.7 Conclusions Chapter 5: Synthesis 5.1 Taxonomy and ecology of ostracods 5.2 Geochemistry of ostracods 5.3 Indicator potential of freshwater ostracods in late Quaternary permafrost deposits 5.4 Outlook Appendix I: Freshwater ostracodes in Quaternary permafrost deposits in the Siberian Arctic I.1 Abstract I.2 Introduction I.3 Study area and geological background I.4 Materials and methods I.5 Results and interpretations I.5.1 Ostracode zone I I.5.2 Ostracode zone II I.5.3 Ostracode zone III I.5.4 Ostracode zone IV I.5.5 Ostracode zone V I.5.6 Ostracode zone VI I.6 Conclusions 125 Appendix II: Palaeoenvironmental dynamics inferred from late Quaternary permafrost deposits on Kurungnakh Island, Lena Delta, Northeast Siberia, Russia II.1 Abstract II.2 Introduction II.3 Regional setting II.4 Material and methods II.4.1 Sedimentology and cryolithology II.4.2 Geochronology II.4.3 Stable isotopes II.3.4 Palaeoecological proxies II.5 Results II.5.1 Lithostratigraphy, sedimentology, and cryolithology II.5.1.1 Unit I II.5.1.2 Unit II II.5.1.3 Unit III II.5.1.4 Unit IV II.5.1.5 Unit V II.5.2 Geochronology II.5.3 Oxygen and hydrogen stable isotopes of ground ice II.5.4 Palynological studies II.5.5 Plant macrofossils II.5.6 Ostracod remains II.5.7 Insect remains II.5.8 Mammal remains II.6 Discussion II.6.1 Local stratigraphic and palaeoenvironmental interpretation II.6.2 Beringian palaeoenvironmental context II.7 Conclusions Supplementary data A Supplementary data B Supplementary data C Appendix III: Data tables from Chapters 2 and 3 Appendix IV: References Acknowledgements
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  • 38
    Call number: AWI G3-22-94742
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 323, [10] Seiten , Illustrationen , 25 cm
    ISBN: 978-5-02-023245-7 , 9785020232457
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 39
    Call number: ZSP-119-10
    In: Altenburger naturwissenschaftliche Forschungen, Heft 10
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 56 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Altenburger naturwissenschaftliche Forschungen 10
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt 1. Einleitung 2. Gebirge und Berge 3. Kurzer Überblick zur Geologie Sachsens 4. Die ertrunkenen „Inselberge" des Tief- und Hügellandes und Entsprechungen im Erzgebirge 5. Tertiärer Vulkanismus und berühmte Berge Sachsens 6. Schichtkämme und -rücken auf der Rumpffläche des Varistischen Gebirges mit Konvergenzen zur tertiären „Inselberg"-Formation 6.1. Der Collmberg-Schichtkamm 6.2. Schichtkämme und -rücken aus kulmischer und präkamabrischer Grauwacke und Rothsteiner Kieselschiefer 7. Rochlitzer Berg - Rest eines vulkanischen Tuffkegels der Rotliegendzeit 8. Elbsandsteingebirge Zusammenfassung Literatur
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  • 40
    Call number: AWI Bio-21-94361
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 601 Seiten , Illustrationen , 26 cm
    ISBN: 094873745x
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Introduction Acknowledgements Classification of British diatoms New combinations References Description of plates Index to the genera and plates
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  • 41
    Call number: AWI G5-22-94865
    Description / Table of Contents: Работа посвящена геологическому и палеонтологическому обоснованию возрастного расчленения палеогеновых и неогеновых отложений востока Сибирской платформы. Обобщен фактический материал, полученный за последние 25 лет по стратиграфии палеоген-неогеновых отложений востока Сибирской платформы. Впервые составлена схема структурно-фациального районирования региона. В 8 районах детально охарактеризовано 25 сводных разрезов (колонок). Выделено 6 региональных горизонтов (5 из них впервые). Для всех стратиграфических подразделений наряду с литологическими и параметрическими данными даются полная палеонтологическая и палеомагнитная характеристики. Проведены региональная и межрегиональная корреляции. Схема рекомендуется в качестве основы для геологической съемки среднего и крупного масштабов, геолого-поисковых и геологоразведочных работ, также разноплановых палеогеографических реконструкций.
    Description / Table of Contents: Translation of the abstract: The work is devoted to the geological and paleontological substantiation of the age division of the Paleogene and Neogene deposits of the east of the Siberian Platform. The factual material obtained over the past 25 years from the stratigraphy of Paleogene-Neogene deposits in the east of the Siberian Platform is summarized. For the first time, a scheme of structural-facies zoning of the region was drawn up. In 8 regions, 25 summary sections (columns) were characterized in detail. 6 regional horizons were identified (5 of them for the first time). For all stratigraphic units, along with lithological and parametric data, complete paleontological and paleomagnetic characteristics are given. Conducted regional and interregional correlations. The scheme is recommended as a basis for geological surveys of medium and large scales, geological prospecting and exploration works, as well as diverse paleogeographic reconstructions.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 20 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 5-463-00131-6
    Language: Russian
    Note: СОДЕРЖАНИЕ Постановление Межведомственного стратиграфического комитета о региональной стратиграфической схеме палеогеновых и неогеновых отложений востока Сибирской платформы Введение 1. Основные новые материалы 2. Общая стратиграфическая шкала 3. Магнитостратиграфическая шкала (полярность) 4. Региональные стратиграфические подразделения 5. Корреляция местных стратиграфических разрезов 6. Вновь установленные стратиграфические подразделения 7. Стратиграфические схемы смежных регионов 8. Основные задачи дальнейших исследований Заключение Список литературы Памяти О.В. Гриненко , In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 42
    Call number: AWI G4-22-95044
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 145 Seiten , Illustrationen , 23 cm
    ISBN: 3728125768 (kart.)
    Series Statement: Schlußbericht NFP 31
    Language: German
    Note: Inhaltsverzeichnis Zusammenfassung Résumé Summary 1 Einführung 1.1 Hydrologie des Gebirgswaldes im Winter 1.2 Arbeitshypothesen 1.3 Methodischer Ansatz 2 Standorte und Methoden 2.1 Standortwahl 2.2 Untersuchungsstandorte und deren Instrumentierung 2.2.1 Testfläche Davos 2.2.2 Testfläche Alptal 2.3 Verarbeitung der Bilder zur Schneeinterzeption 2.4 Modellierung des Wasser- und Wärmehaushaltes 2.4.1 Modellbeschrieb 2.4.2 Modellanwendung und Klimaszenarien 3 Ergebnisse der Feldmessungen 3.1 Winterverläufe in Davos und im Alptal 3.1.1 Davos 1993/94 3.1.2 Davos 1992/93 3.1.3 Alptal 1993/94 3.1.4 Standort vergleich des Interzeptionsverhaltens 3.1.5 Standortvergleich des Abflussverhaltens 3.2 Einzelereignisse im Alptal und in Davos 3.2.1 Testfläche Alptal 3.2.2 Testfläche Davos 3.3 Wassertransport in der Waldschneedecke 3.4 Zusammenfassung der Feldbeobachtungen 4 Ergebnisse der Modellsimulationen 4.1 Modellkalibrierung 4.1.1 Baumfläche Davos - Winter 1992/93 95 4.1.2 Baumfläche Alptal - Winter 1993/94 und Sommer 1994 4.2 Modelltest 4.2.1 Baurnfläche Davos - Winter 1993/94 4.2.2 Lichtungsfläche Davos - Winter 1993/94 4.3 Simulationen mit heutigen und veränderten Klimabedingungen 4.3.1 Vergleich des gemessenen und stochastisch simulierten Wetters 4.3.2 Auswirkungen einer Klimaänderung in Davos 4.3.3 Auswirkungen einer Klimaänderung im Alptal 4.4 Zusammenfassung der Modellergebnisse 5 Schlussbemerkungen Abbildungsverzeichnis Tabellenverzeichnis Literaturverzeichnis , Zusammenfassung in französischer und englischer Sprache
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  • 43
    Call number: AWI G3-22-94842-1
    In: Advances in hillslope processes, Volume 1
    In: British Geomorphological Research Group symposia series
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVIII, 683 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 0-471-96774-2
    Series Statement: Advances in hillslope processes 1
    Language: German
    Note: Contents List of Contributors Foreword / R. J. Chorley Section 1 INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 Hillslope Processes: Research Prospects / M. G. Anderson and S. M. Brooks Section 2 HILLSLOPE HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES Chapter 2 An Evolving Perceptual Model of Hillslope Flow at the Maimai Catchment / D. D. Brammer and J. J. McDonnell Chapter 3 Runoff and Erosion from a Rapidly Eroding Pinyon-Juniper Hill slope / B. P. Wilcox, J. Pitlick, C. D. Allen and D. W. Davenport Chapter 4 Time-Dependent Changes in Soil Properties and Surface Runoff Generation / T. P. Burt and M. C. Slattery Chapter 5 Hydrological Impact of a High-Magnitude Rainfall Event / R. Evans Chapter 6 Short-term Hydrological Response of Soil Water and Groundwater to Rainstorms in a Deciduous Forest Hillslope, Georgia, USA / E. B. Ratcliffe, N. E. Peters and M. Tranter Chapter 7 Modelling the Influence of Afforestation on Hillslope Storm Runoff / T. J. A. Davie Section 3 HILLSLOPE SOLUTE PROCESSES Chapter 8 Movement of Water and Solutes from Agricultural Land: The Effects of Artificial Drainage / A. C. Armstrong and G. L. Harris Chapter 9 Nitrogen and Phosphorous Flows from Agricultural Hillslopes / K. W. T. Goulding, L. S. Matchett, G. Heckrath, C. P. Webster, P. C. Brookes and T. P. Burt Chapter 10 Phosphorus Fractionation in Hillslope Hydrological Pathways Contributing to Agricultural Runoff / R. M. Dils and A. L. Heathwaite Chapter 11 Nutrient Cycling in Upland Catchment Areas: The Significance of Organic Forms of N and P / A. C. Edwards, M. D. Ron Vaz, S. Porter and L. Ebbs Chapter 12 Identification of Critical Source Areas for Phosphorus Export from Agricultural Catchments / W. J. Gburek, A. N. Sharpley and H. B. Pionke Chapter 13 Pathways and Forms of Phosphorus Losses from Grazed Grassland Hillslopes / P. M. Haygarth and S. C. Jarvis Chapter 14 Modelling the Solute Uptake Component of Hillslope Hydrochemistry: Are Flow Times and Path Lengths Important during Mineral Dissolution? / S. Trudgill, J. Ball and B. Rawlins Section 4 SOIL PROCESSES ON HILLSLOPES Chapter 15 The Influence of Slope on the Nature and Distribution of Soils and Plant Communities in the Central Brazilian cerrado / P.A. Furfey Chapter 16 Nitrous Oxide Emissions from a Range of Soil-Plant and Drainage Conditions in Belize / R. M. Rees, K. Castle, J. R. M. Arah and P. A. Furfey Chapter 17 A Soil-Landscape Continuum on a Three-Dimensional Hillslope, Quantock Hills, Somerset / S. J. Park, T. P. Burt and P. A. Bull Chapter 18 Modern Fluvial Processes on a Macroporous Drift-Covered Cavernous Limestone Hillslope, Castleton, Derbyshire, UK / P. Hardwick and J. Gunn Chapter 19 Examining the Factors Controlling the Spatial Scale of Variation in Soil Redistribution Processes from Southwest Niger / A. Chappell, M.A. Oliver, A. Warren, C. T. Agnew and M. Charlton Chapter 20 Variations in Tree Communities and Soils with Slope in Gallery Forest, Federal District, Brazil / M. C. da Silva Junior, P. A. Furfey and J. A. Ratter Chapter 21 The Significance of Soil Profile Differentiation to Hydrological Response and Slope Instability: A Modelling Approach / S. M. Brooks and A. J. C. Collison Section 5 SOIL EROSION ON HILLSLOPES Chapter 22 Soil Erosion by Water: Problems and Prospects for Research / J. Boardman Chapter 23 The Particle-Size Selectivity of Sediment Mobilization from Devon Hillslopes / P. M. Stone and D. E. Walling Chapter 24 Shifts in Rates and Spatial Distributions of Soil Erosion and Deposition under Climate Change / D. T. Favis-Mort/ock and M. R. Savabi Chapter 25 Simulation of Radiocaesium Redistribution on Cultivated Hillslopes using a Mass-Balance Model: An Aid to Process Interpretation and Erosion Rate Estimation / T. A. Quine, D. E. Walling and G. Govers Chapter 26 Erosional Response to Variations in Interstorm Weathering Conditions / R. Bryan Chapter 27 Field Studies of Runoff Processes on Restored Land in South Wales and the Design of Channels for Erosion Control / R. A. Hodgkinson and A. C. Armstrong Chapter 28 On the Complexity of Sediment Delivery in Fluvial Systems: Results from a Small Agricultural Catchment, North Oxfordshire, UK / M. C. Slattery and T. P. Burt Chapter 29 Verification of the European Soil Erosion Model (EUROSEM) for Varying Slope and Vegetation Conditions / R. P. C. Morgan Chapter 30 Validation Problems of Hydrologic and Soil-Erosion Catchment Models: Examples from a Dutch Erosion Project / A. P. J. De Roo
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  • 44
    Call number: AWI P5-23-95010
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VI, 54 Seiten , Illustrationen , 28 cm
    Language: English
    Note: Table of Contents Foreword The Global Context The Arctic in a Global Context The ARCSS Program The Arctic System Science (ARCSS) Program The Scientific Goals of the ARCSS Program ARCSS Objectives Significant Research and Findings of the ARCSS Program ARCSS Program Research Implementation of ARCSS Program Research ARCSS Program Components Paleoenvironmental Studies Greenland Ice Sheet Project Two (GISP2) Paleoclimates of Arctic Lakes and Estuaries (PALE) Ocean-Atmosphere-Ice Interactions (OAII) Land-Atmosphere-Ice Interactions (LAII) Integrative Studies Synthesis, Integration, and Modeling Studies (SIMS) New Initiatives Human Dimensions of the Arctic System (HARC) Russian-American Initiative on Shelf-Land Environments in the Arctic (RAISE) International Collaboration The Future of the ARCSS Program Priorities for the Future Research Questions Integrative Strategies Community Coordination and Integration Coordination and Integration Logistics Support Working with Arctic Residents Community Planning and Science Management ARCSS Committee Science Steering Committees Periodic Meetings of ARCSS Principal Investigators Appendices ARCSS Program Contact Information A History of ARCSS Program Development ARCSS Data Protocol References and Relevant Reports Contributors and Reviewers
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  • 45
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Ås : Agricultural University of Norway, Department of Soil and Water Sciences
    Call number: AWI G3-23-95008
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: viii, 136 Seiten , Illustrationen , 24 cm
    ISBN: 82-575-0394-0 , 8257503940
    ISSN: 0802-3220
    Series Statement: Doctor scientiarum theses / Norges Landbruskhøgskole 1999:19
    Language: English
    Note: Zugleich: Dissertation, Norges landbrukshøgskole, 1999 , Englisch
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  • 46
    Call number: AWI G4-23-95153
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 328 Seiten in getrennter Zählung , Illustrationen , 21 cm
    ISBN: 3859772228 (kart.) , 3-85977-222-8
    Series Statement: Basler Beiträge zur Physiogeographie. Physiogeographica Band 23
    Language: German
    Note: Zugleich: Dissertation, Universität Basel, 1996 , Inhaltsverzeichnis Abbildungsverzeichnis Tabellenverzeichnis 1 Einleitung 1.1 Das Gesamtprojekt 1.2 Das Expeditionsgebiet 1.3 Stand der Forschung im Expeditionsgebiet 1.4 Das Teilprojekt „Geoökosysteme" der Forschungsgruppe Polarökologie Basel (FPB) 1.5 Das Kompartiment Nährstoff- und Wasserhaushalt im Boden: Problemstellung und Zielsetzung der Arbeit 2 Das Arbeitsgebiet am Liefdefjorden: Das Kvikkåa-Einzugsgebiet 2.1 Lage und Abgrenzung 2.2 Übersicht über die Geoökofaktoren im Arbeitsgebiet: Geologische Verhältnisse, Georelief, Klima, Boden, Gewässer und Vegetation 2.3 Die fünf Geoökologischen Raumeinheiten - repräsentiert durch die Geoökosystem-Parameter an den Tesserae für die Jahre 1990-1992 3 Arbeitsmethodik und Datenaufbereitung 3.1 Ablauf und Struktur der Geländearbeit 3.2 Konzept und Prinzip der Meßstellen 3.3 Erfassung des Bodenwasserchemismus 3.3.1 Bodenwassergewinnung mittels Saugkerzen 3.3.2 Probenbehandlung und Laboranalyse 3.3.3 Datenverarbeitung 3.4 Erfassung der Bodensaugspannung 3.4.1 Tensiometer-Methodik 3.4.2 Datenanalyse und Datendarstellung 3.5 Vorfluterproben 3.6 Zusammenfassung 4 Die geoökologische Methodik in der Hocharktis: Eine statistische Betrachtung 4.1 Räumliche und saisonale Variabilität 4.1.1 Die „sub"topische Dimension - die Grundstruktur des ,,Meßgartens" 4.1.2 Die topische Dimension - die Tessera in ihrer Geoökologischen Raumeinheit 96 4.1.3 Die fünf Landschaftsökologischen Standorte und ihre Repräsentativität für das Einzugsgebiet 4.2 Die tägliche Variabilität des Bodenwasserchemismus - oder die Frage nach der zeitlichen Auflösung der Probennahmen 4.3 Zusammenfassung 5 Nährstoff- und Wasserhaushalt im Kvikkåa-Einzugsgebiet am Liefdefjorden 5.1 Die Nährstoffsituation im Vorfluter 5.2 Die Nährstoffsituation im Bodenwasser 5.2.1 Horizontale Gebietsdifferenzierung - repräsentiert durch die Tesserae (Tl 1-Tl5) 5.2.2 Vertikale Differenzierung - repräsentiert durch die Probenentnahmetiefen (10, 20, 30 cm) 5.2.3 Der saisonale Verlauf der Nährstoffe im Bodenwasser 5.2.4 Zusammenfassung 5.3 Die Bedeutung des Nährstoffuaushaltes der Bodenlösung für das Ökosystem - eine zusammenfassende Diskussion 6 Zusammenfassung 6.1 Fazit zur angewandten Saugkerzen-Methodik 6.2 Fazit zur statistischen Betrachtung der räumlichen und zeitlichen Variabilität 6.3 Fazit zum Nährstoff- und Wasserhaushalt im Kvikkåa-Einzugsgebiet 7 Schlußbetrachtungen 8 Literaturverzeichnis Summary Anhang
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  • 47
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    [Braunschweig] : Westermann
    Call number: AWI G10-23-95154
    Description / Table of Contents: Dieses Buch ist eine Einführung in die Bodengeographie und wendet sich an Schüler und Lehrer, Studierende und an interessierte Leser ohne größere Vorkenntnisse. Es wurde weitgehend auf die Ergebnisdarstellung differenzierter Bodenanalysen verzichtet. An dieser Stelle sei aber darauf hingewiesen, dass das heutige Wissen auf den Entbehrungen und Mühen vieler Kollegen sowohl im Gelände als auch im Labor aufbaut. Nach einer kurzen Einführung in die bodenkundlichen Grundlagen und die gebräuchlichsten Bodenklassifikationssysteme werden (Poly-)Genese und Verbreitung der Böden der Erde behandelt. Nutzungsaspekte und andere menschliche Einflüsse werden angerissen, jedoch nicht vertieft. Das Buch ersetzt damit nicht weiterführende bodenkundliche Literatur, auf die an vielen Stellen verwiesen wird. Auf Wechselwirkungen zwischen Pedosphäre und Atmosphäre wird hingewiesen. Dies geschieht unter Berücksichtigung aktueller Diskussionen um die Entwicklung des Klimas der Erde. Damit kommt das Buch einem Wunsch nach Interdisziplinarität nach, der von vielen Studierenden geäußert wurde. Das Buch benutzt durchgängig die Nomenklatur, die zur Weltbodenkarte der FAO-UNESCO entwickelt wurde. Der Aufbau orientiert sich an der ökozonalen Gliederung der Erde. Bodenzonale Zuordnungen werden kritisch diskutiert.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 244 Seiten , Illustrationen , 21 cm
    ISBN: 3141602816 (kart.) , 3-14-160281-6
    Series Statement: Das geographische Seminar
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt 1 Einführung: Aufgabe und Maßstabsebenen einer bodengeographischen Betrachtung 1.1 Maßstabsebenen bodengeographischer Darstellung 1.2 Aufbau und Ziel der Darstellung 2 Bodenbildende Faktoren und Prozesse 2.1 Bodenbildende Faktoren 2.1.1 Bodenbildungsfaktor Klima 2.1.2 Festgestein und Sediment als bodenbildende Faktoren 2.1.3 Relief und Geomorphodynamik als Bodenbildungsfaktoren 2.1.4 Wasser als Bodenbildungsfaktor 2.1.5 Pflanzen und Tiere als bodenbildende Faktoren 2.1.6 Der Mensch als bodenbildender Faktor 2.1.7 Zeit als Bodenbildungsfaktor 2.2 Bodenbildende Prozesse 2.2.1 Gesteinsaufbereitung durch physikalische Verwitterungsprozesse 2.2.2 Chemische Verwitterungsprozesse 2.2.3 Entkalkung. Färbung durch Eisenoxide und -hydroxide, Verlehmung 2.2.3.1 Verlehmung durch Tonmineralbildung als Folge der Glimmerverwitterung 2.2.3.2 Tonmineralbildung aus den Produkten der Silikatvervvitterung sovvie Tonmineralzerstörung durch Desilifizierung 2.2.4 Tonverlagerung (Lessivierung) als bodenbildender Prozeß 2.2.5 Hydromorphierung als bodenbildender Prozeß 2.2.6 Carbonatisierung und Versalzung 2.2.7 Bodenbildende Prozesse und die organische Bodensubstanz 2.2.7.1 Remineralisierung und Humifizierung 2.2.7.2 Podsolierung als bodenbildender Prozeß 2.2.8 Prozesse der Bodendurchmischung und -entmischung (Turbationen) 2.3 Gefügebildung als Merkmal und Folge bodenbildender Prozesse 3 Bodenhorizonte, Bodentypisierung und Bodenklassifikation 3.1 Horizontbezeichnungen und Bodensystematik in Deutschland 3.2 Grundprinzipien der US-amerikanischen Soil Taxonomy 3.3 Die FAO-Weltbodenkarte und ihre Nomenklatur 3.4 Die World Reference Base For Soil Resources 4 Entstehung und Verbreitung der Böden der Erde - Bodengeographische Grundlagen und regionale Beispiele 4.1 Boden und Bodengesellschaften in den waldfreien Polar- und Subpolargebieten 4.1.1 Die besondere Bedeutung der großflächigen Geomorphodynamik 4.1.2 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in der waldfreien Tundra 4.1.3 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in der Fleckentundra (subpolare Wüste) und der polaren Wüste 4.1.4 Die Boden im Südpolargebiet: Parallelen und Unterschiede 4.1.5 Der Faktor Zeit: Landschaftsgeschichte, Klimawandel und Bodenentwicklung 4.1.6 Aspekte anthropogener Einflüsse 4.2 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in den borealen Waldgebieten 4.2.1 Charakteristische Böden an gut dränierten Standorten 4.2.2 Gleysols und Histosols in Senken und Tiefenlinien 4.2.3 Differenzierung nach Maritimität und Kontinentalität 4.2.4 Die starke Streuakkumulation als gemeinsames Kennzeichen 4.2.5 Die Bedeutung von Bränden für die Pedosphare in borealen Waldgebieten 4.2.6 Anthropogene Einflüsse und die Bedeutung klimatischer Veränderungen 4.3 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in den feuchten Mittelbreiten 4.3.1 Die typischen Böden an gut dränierten Standorten in den feuchten Mittelbreiten: Luvisols und Cambisols 4.3.2 Die feuchten Mittelbreiten in Europa: Bodengeographischer Überblick 4.3.2.1 Deckschichten und Böden in den kristallinen Mittelgebirgen und Schichtstufenlandschaften in Deutschland 4.3.2.2 Bodengeographische Aspekte von Becken und Tiefländern in Deutschland 4.3.3 Überblick über die Böden in den feuchten Mittelbreiten Asiens und Nordamerikas 4.3.4 Überblick über die Bodenregionen in den feuchten Mittelbreiten der südlichen Hemisphäre 4.3.5 Aspekte anthropogener Kontaminationen in den Industriegesellschaften 4.4 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in den Steppen (trockene Mittelbreiten) 4.4.1 Intensive Humifizierung - das gemeinsame Kennzeichen der Böden in den Steppen: Das Beispiel des Chernozem 4.4.2 Mit dem Chernozem verwandte Steppenböden: Phaeozem, Greyzem und Kastanozem 4.4.3 Böden in Senken 4.4.4 Das Auftreten von Steppenböden in Eurasien 4.4.5 Überblick über die Steppenböden in Nordamerika 4.4.6 Überblick über die Steppenböden in Südamerika und das ,,Pampa-Problem" 4.4.7 Ursachen der großen Bodenfruchtbarkeit und zur Degradation der Steppenböden durch Nutzung 4.4.8 Zeit und Klimawandel: Bedeutung für die Entwicklung der Steppenböden 4.5 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in Wüsten und Halbwüsten (ohne Steppen) 4.5.1 Tendenzen der Verwitterungsprozesse sovvie zur aolischen und fluvialen Dynamik 4.5.2 Charakteristika der Bodenbildung 4.5.3 Charakteristische Böden in den Trockengebieten 4.5.4 Calcisols und pedogene Kalkkrusten: Entstehung. Einflüsse von Klima und Klimawandel 4.5.5 Gypsisols und pedogene Gipskrusten: Entstehung und Aspekte ihrer paläoklimatischen Bedeutung 4.5.6 Entstehung und Verbreitung von Solonchaks 4.5.7 Sequenz von Bodengesellschaften in Abhängigkeit von Klima und Landschaftsgesehichte am Beispiel der mittleren Namib (südwestafrikanische Küstenwüste) 4.5.8 Semiarid-aride Boden-Toposequenz am Beispiel von Fußflächenlandschaften 4.5.9 Die Böden der Trockengebiete als Kohlenstoftsenke und paläoklimatische Archive 4.5.10 Das Problem bodenzonaler Zuordnungen 4.5.1 1 Potentielle Fruchtbarkeit von Wüsten- und Halbwüstenböden sowie ihre Gefährdung durch landwirtschaftliche Nutzung 4.6. Böden und Bodengesellschaflen in den winterfeuchten Subtropen 4.6.1 Charakteristika der Böden: Rubefizierung, Lessivierung und Carbonatisierung 4.6.2 Die Terra rossa im Mediterranraum: Bindung an Kalkgesteine und aolische Sedimente 4.6.3 Die Bedeutung der äolischen Einträge für die Standorteigenschaften 4.6.4 Charakteristische Böden und Bodengesellschaften in Kalkstein- und Mergellandschaften im Mittelmeergebiet 4.6.5 Überblick über die Böden in den winterfeuchten Subtropen Kaliforniens, Chiles und Südafrikas 4.6.6 Bodengesellschaften auf altverwitterten Substraten in den subtropischen Winterregengebieten - Beispiele aus Südwestaustralien 4.6.7 Das Problem einer bodenzonalen Zuordnung 4.6.8 Aspekte der Nutzung und Gefährdung der Böden 4.7 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in den immerfeuchten Subtropen 4.7.1 Charakteristika der Bodenbildung und kennzeichnende Böden 4.7.2 Überblick über die Verbreitung der Böden und Bodengesellschaften 4.7.3 Das Problem einer bodenzonalen Zuordnung 4.7.4 Aspekte paläoklimatischer Einflüsse 4.8 Böden und Bodengesellschaften in den sommer- und immerfeuchten Tropen 4.8.1 Die organische Substanz 4.8.2 Die Bedeutung der Bioturbation 4.8.3 Chemische Verwitterung und Bodenbildung bei guter Dränage 4.8.4 Charakteristische Bodenbildungsprozesse und Böden bei unzureichender Dränage in Senken und Tiefenlinien 4.8.5 Decksedimente als Gunstfaktor in den Tropen 4.8.6 Bodengeographische Aspekte von Gunst- und Ungunsträumen innertropischer Tiefebenen: Beispiele aus dem Amazonas- und dem Kongo-Becken 4.8.7 Bodengeographische Aspekte von Gebirgsvorländern und Vulkangebieten: Beispiele aus Süd- und Südostasien mit Blick auf die Reisböden 4.8.8 Das Problem einer bodenzonalen Gliederung in den Tropen 4.8.9 Böden in den Tropen: Bezüge zur globalen Klimaentwicklung 4.V Bodengeographische Aspekte von Hochgebirgen 5 Zusammenschau und Ausblick 5.1 Die Karte der Bodenzonen der Erde 5.2 Böden als begrenzte und gefährdete Ressource: Aspekte 6 Literatur 7 Register
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  • 48
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Uppsala : Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
    Call number: AWI G3-23-95006
    Description / Table of Contents: Water flow in frozen soils is closely linked to the heat dynamics in the soil-snowatmosphere system. Therefore, a detailed understanding of both thermal and hydraulic processes, as well as the way they are linked is required to quantify and predict the fluxes during freezing and snowmelt. This thesis focuses on different key processes with regard to water dynamics in frozen soils: (a) the heat exchange at the snow surface, (b) the snowmelt infiltration, (c) the freezing characteristic curve, and (d) the frost-induced solute redistribution. Experimental studies were conducted both in the laboratory, using small soil columns and in the field, on soil plots of 4 m2 Oysimeters) and on an arable field of 6 ha. A one-dimensional numerical SV AT-model (SOIL) with a new two-domain concept for water flow in partly frozen soils was applied to these experiments. Measurements of soil water content (total and liquid), soil temperature, groundwater level and solute concentration as continuous time-series provided valuable information about the physical dynamics in the soil during cycles of freezing and thawing. For a shallow or patchy snowcover the simulation of soil frost was very sensitive to the surface energy balance and the snow depth and required accurate precipitation and radiation measurements. The two-domain infiltration model reproduced the field observations better than a single-domain model and gave more flexibility when simulating different field conditions. However, it also increased the model sensitivity. Major sources of uncertainty were the frost-induced water redistribution, the hydraulic conductivity of the initially air-filled pores and the freezing rate of the infiltrating water in the frozen soil. Accurate measurements of soil hydraulic properties were essential for calibrating the model for new soils. Further development of the model will have to include a more sophisticated description of the snow processes and the solute transport in order to be able to address key environmental problems.
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: Getrennte Zählung , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9157655049 , 91-576-5504-9
    ISSN: 1401-6249
    Series Statement: Acta Universitatis Agriculturae Sueciae. Agraria 72
    Language: English
    Note: Zugleich: Dissertation, Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet, Uppsala, 1997 , Contents Frozen soil hydrology Review and practical relevance The complex frozen soil environment Objectives Heat exchange above and within frozen soils Heat exchange at the snow surface Heat transfer through the snow pack Soil freezing characteristic curve Frost-induced solute redistribution Water infiltration and redistribution in frozen soil Experimental work Modelling Model versus measurements Conclusions Ongoing and future work Improved description of the processes at the pore scale Improved description of the snow pack Link to larger-scale models References Acknowledgments , Englisch
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  • 49
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Boca Raton, Fla. : CRC Press
    Call number: AWI S1-23-95157
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: IX, 812 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: 30th edition
    ISBN: 0849324793 , 0-8493-2479-3
    Language: English
    Note: Table of Contents Chapter 1 Analysis / John S. Robertson, Karen Bolinger, Lawrence M. Glasser, Neil J.A. Sloane, and Rob Gross Chapter 2 Algebra / Brad Wilson, John Michaels, Patrick J. Driscoll, and Rob Gross Chapter 3 Discrete Mathematics / George K. Tzanetopoulos, Jeff Goldberg, Joseph J. Rushanan, and Mel Hausner Chapter 4 Geometry / Ray McLenaghan and Silvio Levy Chapter 5 Continuous Mathematics / Catherine Roberts and Ray McLenaghan Chapter 6 Special Functions / Ahmed I. Zayed, Nicco M. Temme, and Paul Jameson Chapter 7 Probability and Statistics / William C. Rinaman, Christopher Heil, Michael T. Strauss, Michael Mascagni, and Mike Sousa Chapter 8 Scientific Computing / Gary Stanek Chapter 9 Financial Analysis / Daniel Zwillinger Chapter 10 Miscellaneous / Michael T. Strauss, Rob Gross, and Victor J. Katz List of Notations Index
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  • 50
    Call number: AWI G3-23-95336
    In: Miscellaneous Report / Geological Survey of Canada, 64
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 71 Seiten , Illustrationen, Karten
    ISBN: 0660174642 , 0-660-17464-2
    Series Statement: Miscellaneous Report / Geological Survey of Canada 64
    Language: English
    Note: Abstract Résumé Acknowledgments Welcome to Yellowknife Part I: The landscape and the people Geological evolution of the landscape Bedrock geology Surficial geology Climate and vegetation History of Yellowknife From gold to government Significant events Part II: Living with frozen ground Permafrost Regional distribution Permafrost occurrence in Yellowknife Significance of peat Significance of moisture Ice lenses Thaw stable and thaw unstable ground Thaw settlement Frost heave Development Buildings Roads Utilities Thermosyphons Climate change - an uncertain future for permafrost Climate and permafrost history Air temperature trends over the last century Response of air temperatures to doubling of greenhouse gases Effect of climate warming on permafrost in Yellowknife Impacts of climate warming Part III: Guide to field stops Introduction The Capital Tour - Capital Site to Bowling Green building Stop 1. The Capital Site - a profusion of peat Stop 2. Legislative Assembly - design with nature Stop 3. Legislative Assembly roadway - perils of paving peat Stop 4. Walking path - tipping trails Stop 5. Legislative Assembly parking lot - preserving permafrost Stop 6. Frame Lake - Yellowknife's aquatic centrepiece Stop 7. National Defence building - seeking solid ground Stop 8. Visitors Centre - rocking and rolling Stop 9. 49 Street thermosyphons - keeping it cool Stop 10. Bowling Green building - swallowing sidewalks The City Tour - 49 Avenue to Niven Lake Stop 11. 49 and 49 intersection - rolling roadways Stop 12. 49 Avenue - sagging sidewalks Stop 13. Downtown Yellowknife - safe on sand Stop 14. Gold Range Hotel - making things work Stop 15. Centre Square Mall - stemming shifting sands Stop 16. Boston Pizza - fast food on a slab Stop 17. Royal Oak Mines Inc. houses - half a century later Stop 18. 52 Avenue - up, up, and ... away Stop 19. 49 Street hill - leaving good ground Stop 20. 54 Avenue - frozen dangers underfoot Stop 21. Rockcliffe Apartments - creeping crawl space Stop 22. School Draw subdivision - houses on the move Stop 23. School Draw Park - from basements to basketballs Stop 24. Rock outcrop - on the shores of glacial Lake McConnell Stop 25. Detah ice road - crystal highway Stop 26. Old Town - doing things the old-fashioned way Stop 27. Franklin Avenue - whither frozen ground? Stop 28. Fritz Theil Park - from dump to diamond I Stop 29. Old sewage line - pipes and peat Stop 30. Niven Lake - a subarctic oasis I Part IV: The Niven Lake Trail Introduction Stop 1. A biological magnet for waterbirds Stop 2. The land of little sticks Stop 3. The wonder of wetlands Stop 4. Niven Lake -urban oasis for wildlife Stop 5. Peat, beautiful peat Stop 6. Honolulu north? Stop 7. Home sweet home -all year round Stop 8. Those mud-slinging, bug-poking shorebirds Glossary of terms Selected references List of field guides for Yellowknife
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  • 51
    Call number: AWI Bio-24-95729
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIV, 354 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 0195154312 , 9780195154313 , 978-0-19-515431-3
    Series Statement: Long-Term Ecological Research Network Series
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Contributors Part I. Alaska's Past and Present Environment 1. The Conceptual Basis of LTER Studies in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / F. Stuart Chapin III, john Yarie, Keith Van Cleve, and Leslie A. Viereck 2. Regional Overview of Interior Alaska / James E. Beget, David Stone, and David L Verbyla 3. State Factor Control of Soil Formation in Interior Alaska / Chien-Lu Ping, Richard D. Boone, Marcus H. Clark, Edmond C. Packee, and David K. Swanson 4. Climate and Permafrost Dynamics of the Alaskan Boreal Forest / Larry D. Hinzman, Leslie A. Viereck, Phyllis C. Adams, Vladimir E. Romanovsky, and Kenji Yoshikawa 5. Holocene Development of the Alaskan Boreal Forest / Andrea H. Lloyd, Mary E. Edwards, Bruce P. Finney, Jason A. Lynch, Valerie Barber, and Nancy H. Bigelow Part II. Forest Dynamics 6. Floristic Diversity and Vegetation Distribution in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / F. Stuart Chapin III, Teresa Hollingsworth, David F. Murray, Leslie A. Viereck, and Marilyn D. Walker 7. Successional Processes in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / F. Stuart Chapin III, Leslie A. Viereck, Phyllis C. Adams, Keith Van Cleve, Christopher L. Fastie, Robert A. Ott, Daniel Mann, and Jill F. Johnstone 8. Mammalian Herbivore Population Dynamics in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / Eric Rexstad and Knut Kielland 9. Dynamics of Phytophagous Insects and Their Pathogens in Alaskan Boreal Forests / Richard A. Werner, Kenneth F. Raffa, and Barbara L. Illman 10. Running Waters of the Alaskan Boreal Forest / Mark W. Oswood, Nicholas F. Hughes, and Alexander M. Milner Part III. Ecosystem Dynamics 11. Controls over Forest Production in Interior Alaska / John Yarie and Keith Van Cleve 12. The Role of Fine Roots in the Functioning of Alaskan Boreal Forests / Roger W. Ruess, Ronald L. Hendrick, Jason C. Vogel, and Bjartmar Sveinbjornsson 13. Mammalian Herbivory, Ecosystem Engineering, and Ecological Cascades in Alaskan Boreal Forests / Knut Kielland, John P. Bryant, and Roger W. Ruess 14. Microbial Processes in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / Joshua P. Schimel and F. Stuart Chapin III 15. Patterns of Biogeochemistry in Alaskan Boreal Forests / David W. Valentine, Knut Kielland, F. Stuart Chapin III, A. David McCuire, and Keith Van Cleve Part IV. Changing Regional Processes 16. Watershed Hydrology and Chemistry in the Alaskan Boreal Forest: The Central Role of Permafrost / Larry D. Hinzman, W. Robert Bolton, Kevin C. Petrone, Jeremy B. Jones, and Phyllis C. Adams 17. Fire Trends in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / Eric S. Kasischke, T. Scott Rupp, and David L. Verbyla 18. Timber Harvest in Interior Alaska / Tricia L. Wurtz, Robert A. Ott, and John C. Maisch 19. Climate Feedbacks in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / A. David McCuire and F. Stuart Chapin III 20. Communication of Alaskan Boreal Science with Broader Communities / Elena B. Sparrow, Janice C. Dawe, and F. Stuart Chapin III 21. Summary and Synthesis: Past and Future Changes in the Alaskan Boreal Forest / F. Stuart Chapin III, A. David McCuire, Roger W. Ruess, Marilyn W. Walker, Richard D. Boone, Mary E. Edwards, Bruce P. Finney, Larry D. Hinzman, Jeremy B. Jones, Clenn P. Juday, Eric S. Kasischke, Knut Kielland, Andrea H. Lloyd, Mark W. Oswood, Chien-Lu Ping, Eric Rexstad, Vladimir E. Romanovsky, Joshua P. Schimel, Elena B. Sparrow, Bjartmar Sveinbjornsson, David W. Valentine, Keith Van Cleve, David L. Verbyla, Leslie A. Viereck, Richard A. Werner, Tricia L. Wurtz, and John Yarie Index
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  • 52
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Jakutsk : Izdatel'stvo Instituta Merzlotovedenija SO RAN
    Call number: AWI G3-24-95730
    Description / Table of Contents: Translation of abstract: Using the example of the Igarsky district of the Krasnoyarsk Territory, the work examines the development of modern geocryological conditions of the northern taiga subzone of the Yenisei Arctic, caused by the development of the territory and climate warming in recent decades. The scale and degree of changes in geocryological conditions in areas of azonal development of permafrost rocks, as well as on the route of the high-voltage line Kureyskaya HPP - Norilsk in the section from the river, have been revealed. Bol. Kozharki to the hall. The Whitefish Khantaisk Reservoir is about 250 km long. The genesis and development of thermokarst lakes, the formation of modern permafrost on the bottom of a partially drained lake, frost cracking and accumulation of modern epigenetic re-veined underground ice on coarse peat bogs, changes in permafrost conditions along the routes of the “dead” railway and the future Vankor-Igarka oil pipeline are considered. The book is intended for permafrost scientists, geographers and civil engineers.
    Description / Table of Contents: В работе на примере Игарского района Красноярского края рассматривается развитие современных геокриологических условий северо-таежной подзоны Енисейского Заполярья, обусловленное освоением территории и потеплением климата в последние десятилетия. Выявлены масштабы и степень изменений геокриологических условий в районах азонального развития многолетнемерзлых пород, а также на трассе высоковольтной линии Курейская ГЭС - Норильск на участке от р. Бол. Кожарки до зал. Сигового Хантайского водохранилища протяженностью около 250 км. Рассмотрены генезис и развитие термокарстовых озер, формирование современной мерзлоты на дне частично осушенного озера, морозобойное растрескивание и накопление современных эпигенетических повторно-жильных подземных льдов на крупнобугристых торфяниках, изменение мерзлотных условий на трассах "мертвой" железной дороги и будущего нефтепровода Ванкор - Игарка. Книга предназначена для мерзлотоведов, географов и инженеров-строителей.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 89 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 5932540036 , 5-93254-003-6
    Language: Russian
    Note: Translation of Table of Contents: INTRODUCTION Chapter 1. REVIEW OF GEOCRYOLOGICAL RESEARCH Chapter 2. NATURAL CONDITIONS Chapter 3. GENERAL GEOCRYOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND LANDSCAPE ZONING OF THE REGION Chapter 4. CONDITION OF PERMAFROST ROCKS ALONG THE ROUTE OF POWER LINES SVETLOGORSK - IGARKA - SNEZHNOGORSK 4.1. Forested areas 4.2. Treeless areas 4.3. Areas with close rock formations 4.4. Talik areas in the hall. Sigovom Khantaiskoe Reservoir Chapter 5. PERMAFROST ROCKS OF THE LEFT AND RIGHT BANK OF THE YENISEY RIVER NEAR THE CITY OF IGARKA Chapter 6. CHANGES IN GEOCRYOLOGICAL CONDITIONS ON THE “DEAD” RAILROAD ROUTE Chapter 7. FORMATION OF PERMAFROST ROCKS AT THE BOTTOM OF A DRY LAKE. PIKE Chapter 8. GENESIS AND DYNAMICS OF DEVELOPMENT OF ICE MOUNTAIN Chapter 9. TERMOKARST IN THE YENISEI NORTH CONCLUSION LITERATURE , ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ ВВЕДЕНИЕ Глава 1. ОБЗОР ГЕОКРИОЛОГИЧЕСКИХ ИССЛЕДОВАНИЙ Глава 2. ПРИРОДНЫЕ УСЛОВИЯ Глава 3. ОБЩАЯ ГЕОКРИОЛОГИЧЕСКАЯ ХАРАКТЕРИСТИКА И ЛАНДШАФТНОЕ РАЙОНИРОВАНИЕ РЕГОИНА Глава 4. СОСТОЯНИЕ МНОГОЛЕТНЕМЕРЗЛЫХ ПОРОД ПО ТРАССЕ ЛЭП СВЕТЛОГОРСК - ИГАРКА - СНЕЖНОГОРСК 4.1. Залесенные участки 4.2. Безлесные участки 4.3. Участки с близким залеганием скальных пород 4.4. Таликовые участки в зал. Сиговом Хантайскоrо водохранилища Глава 5. МНОГОЛЕТНЕМЕРЗЛЫЕ ПОРОДЫ ЛЕВО- И ПРАВОБЕРЬЯ Р. ЕНИСЕЯ БЛИЗ Г. ИГАРКИ Глава 6. ИЗМЕНЕНИЕ ГЕОКРИОЛОГИЧЕСКИХ УСЛОВИЙ НА ТРАССЕ "МЕРТВОЙ" ЖЕЛЕЗНОЙ ДОРОГИ Глава 7. ФОРМИРОВАНИЕ МНОГОЛЕТНЕМЕРЗЛЫХ ПОРОД НА ДНЕ ОСУШЕННОГО ОЗ. ЩУЧЬЕГО Глава 8. ГЕНЕЗИС И ДИНАМИКА РАЗВИТИЯ ЛЕДЯНОЙ ГОРЫ Глава 9. ТЕРМОКАРСТ НА ЕНИСЕЙСКОМ СЕВЕРЕ ЗАКЛЮЧЕНИЕ ЛИТЕРАТУРА , In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 53
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Darmstadt : Primus
    Call number: M 10.0218 ; 12/2010.19 ; AWI A3-18-13656
    Description / Table of Contents: Sind die Unwetter und Katastrophen der letzten Jahre Ausdruck einer Klimaveränderung oder gab es sie schon immer? Diese 1000 Jahre umfassende Klimadarstellung, die auf den unterschiedlichsten Quellen basiert, ist einmalig für Mitteleuropa. Sie belegt die nachhaltigen Veränderungen des Klimas in den vergangenen Jahrhunderten, die Auswirkungen auf die Gesellschaft und macht deutlich, bis zu welchem Grad der Mensch in jüngerer Zeit Einfluss genommen hat.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VIII, 264 S. , Ill., Kt.
    Edition: 2., aktualisierte und erw. Aufl.
    ISBN: 9783896786043
    Classification:
    Meteorology and Climatology
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt: Vorwort. - Vorwort zur 2.Auflage. - TEIL I GRUNDLAGEN DER HISTORISCHEN KLIMAFORSCHUNG. - Klima in Perspektive: Eine Einführung. - Begründung und Forschungsansätze. - Forschungssituation in Mitteleuropa. - Auf Spurensuche: Quellen, Daten und Zitate. - Chroniken und Annalen: Die ersten Spuren von Wetter, Witterung und Klima. - Quelleninformation - Quellenbezug - Quellenkompilation: Die Dhein-Chronik. - Als das Wetter zum täglichen Ereignis wurde: Wetterjournale. - Vom Wetter auf See: Schiffsjournale. - Vom Wetter unterwegs: Itinerare. - Wetter nach Maß: Die Anfänge der Instrumentenmessung. - Gemalt, gepinselt und gehämmert: Bildhafte und plastische Informationen zum historischen Klima. - Klima auf Umwegen: Proxydaten. - Methoden zur Klimarekonstruktion. - "Hat man mir wahrhafftiglich versicheret": Die quellenkritische Interpretation von schriftlichen Quellenhinweisen. - Klima-, Witterungs- und Wettervorstellungen: Ein Beitrag zur Quellenkritik. - Quelle - Index - Klimawert: Die Transformation schriftlicher Klimahinweise. - Tägliche Wetteraufzeichnungen: Rückblicke der besonderen Art. - Historische Instrumentenmessdaten: Ein Brückenschlag zur Moderne. - Proxydaten: Ihre klimatische Interpretation. - Methoden: Eine Nachbetrachtung. - HISKLID: Aufbau und Struktur der Historischen Klimadatenbank. - TEIL II HITZE, FLUTEN, EIS UND STURM IM SPIEGELBILD DER QUELLEN. - Vom Optimum der Römerzeit über das Pessimum der Völkerwanderung ins Mittelalterliche Wärmeoptimum. - Prolog zum Mittelalterlichen Wärmeoptimum. - Das Klima von 1000 bis 1500. - Warme Zeiten - kalte Zeiten: Die Sommerverhältnisse von 1000 und 1500. - Aus der Kältekammer ins Treibhausklima: Die Winterverhältnisse von 1000 bis 1500. - Im Märzen der Bauer? Die Frühlingsverhältnisse von 1000 bis 1500. - Altweibersommer oder Herbststürme? Die Herbstverhältnisse von 1000 bis 1500. - Das Klima von 1500 bis 2000. - Der jährliche Witterungsgang von 1500 bis 1750. - Zur Kleinen Eiszeit - ein Epilog. - Aus der Kleinen Eiszeit ins Treibhausklima: Die Verhältnisse ab 1750. - Die derzeitigen Folgen. - Der Klimagang der letzten 1000 Jahre - eine Zusammenschau. - Der methodische Weg. - Zum Klimaverlauf ab dem Jahr 1000. - Zur Frage der Steuerungsmechanismen. - Klimarekonstruktionen und -simulationen der letzten 1000 Jahre auf der Basis von naturwissenschaftlichen Daten. - Wenn sich Wetter und Klima zur Katastrophe auswachsen. - Unwetter über Mitteleuropa. - Gewitter in Mitteleuropa. - Stürme und Orkane über Deutschland. - Die Sturmfluten an der deutschen Nord- und Ostseeküste. - Hochwasserereignisse an deutschen Flüssen. - Historische Hochwasser und Atmosphärische Zirkulationsdynamik. - Jahrhundert- und Jahrtausendhochwasser. - Höhenrauch - Sommerhitze - Winterstrenge - Hochwasser: Vier Schritte in die Katastrophe. - Die Hochwasserkatastrophe von 1824 am Neckar und aktuelle planerische Konsequenzen. - Klimakatastrophen in Mitteleuropa: Eine Nachlese. - Die zukünftige Entwicklung des Klimas und die Auswirkungen des Klimawandels in Mitteleuropa. - Die ökonomischen Folgen. - Erkenntniswege zum Treibhausklima. - Die historische Entwicklung des politischen Handlungsrahmens. - 1200 Jahre Klimageschichte: Ein Resümee. - Anhang. - Abkürzungen. - Literaturverzeichnis. - Sachregister. - Ortsregister.
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  • 54
    Call number: ZSP-760/A-14
    In: Terra Antartica reports
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: VIII, 264 S. : Ill., graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9788888395104
    Series Statement: Terra Antartica reports 14
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  • 55
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Kielce : Scandinavium
    Call number: AWI P5-15-0010
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 214 S. : graph. Darst.
    Edition: 1. ed.
    ISBN: 9788389714374
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: Introduction. - List of abbreviations. - 1. Balance of energy as a contemporary challenge. - 1.1. Energy resources and needs. - 1.2. Natural gas balance at the beginning of 21st century. - 1.3. Economic and political conditions at the European gas market. - 1.4. European Union facing the problem of energy supplies. - 2. Energy security - Norden - Basic issues. - 2.1. Subject and scope of national energy security. - 2.2. Nordic countries in international life. - 2.3. Norden and the energy issues of the Baltic states. - 2.4. Nordic countries - European Union in the context of energy security. - 3. Basic elements of the energy balance in Norden states. - 3.1. The Republic of Iceland. - 3.2. The Kingdom of Denmark. - 3.3. The Kingdom of Sweden. - 3.4. The Republic of Finland. - 4. Position of the Kingdom of Norway. - 4.1. Norway as an oil and gas producer. - 4.2. Norway in the energy balance of the region. - 4.3. High North - strategy vision and plan of Norway. - 4.4. High North - relations with the Russian Federation in the field of energy. - 5. Energy and climate - directions of activities of countries from Nordic region. - 5.1. Activities concerning energy and environmental protection and climate changes. - 5.2. Research and development - overcoming negative relations between progress and environment degradation. - 5.3. Nordic states versus contemporary energy security challenges. - Conclusion. - Literature. - List of figures and tables.
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  • 56
    Call number: AWI G2-18-91973
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 49 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: Table of Contents: Introduction. - Contact information. - List of participants. - Guidelines for presenters. - Registration. - Workshop program. - Hotel and workshop venues. - Travel information. - Abstracts. - Public lecture.
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  • 57
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Sankt-Peterburg : Gosudarstvennoe Federal'noe Unitarnoe Predprijatie "Peterburgskaja Kompleksnaja Geologičeskaja Ėkspedicija" MPR PF
    Call number: AWI G3-19-92193
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 238 Seiten , Illustrationen , 1 Kartenbeilage
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 58
    Call number: AWI G3-19-92314
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 151 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 5786200248
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 59
    Call number: AWI G1-19-92229
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 61 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISSN: 0868-4502
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 60
    Call number: AWI P1-19-92255
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 19 Seiten , zahlreiche Illustrationen
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt: Vorwort. - Die Polarregionen. - Das Polareis. - Eischilde, Meereis, Fluss- und Seeeis, Permafrost. - Die globale Erwärmung. - Die polaren Regionen erwärmen sich schneller. - Die Polarregionen: Gebiete höchster Empfindlichkeit mit weltweiter Wirkung. - Die indigenen Völker im Norden, Vegetation, Fauna, das Meereis als Lebensraum, Verringerung des stratosphärischen Ozons: "Das Ozonloch". - Die Meeresströmungen und Bildung des Tiefenwassers. - Wirtschaftliche Nutzung und ihre Risiken. - Öl- und Gasförderung, Gashydrate, Tourismus, Fischerei, Taiga. - Andere Gefährdungen und Schutz der Polarregionen. - Schadstoffe, radioaktive Altlasten, Walfang, die Arktis: Region des Umweltschutzes. - Schlussbetrachtung.
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  • 61
    Call number: AWI G4-19-92514
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VII, 79 Seiten , Illustrationen , 24 cm
    ISBN: 978-84-7840-756-9
    Language: Spanish
    Note: Sumario 1 Cambio climático 1.1. Causas nauturales de cambios climáticos 1.2. Cambios climáticos a lo largo del tiempo geológico 1.3. Variaciones del efecto invernadero 2 Hacia el cambio climático 2.1. Temperatura 2.2. Precipitación 2.3. Nivel del mar 2.4. Extensión de nieve y Polos 2.5. Desastres naturales 2.6. Permafrost 3 Escenarios climáticos para el siglo XXI en España 4 El agua aubterránea y los efectos del cambio climático 4.1. Usos del agua subterránea 4.2. Efectos del cambio climático en la fase subterránea del ciclo hidrológico 5 Experiencia del IGME 5.1. Conocimiento de los recursos hídricos subterráneos 5.2. Acuíferos costeros 5.3. Estimación de la recarga natural 5.4. Ecosistemas acuáticos relacionados con las aguas subterráneas 5.5. Actuaciones contra las sequías 5.6. Estudios polares 5.7. Estudios paleoclimáticos 5.8. Almacenamiento geológico profundo de CO2 5.9. Actuaciones dirigidas a mitigar los efectos del cambio climatíco 6. Propuesta de estudios para los próximos decenios Referencias bibliográficas , In spanischer Sprache
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  • 62
    Non-book medium
    Non-book medium
    [Herstellungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AMBERNET Ltd.
    Call number: AWI NBM-19-92576
    Type of Medium: Non-book medium
    Pages: 1 CD-ROM (circa 25 min) , farbig , 002500 , 12 cm
    Language: English
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  • 63
    Call number: AWI G5-20-93624
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 76 Seiten , Illustrationen , 25 cm
    ISBN: 5896580088
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 64
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Tucumán : Universidad Nacional de Tucumán, Instituto de Geodesia y Topografía
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI E3-20-94011
    In: Publicacion / Instituto de Geodesia y Typografia 〈San Miguel de Tucuman〉 15, 15
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 19 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Publicacion / Instituto de Geodesia y Typografia 〈San Miguel de Tucuman〉 3
    Language: Spanish
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  • 65
    Call number: AWI G3-22-94800
    Type of Medium: Dissertations
    Pages: ix, 85 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: Dissertation, Universität Potsdam, 2006
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  • 66
    Call number: AWI G3-22-94842-2
    In: Advances in hillslope processes, Volume 2
    In: British Geomorphological Research Group symposia series
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVI, Seite 688 - 1306 , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 0-471-96774-2
    Series Statement: Advances in hillslope processes 2
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS VOLUME 2 Section 6 GULLY DEVELOPMENT PROCESSES Chapter 31 Thresholds of Channel Initiation in Historical and Holocene Times, Southeastern Australia / I. P. Prosser Chapter 32 The Role of Sideslope Gullies in the Production andDelivery of Sediment to Contemporary Terraces, Rambla del Hornillo, Southern Spain / H. Faulkner Chapter 33 Holocene Hillslope Gully Systems in the Howgill Fells, Cumbria / A. M. Harvey Chapter 34 Unsaturated Strength and Preferential Flow as Controls on Gully Head Development / A. J. C. Collison Section 7 SLOPE STABILITY Chapter 35 Landslides and Stability in the Nepalese Middle Hills under Seasonal and Agricultural Land-Use Change Scenarios / K. Wu and J. B. Thornes Chapter 36 Developments in Slope Hydrology-Stability Modelling for Tropical Slopes / M. G. Anderson, A. J. C. Collison, J. Hartshorne, D. M. Lloyd and A. Park Chapter 37 The Mechanics and Landforms of Deep-Seated Landslides / D. Petley Chapter 38 The Assessment and Modelling of Hydrological Failure Conditions of Landslides in the Puriscal Region (Costa Rica) and the Manizales Region (Colombia) / M. T. J. Terlien, P. G. B. De Louw, Th. W. J. Van Asch and R. A. A. Hetterschijt Chapter 39 The Effects of Grass Roots on the Shear Strength of Colluvial Soils in Nepal / C. J. Lawrance, R. J. Rickson and J. E. Clark Chapter 40 Development of an Episodic Landform Change Model based upon the Black Ven Mudslide, 1946-1995 / D. Brunsden and J. H. Chandler Chapter 41 Coastal Slope Development: Temporal and Spatial Periodicity in the Holderness Cliff Recession / J. Pethick Section 8 TROPICAL HILLSLOPE PROCESSES Chapter 42 A New Approach towards the Quantification of Runoff and Eroded Sediment from Bench Terraces in Humid Tropical Steeplands and its Application in South-Central Java, Indonesia / L. A. Bruijnzee/ and W. R. S. Critchley Chapter 43 Hydrological Pathways and Water Chemistry in Amazonian Rain Forests / H. Elsenbeer and A. Lack Chapter 44 Observations on Slope Processes in a Tropical Rain Forest Environment Before and After Forest Plantation Establishment / A. Maimer Chapter 45 Tectonics and Relief in Tropical Forested Mountains: The Gipfelflur Hypothesis Revisited / A. P. Dykes and J. B. Thornes Section 9 SEMI-ARID HILLSLOPE PROCESSES Chapter 46 Hillslope Response to Extreme Storm Events: The Example of the Vaison-La-Romaine Event / J. Wainwright Chapter 47 Geomorphological Implications of Vegetation Patchiness on Semi-arid Slopes / J. Puigdefabregas and G. Sanchez Chapter 48 Runoff and Erosion on Semi-arid Hillslopes / A. J. Parsons, J. Wainwright and A. D. Abrahams Chapter 49 Cuesta Scarp Forms and Processes in Different Attitudinal Belts of the Colorado Plateau as Indicators of Climatic Change / K.-H. Schmidt and P. Meitz Chapter 50 Modelling the Complexity of Land Surface Response to Climatic Variability in Mediterranean Environments / M. Mulligan Section 10 PERIGLACIAL HILLSLOPE PROCESSES Chapter 51 Processes of Thaw-Induced Mass Movement in Non-cohesive Soils: Results of an Instrumented Slope Simulation Experiment / C. Harris and M. C. R. Davies Chapter 52 Paraglacial Slope Adjustment during Recent Deglaciation and Its Implication for Slope Evolution in Formerly Glaciated Environments / C. K. Ballantyne and D. I. Benn Chapter 53 Paraglacial or Periglacial? The Sedimentology of Slope Deposits in Upland Northumberland / S. Harrison Chapter 54 Slow Mass Movements and Climatic Relationships, 1972-1994, Kapp Linné, West Spitzbergen / H. J. Akerman Chapter 55 Rock Weathering and the Formation of Summit Blockfield Slopes in Norway: Examples and Implications / B. R. Rea, W. B. Whalley and E. M. Porter Author Index Subject Index
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  • 67
    Call number: AWI P5-22-94839
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 340 Seiten , Illustrationen , 25 cm
    ISBN: 5-86007-120-5
    Language: Russian
    Note: CONTENTS INTRODUCTION Chapter I. CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE INITIAL COLONIZATION OF THE EURASIAN ARCTIC Occupation of the North Polar Regions in the Palaeolithic The Climate of the Arctic during the Early and Middle Holocene On the concepts of «Mesolithic» and «Neolithic» Mesolithic Monuments in the European and West Siberian Arctic The Sites of the Mesolithic Period and of Mesolithic-Early Neolithic Appearance in the East.Siberian and Taimyr Trans-Polar Area The Correlation of the Mesolithic Sites of Taimyr with the Mesolithic Cultures of the Forest Zone of Siberia Chapter II. THE TAIMYR TRANSPOLAR ZONE IN THE NEOLITHIC The Early Neolithic of Taimyr (the IVth Millennium BC) The Neolithic Sites of the III-II Millennia BC Net ceramic sites (the Maimeche culture) Assemblages with the Baykit type ceramics Chapter Ill. THE EARLY BRONZE CASTERS OF THE TAIMYR PENINSULA Climatic Changes in the Late Holocene Ymyiakhtakh Sites in the Taimyr Subpolar Region Waffie Pottery in the Subpolar Region: Distribution and Subsequent Evolution Chapter IV. THE TAIMYR PENINSULA IN THE EARLY IRON EPOCH AND THE MIDDLE AGE The Ust-Polovinka settlement and the Pyasina culture Monuments of the Malokorenninsk culture Monuments of cultures with East Siberian traditions The Vozhpai culture Chapter V. EVOLUTION OF ANCIENT SOCIETIES OF THE TAIMYR SUBPOLAR REGION: ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL ASPECTS Settlements in the Taimyr Subpolar Region as a Source of Palaeosociological Information Bronze-casting on the Taimyr Peninsula The Appearance and Development of Reindeer Herding in the Tundra Zone of West Siberia and the Taimyr Subpolar Region CONCLUDING REMARKS APPENDIX REFERENCES PUBLICATIONS OF L. P. KHLOBYSTIN ILLUSTRATIONS ABBREVIATIONS SUMMARY , ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ Предисловие. К портрету исследователя ВВЕДЕНИЕ Глаба I КЛИМАТИЧЕСКИЕ ИЗМЕНЕНИЯ В ЕВРАЗИЙСКОМ ЗАПОЛЯРЬЕ И ПЕР-ВЫЕ ЭТАПЫ ЕГО ЗАСЕЛЕНИЯ Заселение ЗаполярLя в эпоху палеолита Климат Заполярья в раннем и среднем голоцене О понятиях «мезолИD〉 и «неолит» Памятники эпохи мезолита Европейского н Западно-Сибирского ЗаполярLя Памятнщси эпохи мезолита и мезолитическо-раиненеолитического облика в Восточно-Сибирском и Таймырском Заполярье Соотношение мезолитических памятников Таймыра с культурами мезолита лесной зоны Сибири Глава II. ТАЙМЫРСКОЕ ЗАПОЛЯРЬЕ В ЭПОХУ НЕОЛИТА Ранний неолит Таймыра (IV тыс. до н. э.) Неолитические памятники III-II тыс. до и. э. Стоянки с сетчатой керамикой (памятники кулLтуры Маймече) Комплексы с керамикой байкитскоrо типа Глава III. РАННИЕ БРОНЗОЛИТЕЙЩИКИ ТАЙМЫРА Об изменении климата в позднем голоцене Ымыяхтахские памятники в Таймырском Заполярье РаспространеНИе вафельной керамики в Заполярье и ее последующее развитие Глава IV. ТАЙМЫР В ПЕРИОД РАННЕГО ЖЕЛЕЗА И СРЕДНЕВЕКОВЬЯ Поселение Усть-Половинка и пясинская культура Памятники малокореннинской культуры Памятники культур с восточносибирскими традициями Вожпайская культура Глава V. ЭКОНОМИЧЕСКИЕ И СОЦИАЛЬНЫЕ АСПЕКТЫ РАЗВИТИЯ ДРЕВНИХ ОБЩЕСТВ ТАЙМЫРСКОГО ЗАПОЛЯРЬЯ Поселения Таймырского Заполярья как источник палеосоциолоrической информации Бронзоли-гейное производство на Таймыре Вопросы появления и разви-rия оленеводства в тундровой зоне Западной Сибири и Таймырского Заполярья ЗАКЛЮЧЕНИЕ ПРИЛОЖЕНИЕ ЛИТЕРАТУРА БИБЛИОГРАФИЯ ТРУДОВ Л. П. ХЛОБЫСТИНА ИЛЛЮСТРАЦИИ СПИСОК СОКРАЩЕНИЙ SUMMARY , Sprache der Zusammenfassung: Englisch , In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 68
    Call number: AWI G1-23-95188
    Description / Table of Contents: This book provides a sound introduction to the basic physical processes that dominate the workings of the Earth, its atmosphere and hydrosphere. It systematically introduces the physical processes involved in the Earth's systems without assuming an advanced physics or mathematical background.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XI, 321 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: First published
    ISBN: 1405101733 , 1-4051-0173-3 , 9781405101738
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface Acknowledgments Chapter 1 Planet Earth and Earth systems 1.1 Comparative planetology 1.2 Unique Earth 1.3 Earth systems snapshots 1.4 Measuring Earth 1.5 Whole Earth 1.6 Subtle, interactive Earth Further reading Chapter 2 Matters of state and motion 2.1 Matters of state 2.2 Thermal matters 2.3 Quantity of matter 2.4 Motion matters: kinematics 2.5 Continuity: mass conservation of fluids Further reading Chapter 3 Forces and dynamics 3.1 Quantity of motion: momentum 3.2 Acceleration 3.3 Force, work, energy, and power 3.4 Thermal energy and mechanical work 3.5 Hydrostatic pressure 3.6 Buoyancy force 3.7 Inward acceleration 3.8 Rotation, vorticity, and Coriolis force 3.9 Viscosity 3.10 Viscous force 3.11 Turbulent force 3.12 Overall forces of fluid motion 3.13 Solid stress 3.14 Solid strain 3.15 Rheology Further reading Chapter 4 Flow, deformation, and transport 4.1 The origin of large-scale fluid flow 4.2 Fluid flow types 4.3 Fluid boundary layers 4.4 Laminar flow 4.5 Turbulent flow 4.6 Stratified flow 4.7 Particle settling 4.8 Particle transport by flows 4.9 Waves and liquids 4.10 Transport by waves 4.11 Granular gravity flow 4.12 Turbidity flows 4.13 Flow through porous and granular solids 4.14 Fractures 4.15 Faults 4.16 Solid bending, buckling, and folds 4.17 Seismic waves 4.18 Molecules in motion: kinetic theory, heat conduction, and diffusion 4.19 Heat transport by radiation 4.20 Heat transport by convection Further reading Chapter 5 Inner Earth processes and systems 5.1 Melting, magmas, and volcanoes 5.2 Plate tectonics Further reading Chapter 6 Outer Earth processes and systems 6.1 Atmosphere 6.2 Atmosphere-ocean interface 6.3 Atmosphere-land interface 6.4 Deep ocean 6.5 Shallow ocean 6.6 Ocean-land interface: coasts 6.7 Land surface Further reading Appendix Brief mathematical refresher or study guide Cookies Index
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  • 69
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    New York, NY : Springer
    Call number: AWI S2-23-95184
    Description / Table of Contents: A comprehensive and practical guide to analysing ecological data based on courses given to researchers, environmental consultants and post graduate students. Provides comprehensive introductory chapters together with 17 detailed case study chapters written jointly with former course attendants. Each case study explores the statistical options most appropriate to the ecological questions being asked and will help the reader choose the best approach to analysing their own data. A non-mathematical, but modern approach (GLM, GAM, mixed models, tree models, neural networks) is used throughout the book, making it ideally suited to practicing ecologists and environmental scientists as well as professional statisticians. All data sets from the case studies are available for downloading from www.highstat.com
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXVI, 672 Seiten , Illustrationen , 24 cm
    ISBN: 0387459677 (hbk) , 9780387459677 (hbk) , 978-0-387-45967-7 , 0387459723 (electronic) , 9780387459723 (electronic)
    Series Statement: Statistics for biology and health
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Contributors 1 Introduction 1.1 Part 1: Applied statistical theory 1.2 Part 2: The case studies 1.3 Data, software and flowcharts 2 Data management and software 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Data management 2.3 Data preparation 2.4 Statistical software 3 Advice for teachers 3.1 Introduction 4 Exploration 4.1 The first steps 4.2 Outliers, transformations and standardisations 4.3 A final thought on data exploration 5 Linear regression 5.1 Bivariate linear regression 5.2 Multiple linear regression 5.3 Partial linear regression 6 Generalised linear modelling 6.1 Poisson regression 6.2 Logistic regression 7 Additive and generalised additive modelling 7.1 Introduction 7.2 The additive model 7.3 Example of an additive model 7.4 Estimate the smoother and amount of smoothing 7.5 Additive models with multiple explanatory variables 7.6 Choosing the amount of smoothing 7.7 Model selection and validation 7.8 Generalised additive modelling 7.9 Where to go from here 8 Introduction to mixed modelling 8.1 Introduction 8.2 The random intercept and slope model 8.3 Model selection and validation 8.4 A bit of theory 8.5 Another mixed modelling example 8.6 Additive mixed modelling 9 Univariate tree models 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Pruning the tree 9.3 Classification trees 9.4 A detailed example: Ditch data 10 Measures of association 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Association between sites: Q analysis 10.3 Association among species: R analysis 10.4 Q and R analysis: Concluding remarks 10.5 Hypothesis testing with measures of association 11 Ordination — First encounter 11.1 Bray-Curtis ordination 12 Principal component analysis and redundancy analysis 12.1 The underlying principle of PCA 12.2 PCA: Two easy explanations 12.3 PCA: Two technical explanations 12.4 Example of PCA 12.5 The biplot 12.6 General remarks 12.7 Chord and Hellinger transformations 12.8 Explanatory variables 12.9 Redundancy analysis 12.10 Partial RDA and variance partitioning 12.11 PCA regression to deal with collinearity 13 Correspondence analysis and canonical correspondence analysis 13.1 Gaussian regression and extensions 13.2 Three rationales for correspondence analysis 13.3 From RGR to CCA13.4 Understanding the CCA triplot 13.5 When to use PCA, CA, RDA or CCA 13.6 Problems with CA and CCA 14 Introduction to discriminant analysis 14.1 Introduction 14.2 Assumptions 14.3 Example 14.4 The mathematics 14.5 The numerical output for the sparrow data 15 Principal coordinate analysis and non-metric multidimensional scaling 15.1 Principal coordinate analysis 15.2 Non-metric multidimensional scaling 16 Time series analysis — Introduction 16.1 Using what we have already seen before 16.2 Auto-regressive integrated moving average models with exogenous variables 17 Common trends and sudden changes 17.1 Repeated LOESS smoothing 17.2 Identifying the seasonal component 17.3 Common trends: MAFA 17.4 Common trends: Dynamic factor analysis 17.5 Sudden changes: Chronological clustering 18 Analysis and modelling of lattice data 18.1 Lattice data 18.2 Numerical representation of the lattice structure 18.3 Spatial correlation 18.4 Modelling lattice data 18.5 More exotic models 18.6 Summary 19 Spatially continuous data analysis and modelling 19.1 Spatially continuous data 19.2 Geostatistical functions and assumptions 19.3 Exploratory variography analysis 19.4 Geostatistical modelling: Kriging 19.5 A full spatial analysis of the bird radar data 20 Univariate methods to analyse abundance of decapod larvae 20.1 Introduction 20.2 The data 20.3 Data exploration 20.4 Linear regression results 20.5 Additive modelling results 20.6 How many samples to take? 20.7 Discussion 21 Analysing presence and absence data for flatfish distribution in the Tagus estuary, Portugal 21.1 Introduction 21.2 Data and materials 21.3 Data exploration 21.4 Classification trees 21.5 Generalised additive modelling 21.6 Generalised linear modelling 21.7 Discussion 22 Crop pollination by honeybees in Argentina using additive mixed modelling 22.1 Introduction 22.2 Experimental setup 22.3 Abstracting the information 22.4 First steps of the analyses: Data exploration 22.5 Additive mixed modelling 22.6 Discussion and conclusions 23 Investigating the effects of rice farming on aquatic birds with mixed modelling 23.1 Introduction 23.2 The data 23.3 Getting familiar with the data: Exploration 23.4 Building a mixed model 23.5 The optimal model in terms of random components 23.6 Validating the optimal linear mixed model 23.7 More numerical output for the optimal model 23.8 Discussion 24 Classification trees and radar detection of birds for North Sea wind farms 24.1 Introduction 24.2 From radars to data 24.3 Classification trees 24.4 A tree for the birds 24.5 A tree for birds, clutter and more clutter 24.6 Discussion and conclusions 25 Fish stock identification through neural network analysis of parasite fauna 25.1 Introduction 25.2 Horse mackerel in the northeast Atlantic 25.3 Neural networks 25.4 Collection of data 25.5 Data exploration 25.6 Neural network results 25.7 Discussion 26 Monitoring for change: Using generalised least squares, non-metric multidimensional scaling, and the Mantel test on western Montana grasslands 26.1 Introduction 26.2 The data 26.3 Data exploration 26.4 Linear regression results 26.5 Generalised least squares results 26.6 Multivariate analysis results 26.7 Discussion 27 Univariate and multivariate analysis applied on a Dutch sandy beach community 27.1 Introduction 27.2 The variables 27.3 Analysing the data using univariate methods 27.4 Analysing the data using multivariate methods 27.5 Discussion and conclusions 28 Multivariate analyses of South-American zoobenthic species — spoilt for choice 28.1 Introduction and the underlying questions 28.2 Study site and sample collection 28.3 Data exploration 28.4 The Mantel test approach 28.5 The transformation plus RDA approach 28.6 Discussion and conclusions 29 Principal component analysis applied to harbour porpoise fatty acid data 29.1 Introduction 29.2 The data 29.3 Principal component analysis 29.4 Data exploration 29.5 Principal component analysis results 29.6 Simpler alternatives to PCA 29.7 Discussion 30 Multivariate analyses of morphometric turtle data — size and shape 30.1 Introduction 30.2 The turtle data 30.3 Data exploration 30.4 Overview of classic approaches related to PCA 30.5 Applying PCA to the original turtle data 30.6 Classic morphometric data analysis approaches 30.7 A geometric morphometric approach 31 Redundancy analysis and additive modelling applied on savanna tree data 31.1 Introduction 31.2 Study area 31.3 Methods 31.4 Results 31.5 Discussion 32 Canonical correspondence analysis of lowland pasture vegetation in the humid tropics of Mexico 32.1 Introduction 32.2 The study area 32.3 The data 32.4 Data exploration 32.5 Canonical correspondence analysis results 32.6 African star grass 32.7 Discussion and conclusion 33 Estimating common trends in Portuguese fisheries landings 33.1 Introduction 33.2 The time series data 33.3 MAFA and DFA 33.4 MAFA results 33.5 DFA results 33.6 Discussion 34 Common trends in demersal communities on the Newfoundland-Labrador Shelf 34.1 Introduction 34.2 Data 34.3 Time series analysis 34.4 Discussion 35 Sea level change and salt marshes in the Wadden Sea: A time series analysis 35.1 Interaction between hydrodynamical and biological factors 35.2 The data 35.3 Data exploration 35.4 Additive mixed modelling 35.5 Additive mixed modelling results 35.6 Discussion 36 Time series analysis of Hawaiian waterbirds 36.1 Introduction 36.2 Endangered Hawaiian waterbirds 36.3 Data exploration 36.4 Three ways to estimate trends 36.5 Additive mixed modelling 36.6 Sudden breakpoints 36.7 Discussion 37 Spatial modelling of forest community features in the Volzhsko-Kamsky reserve 37.1 Introduction 37.2 Study area 37.3 Data exploration 37.4 Models of boreality without spatial auto-correlation 37.5 Models of boreality with spatial auto-correlation 37.6 Conclusion References Index
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  • 70
    Call number: AWI G4-23-95001
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: ii, 62 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Summary Introduction Material and Methods 2.1 Experimental Approach and Concept 2.2 Cold Chamber Experiments 2.2.1 Packed Sand Columns 2.2.2 Undisturbed Soil Monolith 2.3 Tracer Extraction and Determination of Tracer Concentrations 2.4 Digital Image Analysis 2.4.1 Photographic Recording 2.4.2 Image Analysis 2.4.3 Statistical Regression Analysis 2.5 Fluorescence Imaging 2.6 Low-Temperature SEM and X-Ray Analysis 2.7 Numerical Simulation 2.7.1 Model Description 2.7.2 Model Application 3 Results From Cold Chamber Experiments 3.1 Packed Sand Columns (Experiment I-III) 3.1.1 Infiltration Behaviour (Experiment I-III) 3.1.2 Dye Tracer Distribution (Experiment III) 3.1.3 Mass Recovery of Dye Tracers (Experiment III) 3.1.4 Vertical Distribution of Dye Tracers Determined From Large Sections (Experiment III) 3.2 Undisturbed Soil Monolith (Experiment IV) 3.2.1 Infiltration Behaviour 3.2.2 Dye Tracer Distributions 3.2.3 Mass Recovery of all Tracers Determined From Large Sections 3.2.4 Vertical Distribution of all Tracers Determined From Large Sections 4 Results From Low-Temperature SEM and X-Ray Analysis 4.1 Dry Sand and Loam 4.2 Wet Sand 4.3 Wet Loam 5 Modelling Results 5.1 Thermal Regime 5.2 Water Content Profile Before the Irrigation 5.3 Infiltration Behaviour 5.4 Water Content Profile After the Irrigation 5.5 Solute Transport 5.6 Energy Exchange at the Surface 6 Conclusions 6.1 Conclusions About the Methods 6.2 Conclusions About the Water Infiltration in Frozen Soil List of Figures List of Tables Bibliography
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  • 71
    Call number: AWI Bio-23-95527
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 675 Seiten , 19 cm
    Edition: 6., überarbeitete und erweiterte Auflage
    ISBN: 333460960X , 3-8274-0665-X , 382740665X
    Series Statement: UTB für Wissenschaft : Uni-Taschenbücher 367
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt Vorwort Hinweise für die Benutzung 1. Einführung in die Terminologie und Nomenklatur 1.1. Einteilung der Zoologie 1.2. Herkunft und Entwicklung der zoologischen Fachsprache 1.3. Philologische Grundlagen der Terminologie (Lautlehre) 1.3.1. Schrift, Transkription, Schreibweise 1.3.2. Aussprache 1.3.3. Betonung 1.3.4. Silbentrennung 1.3.5. Bindevokale, Prä- und Suffixe in Komposita 1.4. Grundlagen und Prinzipien der Taxonomischen Nomenklatur 1.4.1. Begriff und Funktionen der Zoologischen Nomenklatur 1.4.2. Überblick über die systematischen Kategorien und ihre Benennung 1.4.3. Namen der Gattungsgruppe 1.4.4. Namen der Artgruppe 1.4.5. Namen der Autoren 1.4.6. Namen der infrasubspezifischen Formen 1.4.7. Wiedergabe von Namen im Deutschen 1.5. Symbole und Abkürzungen 2. Lexikalischer Hauptteil: Erklärungen von Tiernamen, zoologischen Fachwörtern inklusive allgemeinbiologischer, anatomischer und physiologischer Termini 3. Autorennamen (Verzeichnis) 4. System des Tierreichs 5. Literatur Erklärung der im Lexikon verwendeten Abkürzungen und Zeichen Erstauftreten von Tiergruppen in der Erdgeschichte
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  • 72
    Call number: AWI A2-24-95687
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 97 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: 2nd edition
    ISBN: 9782880853051 , 978-2-940443-00-0
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Executive summary Overview Arctic climate change Key findings of this assessment 1. Atmospheric circulation feedbacks 2. Ocean circulation feedbacks 3. Ice sheets and sea-level rise feedbacks 4. Marine carbon cycle feedbacks 5. Land carbon cycle feedbacks 6. Methane hydrate feedbacks Author team
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  • 73
    Call number: AWI A1-18-91747
    Description / Table of Contents: If dangerous climate change is still to be avoided, a reversal of current trends must be achieved within the next ten years, and greenhouse gas emissions worldwide must be halved by 2050 compared with a 1990 baseline. However, there is a widening gap between the action that is urgently needed and current climate policy. The German Advisory Council on Global Change (WBGU) is therefore convinced that a new climate policy dynamic is required worldwide. Currently, all eyes are on Germany: its Presidency of the Council of the European Union and Presidency of G8 offer a dual opportunity to drive climate protection forward. The Council‘s core messages are as follows: Climate protection is both worthwhile and feasible: Investing in climate protection is economically efficient, as the costs of effective climate protection are far lower than the costs of inaction. The longer we delay, the more expensive climate protection will become. For successful climate protection, a transformation of the world‘s energy systems is key. Such a transformation is technologically feasible, marking a shift away from fossil towards renewable energy sources, and requires rapid utilization of the high efficiency potentials. Further development of the UN climate convention: A consensus on the mitigation target must be forged and enshrined in the convention. To this end, the Council recommends the adoption of a global temperature guard rail limiting the rise in near-surface air temperature to a maximum of 2 °C relative to the pre-industrial value – equivalent to stabilizing the concentration of greenhouse gases below 450 ppm CO2eq. The Kyoto Protocol must be developed further and offer effective incentives for the transformation of energy systems. The industrialized countries should commit to ambitious reduction targets, while mechanisms must be established for the progressive, but differentiated integration of the newly industrializing and developing countries into commitment regimes. The issue of adaptation must also be given appropriate priority. This must include firm pledges from the industrialized countries on technological cooperation and financing. Making the most of the G8 Summit at Heiligendamm: Fresh initiatives from the heads of state and government are required to inject new life into the faltering climate process. The G8 countries and the five major newly industrializing countries, as the world‘s leading political and economic nations, should now send out clear signals and agree an ‚innovation pact on decarbonization‘. By adopting joint parameters for efficiency and CO2 emissions standards, developing a Road Atlas for the decarbonization of energy systems, and promoting technological cooperation, the G8+5 countries have the potential to become the driving force in international climate policy. Reaffirming the European Union‘s leading role: The European Union should expand its leading role in international climate protection. To maintain its credibility, it must achieve its agreed emissions reduction targets. The EU must demonstrate the viability of climate protection and provide fresh impetus for energy efficiency and renewables worldwide. The European Union‘s Emissions Trading Scheme should be developed further and improved as a matter of urgency.
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 20 Seiten
    ISBN: 978-3-936191-16-6
    Series Statement: Policy paper / WBGU, German Advisory Council on Global Change 5
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: Summary for Policy-Makers. - 1 Climate protection: Swift action is essential. - The scientific evidence is clear. - Compliance with the 2 °C guard rail is worthwhile. - 2 Transforming the world‘s energy systems: The cornerstone of climate protection. - The energy portfolio for the future. - A new generation of energy technologies . - Mobilizing untapped efficiency potential. - Financing the transformation of energy systems. - A new climate policy dynamic. - 3 Implementing and developing the Climate Change Convention. - Making the 2 °C guard rail an international standard. - Gearing the Kyoto Protocol towards the long term. - Agreeing ambitious reduction targets for industrialized countries. - Integrating newly industrializing countries on a differentiated basis. - Giving adaptation high priority. - 4 Agreeing an innovation pact with Road Atlas at the G8 summit. - Agreeing parameters for climate-compatible technologies. - Developing a joint Road Atlas. - Offering technological cooperation as an incentive. - Harnessing impetus for the Climate Change Convention. - 5 Strengthening the EU‘s leading role. - Triggering an efficiency revolution. - Expanding renewables. - Fostering international cooperation in the energy sector. - Making the Emission Trading Scheme efficient and effective . - Strengthening the function of the public sector as a role model. - Implementing the programme of action on ‘sustainable consumption‘. - Redirecting energy subsidies. - Boosting adaptation within the framework of development cooperation. , Deutsche Ausgabe unter dem Titel: Neue Impulse für die Klimapolitik
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  • 74
    Call number: AWI S6-18-91800
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 176 S. , zahlr. Ill.
    ISBN: 5-7696-2541-4
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrill. Schr.
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  • 75
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    [s.l.] : [s.n.]
    Call number: AWI S6-18-91804
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 29 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: Russian , English
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift , In russischer und englischer Sprache
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  • 76
    Call number: AWI G6-18-92020
    Type of Medium: Dissertations
    Pages: 135, LIII Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: German
    Note: Heidelberg, Universität, Dissertation, 1997 , Inhaltsverzeichnis: Zusammenfassung. - 1 Einleitung. - 2 Grundlagen. - 2.1 Der grönländische Aerosolkörper. - 2.1.1 Schwefelkomponenten. - 2.1.2 Stickstoffkomponenten. - 2.1.3 Seesalzaerosol. - 2.1.4 Mineralstaub. - 2.2 Depositionsprozesse. - 2.2.1 Irreversible Depositionsprozesse. - 2.2.2 Reversible Depositionsprozesse. - 3 Zeitreihenanalyse. - 3.1 Problemstellung. - 3.2 Konzentrationszeitreihen. - 3.3 Methoden. - 3.3.1 Ausreißerdetektion. - 3.3.2 Trendanalyse. - 3.3.3 Frequenzanalyse. - 4 Methodik. - 4.1 Probennahme. - 4.1.1 Firnkernbohrungen. - 4.1.2 Schachtprobennahme. - 4.1.3 Aliquotienung und Probendekontamination. - 4.2 Ionenchromatographie. - 4.2.1 Kationenmethode. - 4.2.2 Anionenmethode. - 4.2.3 Blankwerte. - 4.2.4 Meßgenauigkeit. - 4.3 Atommassenspektrometrie. - 4.4 Datierung. - 4.4.1 Schachtdatierung. - 4.4.2 Datierung flacher Firnkerne. - 4.4.3 Datierung tieferer Firnkerne. - 4.5 Mittelungsprozeduren. - 5 Klimatologie. - 5.1 Glaziometeorologie. - 5.1.1 Temperatur. - 5.1.2 Schneeakkumulation. - 5.1.3 Deuteriumexzeß. - 5.2 Klimaänderungen. - 5.2.1 Isotopengehalt. - 5.2.2 Schneeakkumulation. - 5.3 Resümee. - 6 Glaziochemie Nordostgrönlands. - 6.1 Saisonale Variation. - 6.1.1 Sulfat. - 6.1.2 Nitrat. - 6.1.3 Seesalz. - 6.1.4 Mineralstaub. - 6.1.5 Methansulfonat. - 6.1.6 Ammonium. - 6.1.7 Zusammenfassung. - 6.2 Rezente geographische Verteilung. - 6.21 Sulfat. - 6.2.2 Nitrat. - 6.2.3 Seesalz. - 6.2.4 Mineralstaub. - 6.2.5 Methansulfonat. - 6.2.6 Ammonium. - 6.3 Vorindustrielle geographische Verteilung. - 6.3.1 Sulfat. - 6.3.2 Nitrat. - 6.3.3 Seesalz. - 6.3.4 Mineralstaub. - 6.3.5 Methansulfonat. - 6.3.6 Ammonium. - 6.3.7 Zusammenfassung. - 7 Depositionsmodell. - 7.1 Irreversible Deposition. - 7.2 Reversible Deposition. - 7.3 Deposition in Grönland. - 7.3.1 Sulfat. - 7.3.2 Seesalzaerosol. - 7.3.3 Mineralstaub. - 7.3.4 Nitrat. - 8 Glaziochemische Langzeitvariation. - 8.1 Natürliche Aerosolkomponenten. - 8.1.1 Mineralstaub. - 8.1.2 Seesalz. - 8.2 Biogener Schwefel. - 8.3 Anthropogene Spurenstoffgeschichte. - 8.3.1 Sulfat. - 8.3.2 Nitrat. - 8.3.3 Chloridexzeß. - 8.3.4 Ammonium. - 8.4 Vergleich mit anderen Zeitreihen. - 9 Ausblick. - Literaturverzeichnis. - Abbildungsverzeichnis. - Tabellenverzeichnis. - A Teststudie der Zeitreihenanalysemethoden. - A.1 Testdatensatz. - A.2 Ausreißerdetektion. - A.3 Trendanalyse. - A.3.1 Splineapproximation. - A.3.2 Singuläre Spektrum Analyse. - B Saharastaubreduktion des CCB-Kerns. - C IC-Analysenbedingungen. - D Probennahmen. - E Mittlere Kernparameter. - F Daten.
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  • 77
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Copenhagen : [s.n.]
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92044
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 75 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: Flight plan 1999. - LC130 schedule. - NGRIP 1999 schedule. - Overview of 1999 schedule. - lnfo for August1998 meeting. - Quartering and buildings. - Number of field participants. - NGRIP 1999 sub programs. - SITREP. - Term of reference for the NGRIP field work. - Accidents and illness. - Mail to NGRIP participants. - Cargo shipments to Greenland. - Personnel transport 1999. - Booze and drugs. - Vacation in Greenland. - Shipping boxes. - Welcome to the NGRIP camp. - List of participants. - NG RIP camp load. - Kangerlussuaq and the surrounding area. - Thule Air Base, Greenland, Base Operations. - Uplift 1998. - Typical specifications for LC-130 and Twin Otter. - Useful data. - Coordination of C-130 in Kangerlussuaq. - Aviation weather reports. - Typical communication plan and frequencies used. - Phonetic alphabet. - Personal field equipment. - Operation of Thrane & Thrane STDC telex terminal. - Operation of NERA lnmarsat M terminal. - Map of NGRIP camp. - NGRIP inclined pit and trenches. - Map of NGRIP Region. - Map of Greenland and North Greenland. - Map of skiway. - Ice divide North of NGRIP. - Map of the magnetic declination in Greenland. - Glycol specification. - Density vs temperature of hole liquid. - Positions in Greenland, distances and directions. - List of NGRIP addresses.
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  • 78
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Copenhagen : [s.n.]
    Call number: AWI G7-19-92046
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 64 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: Flight plan 1996. - C130 schedule. - NGRIP 1996 Schedule. - Overview of 1996 schedule. - Camp Layout. - Buildings. - Number of field participants. - NGRIP 1996 Sub programs. - CARDS Radar test. - KMS Elevation measurements. - SITREP. - Terms of Reference during the field operation. - Accidents and Illness. - Mail to NGRIP participants. - Cargo shipments to Greenland. - Personnel transport 1996. - Booze and drugs. - Vacation in Greenland. - Shipping boxes. - Welcome to the NGRIP camp. - List of participants. - NGRIP camp load. - Kangerlussuaq and Surrounding Area. - Thule Air Base, Greenland, Base Operations. - Other useful information for Thule passengers. - Uplift 1996. - Typical specs for LC-130 and Twin Otter. - Useful data. - Coordination of C-130 in Kangerlussuaq. - Aviation weather reports. - Typical communication plan. - Summary of frequencies used in Greenland. - Phonetic alphabet. - Personal field equipment. - Map of GRIP camp. - NGRIP, Maps of one and two line set up. - NGRIP trenches. - Map of Greenland. - Map of north Greenland. - Map of ice divide north of GRIP. - Map of magnetic declination in Greenland. - Positions in Greenland. - Relevant distances and directions. - 1996 Twin Otter hours. - List of NGRIP addresses.
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  • 79
    Call number: ZSP-994
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 21 x 21 cm
    ISSN: 1618-3703
    Former Title: Vorgänger: Zweijahresbericht / Stiftung Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Subsequent Title: Fortsetzung Zweijahresbericht ... / AWI, Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung in der Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft
    Language: German , English
    Note: Erscheint alle 2 Jahre , Text in deutscher und englischer Sprache
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  • 80
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Durham, N.H. : [GISP2 Science Management Office, Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space, University of New Hampshire]
    Call number: AWI P8-20-93386
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 41 Seiten
    Language: English
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  • 81
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Amsterdam : Elsevier
    Call number: AWI G2-21-94484
    Description / Table of Contents: Although it is generally accepted that the Arctic Ocean is a very sensitive and important region for changes in the global climate, this region is the last major physiographic province of the earth whose short-and long-term geological history is much less known in comparison to other ocean regions. This lack of knowledge is mainly caused by the major technological/logistic problems in reaching this harsh, ice-covered region with normal research vessels and in retrieving long and undisturbed sediment cores. During the the last about 20 years, however, several international and multidisciplinary ship expeditions, including the first scientific drilling on Lomonosov Ridge in 2004, a break-through in Arctic research, were carried out into the central Artic and its surrounding shelf seas. Results from these expeditions have greatly advanced our knowledge on Arctic Ocean paleoenvironments. Published syntheses about the knowledge on Arctic Ocean geology, on the other hand, are based on data available prior to 1990. A comprehensive compilation of data on Arctic Ocean paleoenvironment and its short-and long-term variability based on the huge amount of new data including the ACEX drilling data, has not been available yet. With this book, presenting (1) detailed information on glacio-marine sedimentary processes and geological proxies used for paleoenvironmental reconstructions, and (2) detailed geological data on modern environments, Quaternary variability on different time scales as well as the long-term climate history during Mesozoic-Tertiary times, this gap in knowledge will be filled.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIV, 592 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: First edition
    ISBN: 9780444520180
    Series Statement: Developments in marine geology 2
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Part 1: Introduction and Background Chapter 1. Introduction to the Arctic: Significance and History 1.1 The Arctic Ocean and Its Significance for the Earth's Climate System 1.2 History of Arctic Ocean Research 1.3 Plate Tectonic Evolution and Palaeogeography 1.4 Glaciations in Earth's History Chapter 2. Modern Physiography, Hydrology, Climate, and Sediment Input 2.1 Bathymetry and Physiography 2.2 Oceanic Circulation Pattern and Water-Mass Characteristics 2.3 Sea-Ice Cover: Extent, Thickness, and Variability 2.4 Primary Production and Vertical Carbon Fluxes in the Arctic Ocean 2.5 River Discharge 2.6 Permafrost 2.7 Coastal Erosion 2.8 Aeolian Input 2.9 Modern Sediment Input: A Summary Part 2: Processes and Proxies Chapter 3. Glacio-Marine Sedimentary Processes 3.1 Sea-Ice Processes: Sediment Entrainment and Transport 3.2 Ice Sheet- and Iceberg-Related Processes 3.3 Sediment Mass-Wasting Processes 3.4 Turbidite Sedimentation in the Central Arctic Ocean Chapter 4. Proxies Used for Palaeoenvironmental Reconstructions in the Arctic Ocean 4.1 Lithofacies Concept 4.2 Grain-Size Distribution 4.3 Proxies for Sources and Transport Processes of Terrigenous Sediments 4.4 Trace Elements Used for Palaeoenvironmental Reconstruction 4.5 Micropalaeontological Proxies and Their (Palaeo-) Environmental and Stratigraphical Significance 4.6 Stable Isotopes of Foraminifers 4.7 Organic-Geochemical Proxies for Organic-Carbon Source and Palaeoenvironment Part 3: The Marine-Geological Record 5 Modern Environment and its record in surface sediments 5.1 Terrigenous (non-biogenic) components in Arctic Ocean surface sediments: Implications for provenance and modern transport processes 5.2 Organic-Carbon Content: Terrigenous Supply versus Primary Production Chapter 6. Quaternary Variability of Palaeoenvironment and Its Sedimentary Record 6.1 The Stratigraphic Framework of Arctic Ocean Sediment Cores: Background, Problems, and Perspectives 6.2 Variability of Quaternary Ice Sheets and Palaeoceanographic Characteristics: Terrestrial, Model, and Eurasian Continental Margin Records 6.3 Circum-Arctic Glacial History, Sea-Ice Cover, and Surface-Water Characteristics: Quaternary Records from the Central Arctic Ocean 6.4 Accumulation of Particulate Organic Carbon at the Arctic Continental Margin and Deep-Sea Areas During Late Quaternary Times Chapter 7. Mesozoic to Cenozoic Palaeoenvironmental Records of High Northern Latitudes 7.1 Mesozoic High-Latitude Palaeoclimate and Arctic Ocean Palaeoenvironment 7.2 Cenozoic High-Latitude Palaeoclimate and Arctic Ocean Palaeoenvironment Chapter 8. Open Questions and Future Geoscientific Arctic Ocean Research 8.1 Quaternary and Neogene Climate Variability on Sub-Millennial to Milankovich Time Scales 8.2 The Mesozoic-Cenozoic History of the Arctic Ocean References Index
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  • 82
    Call number: AWI G2-21-94620
    Description / Table of Contents: The monograph outlines the history of establishing the drifting stations in the Arctic Basin beginning from 1937, sets forth the main aims and goals of the observations made, and describes methods of arranging drifting stations, gear and equipment for life support and scientific observations at the "North Pole" drifting stations and in high-latitudinal airborne expeditions. The main scientific results of the analysis of meteorological, ice, oceanographic and geophysical observations in the central Arctic Basin are presented. The contribution of data collected at the drifting stations to the process of gaining knowledge about the nature of the Arctic Basin and the perspectives of using drifting stations in the future, in particular during the International Polar Year 2007-2008 are being discussed. The book contains an extensive illustrative, cartographic and tabular material, which can be used by a wide circle of specialists investigating the nature of the Arctic region.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xix, 267 Seiten , Illustrationen, Karten
    ISBN: 5-02-025079-1
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 83
    Call number: AWI Bio-21-94354
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 376 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9783906166551 , 3906166554
    Series Statement: Diatom monographs 8
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS Foreword 1. Introduction (Krystyna Wasylikowa) 2. History of research (Herbert E. Wright, Jr) 2.1. Introduction 2.2. The 1963 campaign 2.3. The 1970 campaign 2.4. Post-1970 analytical work 3. Geologie and climatic setting of the sites (Herbert E. Wright, Jr) 4. Outline of the Vegetation of western Iran (Willem van Zeist) 4.1. Introduction 4.2. The regional Vegetation 4.3. Zeribar marsh Vegetation 5. Coring and sampling methods (Herbert E. Wright, Jr and Krystyna Wasylikowa) 5.1. Introduction 5.2. Lake Zeribar 5.3. Lalabad and Nilofar 5.4. Mirabad landslide lakes 5.5. Sub-sampling 6. Description of Sediments (Krystyna Wasylikowa and Herbert E. Wright, Jr) 7. Lake Zeribar: dating and Sedimentation rate (Adam Walanus and Krystyna Wasylikowa) 7.1. Introduction 7.2. Age-depth curves 7.3. Sedimentation rate 8. Late Pleistocene and Holocene Vegetation at Zeribar (Willem van Zeist) 8.1. Introduction 8.2. The surface-sample study 8.3. Late Pleistocene 8.4. Holocene 8.5. Comparison with other pollen sites 9. Paleoecology of Lake Zeribar in the Late Pleistocene and Holocene reconstrueted from the flora of aquatic and marsh plants (Krystyna Wasylikowa) 9.1. Introduction 9.2. Methods 9.3. Principles of palaeoecological interpretation of plant-macrofossil assemblages from Lake Zeribar 9.4. Pleniglacial lake Vegetation 9.5. Lake Vegetation during the decline of the Pleniglacial and in the Lateglacial 9.6. Lake Vegetation in the Holocene 9.7. Summary of plant-macrofossil stratigraphy 9.8. Notes on the identification of plant macrofossils from Lake Zeribar (Krystyna Wasylikowa and Felix Yu. Velichkevich) 10. Diatom paleolimnology of Lake Zeribar, Iran, in the Late Pleistocene and Holocene (Andrzej Witkowski, Kazimierz Wasylik, Horst Lange-Bertalot, Malgorzata Bak and Karolina Derwich) 10.1. Introduction 10.2. Material and methods 10.3. Results 10.4. Discussion 10.5. Conclusions (Plates) 11. Oospores of Charales in Late Pleistocene and Holocene Sediments of Lake Zeribar, Iran (Andrzej Hutorowicz) 11.1. Introduction 11.2. Materials and methods 11.3. Systematic description of the charophyte species identified 11.4. Palaeoparameters of water in Lake Zeribar 11.5. Charophyte Vegetation at the decline of the Pleniglacial and in the Lateglacial 11.6. Charophyte Vegetation at the decline of the Lateglacial and the beginning of the Holocene 11.7. Charophyte Vegetation in the Holocene 11.8. Summary of charophyte Vegetation stratigraphy 12. Molluscs of Late Quaternary lacustrine Sediments of Lake Zeribar (Iran) (Stefan W. Alexandrowicz) 12.1. Introduction 12.2. Material and methods 12.3. Species of molluscs 12.4. Assemblages of molluscs 12.5. Interpretation 13. Charred plant macrofossils in Lake Zeribar Sediments (Jerzy J. Langer andKrystyna Wasylikowa) 13.1. Introduction 13.2. Charred remains in Lake Zeribar Sediments 13.3. Physico-chemical analyses 13.4. Conclusions of physico-chemical analyses 13.5. Palaeoecological interpretation 14. Variations in effective moisture at Lake Zeribar, Iran during the last glacial period and Holocene, inferred from the δ18O values of authigenic calcite (Lora R. Stevens, Emi Ito, and Herbert E. Wright, Jr) 14.1. Introduction 14.2. Climatic setting 14.3. Oxygen-isotope setting 14.4. δ18O values as proxies for hydrology and effective moisture 14.5. Methods 14.6. Results 14.7. Discussion 14.8. Conclusions 15. The Lake Zeribar palaeoecology: a synthesis (Krystyna Wasylikowa, Willem van Zeist, Herbert E. Wright, Jr, Lora R. Stevens, Andrzej Witkowski, Adam Walanus, Andrzej Hutorowicz, Stefan W. Alexandrowicz, and Jerzy J. Langer) 15.1. Introduction 15.2. Middle Pleniglacial (ca. 48,000-38,000 cal. yr BP) 15.3. Upper Pleniglacial (ca. 38,000-15,400 cal yr BP) 15.4. The Lateglacial (ca. 15,400-12,000 cal.yr BP) 15.5. Early Holocene (ca. 12,000-6900 cal. yr BP) 15.6. Middle and Late Holocene from 6900 to 1400 cal. yr BP 15.7. Summarizing remarks References Appendix 1 (Depth and age of samples used for various analyses) Appendix 2 (List of plant taxa identified on the basis of macrofossils found in sediment cores 63J, 70A, 63B, 70B, and 63C) Appendix 3 (List of diatom species identified in the sediment cores 63J, 70A, and 70B) PlatesI-XII
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  • 84
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Canberra [u.a.] : Australian Biological Resources Study [u.a.] | Hobart : Australian Antarctic Division
    Call number: AWI Bio-21-94359
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VIII, 563 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 0642568359 (hbk.) , 9780642568359 (hbk.)
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS Contributors Acknowledgements 1. Introduction / Harvey J. Marchant & Fiona J. Scott Systematic Arrangement of Taxa 2. Diatoms / Fiona J. Scott & David P. Thomas 3. Dinoflagellates / Andrew McMinn & Fiona J. Scott 4. Silicoflagellates / Gustaaf M. Hallegraeff 5. Haptophytes: Order Prymnesiales / Harvey J. Marchant & Fiona J. Scott & Andrew T. Davidson 6. Haptophytes: Order Coccolithophorales / Claire S. Findlay, Jeremy R. Young & Fiona J. Scott 7. Chrysophytes / Harvey J. Marchant & Fiona J. Scott 8. Prasinophytes / Harvey J. Marchant 9. Chlorophytes / Fiona J. Scott 10. Cryptophytes / Fiona J. Scott & John van den Hojf 11. Euglenoids / Fiona J. Scott 12. Cyanophytes / Harvey J. Marchant 13. Choanoflagellates / Harvey J. Marchant 14. Ciliates / Wolfgang Petz 15. Protista Incertae Sedis / Fiona J. Scott & Harvey J. Marchant Glossary Bibliography Copyright Permission Index
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  • 85
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Amsterdam : Academic Press
    Call number: AWI Bio-21-94358
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XV, 542 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: second Edition
    ISBN: 0124555217 , 9780124555211
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS Preface Acknowledgments 1 Toward an Ecological Geography of the Sea The Progressive Exploration of Oceanic and Shelf Ecosystems The Availability of Timely Global Oceanographic Data from Satellites Internal Dynamics of Satellite-Observed Algal Blooms Our New Understanding of the Role of Very Small Organisms 2 Biogeographic Partition of the Ocean Taxonomic Diversity: The Shifting Baseline of Biogeography The Useful Results from 150 Years of Marine Biogeography Biogeographic Regions of the Pelagos Geographic Component of Benthic-Pelagic Coupling From Pristine to Modified Ecosystems 3 Fronts and Pycnoclines: Ecological Discontinuities Fronts and Frontal Systems Oceanic Fronts and Eddy Streets Shelf-Edge and Upwelling Fronts Tidal Fronts and River Plumes of the Shelf Seas The Ubiquitous "Horizontal Front" at the Shallow Pycnocline 4 Physical Control of Ecological Processes Ecological Consequences of Mesoscale Eddies and Planetary Waves Stratification and Irradiance: The Consequences of Latitude Regional and Latitudinal Resistance to Mixing in the Open Oceans Rule-Based Models of Ecological Response to External Forcing Case 1—Polar Irradiance-Mediated Production Peak Case 2—Nutrient-Limited Spring Production Peak Case 3—Winter-Spring Production with Nutrient Limitation Case 4—Small-Amplitude Response to Trade Wind Seasonality Case 5—Large-Amplitude Response to Monsoon-like Reversal of Trade Winds Case 6—Intermittent Production at Coastal Divergences Coastal Asymmetry, Geomorphology, and Tidal Forcing 5 Nutrient Limitation: The Example of Iron Nutrient Distribution and the Consequences of Differing Supply Ratios Regional Anomalies in Nutrient Limitation Models of Regional Nutrient Flux and Limitation 6 Biomes: The Primary Partition The Four Primary Biomes of the Upper Ocean Polar Biome Westerlies Biome Trades Biome Coastal Biome 7 Provinces: The Secondary Compartments Ecological Provinces in the Open Ocean Ways of Testing Static Province Boundaries in the Open Ocean A Statistical Test Analytical Tests Biogeographic Tests Practicable and Useful Partitions in Coastal Seas 8 Longer Term Responses: From Seasons to Centuries Scales of External Forcing Recurrent, ENSO-Scale Changes of State Multidecadal Trends and Changes Conclusion: Stable Partitions in a Varying Ocean? 9 The Atlantic Ocean Atlantic Polar Biome Boreal Polar Province (BPLR) Atlantic Arctic Province (ARCT) Atlantic Subarctic Province (SARC) Atlantic Westerly Winds Biome North Atlantic Drift Province (NADR) Gulf Stream Province (GFST) North Atlantic Subtropical Gyral Province (NAST-E, NAST-W) Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea Province (MEDI) Atlantic Trade Wind Biome North Atlantic Tropical Gyral Province (NATR) Caribbean Province (CARB) Western Tropical Atlantic Province (WTRA) Eastern Tropical Atlantic Province (ETRA) South Atlantic Gyral Province (SATL) Atlantic Coastal Biome Northeast Atlantic Shelves Province (NECS) Canary Current Coastal Province (CNRY) Guinea Current Coastal Province (GUIN) Benguela Current Coastal Province (BENG) Northwest Atlantic Shelves Province (NWCS) Guianas Coastal Province (GUIA) Brazil Current Coastal Province (BRAZ) Southwest Atlantic Shelves Province (FKLD) 10 The Indian Ocean Indian Ocean Trade Wind Biome Indian Monsoon Gyres Province (MONS) Indian South Subtropical Gyre Province (ISSG) Indian Ocean Coastal Biome Red Sea, Arabian Gulf Province (REDS) Northwest Arabian Sea Upwelling Province (ARAB) Western India Coastal Province (INDW) Eastern India Coastal Province (INDE) Eastern Africa Coastal Province (EAFR) Australia-Indonesia Coastal Province (AUSW) 11 The Pacific Ocean Pacific Polar Biome North Pacific Epicontinental Sea Province (BERS) Pacific Westerly Winds Biome Pacific Subarctic Gyres Province, East and West (PSAG) Kuroshio Current Province (KURO) North Pacific Subtropical and Polar Front Provinces (NPST and NPPF) Tasman Sea Province (TASM) Pacific Trade Winds Biome North Pacific Tropical Gyre Province (NPTG) North Pacific Equatorial Countercurrent Province (PNEC) Pacific Equatorial Divergence Province (PEQD) Western Pacific Warm Pool Province (WARM) Archipelagic Deep Basins Province (ARCH) South Pacific Subtropical Gyre Province, North and South (SPSG) Pacific Coastal Biome Alaska Coastal Downwelling Province (ALSK) California Current Province (CALC) Central American Coastal Province (CAMR) Humboldt Current Coastal Province (HUMB) China Sea Coastal Province (CHIN) Sunda-Arafura Shelves Province (SUND) East Australian Coastal Province (AUSE) New Zealand Coastal Province (NEWZ) 12 The Southern Ocean Antarctic Westerly Winds Biome South Subtropical Convergence Province (SSTC) Subantarctic Water Ring Province (SANT) Antarctic Polar Biome Antarctic Province (ANTA) Austral Polar Province (APLR) References Index
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  • 86
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    San Diego [u.a.] : Academic Press
    Call number: AWI Bio-21-94360
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XV, 858 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 012693018X (pbk.)
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Editor's Foreword Contributors' Forewords Acknowledgments Chapter 1 lntroduction and historical background / Grethe R. Hasle and Carmelo R. Tomas Chapter 2 Marine Diatoms / Grethe R. Hasle and Erik E. Syvertsen Introduction General Characteristics Life Cycles Morphology and Terminology Classification Genera Represented in Marine Plankton Centric Diatoms Pennate Diatoms Identification Content Description of Taxa Centric Diatoms Pennate Diatoms Methodology Collection and Concentration Unialgal Cultures as a Means for Species Identification Preservation and Storage Preparation for Light Microscopy Preparation for Electron Microscopy Microscopy What to Look for-General Hints for Identification and Preparation Taxonomic Appendix New Genus New Names Validation of Names New Nomenclatural Combinations Common Diatom Synonyms Index of Diatom Taxa References Chapter 3 Dinoflagelates / Karen A. Steidinger in Collaboration with Karl Tangen Introduction General Characteristics Dinoflagellates: Eukaryotic Unicells Terminology and Morphology Morphological Types General Cell Terms Microanatomy Characters Used in Identifying Prorocentroid Desmokont Cells Characters Used in Identifying Dinokont Cells Identification of Species Techniques for Preparation of Dinoflagellates for Identification Common Dinoflagellate Synonyms Index of Dinoflagellate Taxa References Chapter 4 Introduction / Carmelo R. Tomas Chapter 5 The Planktonic Marine Flagellates / Jahn Throndsen Introduction General Considerations Algal Flagellate Characteristics Flagellate Terminology Phytoflagellate Taxanomy Phytoflagellate Systematics Chromophyta Cryptophyceae Raphidophyceae Chrysophyceae Dictyochophyceae Prymnesiophyceae-Haptophyceae (Exclusive of Coccolithophorids) Chlorophyta Euglenophyceae Prasinophyceae Chlorophyeae Zooflagellates (Phylum Zoomastigophora) Choanoflagellidea Kinetoplastidea Ebriidea Techniques Preparing Samples for Observation Cultivation for Identification Preparation of Samples for Further Studies Specific Problems to Avoid Common Flagellate Synonyms Glossary Index of Flagellate Taxa References Chapter 6 Modern Coccolithophorids / Berit R. Heimdal Introduction General Characteristics Terminology and Morphology Problems in Studying Recent Coccolithophorids Classification Outline for Classification and Arrangement of Genera Systematic Descriptions Holococcolithophorids Heterococcolithophorids Common Coccolithophorid Synonyms Index of Coccolithophorid Taxa References Glossary General Index
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  • 87
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Boca Raton : Taylor & Francis
    Call number: AWI G8-22-95025
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 575 Seiten , Illustrationen , 1 CD-ROM
    Edition: Second edition
    ISBN: 0-4152-6340-9
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 Goals of this Book 1.2 Current Status of Resources 1.2.1 Ozone Hole 1.2.2 Water-Borne Soil Erosion 1.2.3 Loss of Biodiversity 1.3 Impact of Resource Degradation 1.4 Nature of Resource ;Degradation 1.5 Nature of Resource Management 1.5.1 Strategic Management 1.5.2 Process or Regional Management 1.5.3 Operational Management 1.5.4 Relationship between These Levels of Management 1.6 Nature of Regional Resource Management Information Systems 1.7 Geographic Information in Resource Management 1.8 Structure of this Book Reference Chapter2 Physical Principles of Remote Sensing 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Electromagnetic Radiation 2.2.1 Nature of Electromagnetic Radiation 2.2.2 Radiometric Terms and Definitions 2.2.3 Energy Radiated by the Sun and the Earth 2.2.4 Effects of the Atmosphere 2.2.5 Correction of Remotely Sensed Data for Attenuation through the Atmosphere 2.2.5 .1 Atmospheric Correction Using Field Data 2.2.5.2 Atmospheric Correction Using Numerical Atmospheric Models 2.2.6 Measurement of Radiance and Irradiance 2.2.6.1 Collecting Optics 2.2.6.2 Filter Unit 2.2.6.3 Detectors 2.2.6.4 Output Device 2.3 Interaction of Radiation with Matter 2.3.1 Nature of Reflectance 2.3.1.1 Reflectance within the Boundary Layer 2.3.2 Reflectance of Water Surfaces 2.3.3 Reflectance Characteristics of Soils 2.3.4 Reflectance of Vegetation 2.3.5 Reflectance Characteristics of Green Leaves 2.3.6 Reflectance Characteristics of Dead Leaves 2.3.7 Vegetative Canopy Reflectance 2.3.8 Bi-Directional Reflectance Distribution Function of Surfaces 2.4 Passive Sensing Systems 2.4.1 The Camera 2.4.1.1 Lens Cone 2.4.1.2 Magazine or Digital Back 2.4.1.3 Camera Body 2.4.1.4 Suspension Mount 2.4.1.5 Light Sensitive Cell Arrays 2.4.1.6 Measurement of Resolution in Image Data 2.4.2 Acquisition of Aerial Photography with a Framing Camera 2.4.2.1 Effects of Height Differences on an Aerial Photograph 2.4.2.2 Types of Lens Cones 2.4.3 The Scanner 2.4.4 The Moving Mirror Scanner 2.4.4.1 Resolution of Scanner Data 2.4.4.2 Thermal Scanner Data 2.4.4.3 Sources of Error in Oscillating Mirror Scanner Imagery 2.4.5 Push broom Scanners 2.5 Active Sensing Systems 2.5 .1 Introduction 2.5.2 The Geometry of Radar Systems 2.5 .2.1 Resolution of Radar Data 2.5.2.2 Effect of Height Displacements 2.5.3 The Attenuation and Scattering of Radar in the Atmosphere 2.5 .4 The Information Content of Radar Imagery 2.5.4.1 Surface Roughness and Slope 2.5.4.2 Inhomogeneity 2.5.4.3 Dielectric Properties 2.5.4.4 Resonance-Sized Objects 2.5.4.5 Wavelength 2.5.4.6 Polarisation 2.5.5 Radar Interferometry 2.5.6 Summary 2.6 Hyperspectral Image Data 2.6.1 Definition 2.6.2 Applications of Hyperspectral Image Data 2.7 Hypertemporal Image Data 2.7.1 Introduction 2.8 Platforms 2.8.1 Terrestrial Platforms 2.8.2 Balloon 2.8.3 Helicopter or Boat 2.8.4 Manned and Unmanned Aircraft 2.8.4.1 Hot Spots 2.8.5 Planning an Aerial Sortie 2.8.6 Satellite Platform 2.9 Satellite Sensor Systems Additional Reading References Chapter 3 Visual Interpretation and Map Reading 3.1 Overview 3.1.1 Remotely Sensed Data and Visual Interpretation 3.1.2 Effects of Height Differences on Remotely Sensed Images 3.2 Stereoscopy 3.2.1 Introduction 3.2.2 Monocular Vision 3.2.3 Binocular Vision 3.2.4 Binocular Perception of Colour 3.2.5 General Principles of Stereoscopic Vision 3.2.6 Methods of Stereoscopic Viewing 3.2.7 Physical Methods of Separation Using Stereoscopes 3.2.8 Viewing with a Stereoscope 3.2.9 Optical Methods of Separation 3.2.9.1 Coloured Anaglyph 3.2.9.2 Polarising Filters 3.2.10 Construction of a Stereo-Triplet 3.3 Measuring Height Differences in a Stereoscopic Pair of Photographs 3.3.1 Principle of the Floating Mark 3.3.2 Parallax Bar 3.3.3 Vertical Exaggeration 3.3.4 Displacements due to Height Differences man Aenal Photograph 3.3.5 Derivation of the Parallax Bar Formulae 3.3.6 Characteristics of the Parallax Bar Equation 3.4 Planimetric Measurements on Aerial Photographs 3.4.1 Introduction 3.4.2 Determination of Scale 3.4.3 Measurement of Distances 3.4.3.1 Graduated Rule or Scale 3.4.3.2 Paper Strip 3.4.3.3 Length of String 3.4.3.4 Odometer 3.4.4 Measurement of Areas 3.4.4.1 Dot Grid 3.4.4.2 Digitiser 3.4.5 Transfer of Planimetric Detail by the Use of the Anharmoruc Ratio 3.4.5.1 Paper Strip Method 3.4.5.2 Projective Nets 3.4.6 Proportional Dividers 3.5 Perception of Colour 3.6 Principles of Photographic Interpretation 3.6.1 Introduction 3.6.2 Levels of Interpretation 3.6.2.1 Image Reading 3.6.2.2 Image Analysis 3.6.2.3 Image Interpretation 3.6.3 Principles of Object Recognition 3.6.3.1 Size 3.6.3.2 Shape 3.6.3.3 Shadow 3.6.3.4 Colour or Tone 3.6.3 .5 Pattern and Texture 3.6.4 Interpretation Strategies 3.6.4.1 Location and Association 3.6.4.2 Temporal Change 3.6.4.3 Convergence of Evidence 3.6.5 Interpretation Procedure 3.7 Visual Interpretation of lmages 3.7.1 Visual Interpretation of Thermal Image Data 3.7.2 Visual Interpretation of Radar Image Data 3.8 Maps and Map Reading 3.8.1 Map Projections 3.8.1.1 Definition of the Mathematical Shape of the Portion of the Earth 3.8.1.2 Specify How the Curved Surface of the Earth is to be Unfolded onto a Flat Sheet 3.8.2 Mapping Systems and Map Types 3.8.3 Map Co-ordinates and Bearings 3.8.4 Establishing One's Location on a Map 3.8.5 Map Reading on a Topographic.Map 3.8.6 Terrain Classification Further Reading References Chapter4 Image Processing 4.1 Overview 4.1.1 Pre-Processing 4.1.2 Enhancement 4.1.3 Classification 4.1.4 Estimation 4.1.5 Temporal Analysis 4.2 Statistical Considerations 4.2.1 Probability Density Functions 4.2.1.1 Binomial Distribution 4.2.1.2 Normal Distribution 4.2.2 Correlation 4.2.3 Statistical Characteristics of Satellite Scanner Data 4.2.4 Measures of Distance 4.2.5 Shannon's Sampling Theorem 4.2.6 Autocorrelation and Variograms 4.2.7 Frequency Domain 4.2.7.1 Scaling 4.2.7.2 Shifting 4.2.7.3 Convolution 4.2.8 Least Squares Method of Fitting 4.3 Pre-Processing of Image Data 4.3.1 Introduction 4.3.2 Rectification 4.3.2.1 Theoretical Basis for Rectification 4.3.2.2 Correction for Systematic Errors 4.3.2.3 Fitting Image Data to Ground Control 4.3.2.4 Resampling the Image Data 4.3.2.5 Windowing and Mosaicing 4.3.2.6 Rectification in Practice 4.3 .3 Radiometric Calibration 4.3.4 Atmospheric Correction 4.3.4.1 Use of a Linear Model for Atmospheric Correction 4.3.4.2 Atmospheric Correction Using Atmospheric Models 4.4 The Enhancement of Image Data 4.4.1 Radiometric Enhancement 4.4.1.1 Display of an Image 4.4.1.2 Pseudo-Colour Density Slice 4.4.1.3 Linear Enhancement 4.4.1.4 Non-Linear Enhancements 4.4.1.5 Piecewise Linear Stretch 4.4.1.6 Histogram Equalisation 4.4.2 Spectral Enhancements 4.4.2.1 Ratioing 4.4.2.2 Orthogonal Transformations 4.4.2.3 Vegetation Indices 4.4.2.4 Fourier Transformation 4.4.3 Spatial Transformations of Image Data 4.4.3.1 Measurement of Texture 4.4.3.2 Edge Detection 4.4.3.3 Removal of Regular Noise in Image Data 4.4.3.4 Analysis of Spatial Correlation: The Variogram 4.4.3.5 Image Segmentation 4.4.3 .6 Object Patterns and Object Sizes: The ALV Function 4.4.4 Temporal Enhancements 4.4.4.1 Temporal Enhancement 4.4.4.2 Principal Components 4.4.4.3 Temporal Distance Images 4.4.4.4 Fourier Analysis of Hypertemporal Data 4.5 Analysis of Mixtures or End Member Analysis 4.5.1 Linear End Member Model 4.5.2 Characteristics of the Linear End Member Model 4.5.3 Identification of End Members 4.5.4 Implementation of the Linear End Member Algorithm 4.6 Image Classification 4.6.1 Principles of Classification 4.6.2 Discriminant Function Classifiers 4.6.2.1 Development of the Maximum Likelihood Classifier 4.6.2.2 Summary 4.6.2.3 Characteristics of the Discriminant Function Family of Classifiers 4.6.2.4 Implementation of the Maximum Likelihood Classifier 4.6.3 Fuzzy Classifiers 4.6.4 Neural Network Classifiers 4.6.5 Hierarchical Classifiers 4.6.6 Classification Strategies 4.6.6.1 Types of Classes 4.6.6.2 Selecting Classes and Classifiers 4.6.6.3 Im
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  • 88
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Fairbanks, Alas. : Institute of Northern Engineering, University of Alaska
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI G3-16-90316-4
    In: Ninth International Conference on Permafrost, Volume 1
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xxx, 1054, xxxvi, xl Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 978-0-9800179-2-2
    Series Statement: Ninth International Conference on Permafrost Volume 1
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface Acknowledgments NICOP Organizing Team Members NICOP Sponsors Associate Editors and Reviewers Volume 1 Initial Disturbance and Recovery Measurements from Military Vehicle Traffic on Seasonal and Permafrost Terrain / R.T. Affleck, S.A. Shoop, C.M. Collins, and E. Clark Erosion of the Barrow Environmental Observatory Coastline 2003–2007, Northern Alaska / A. Aguirre, C.E. Tweedie, J. Brown, and A. Gaylord Pore Water and Effective Pressure in the Frozen Fringe During Soil Freezing / S. Akagawa, S. Hiasa, S. Kanie, and S.L. Huang Coastal Processes and Their Influence Upon Discharge Characteristics of the Strokdammane Plain, West Spitsbergen, Svalbard / H.J. Akerman Forecasting Chemical Thawing of Frozen Soil as a Result of Interaction with Cryopegs / V.I. Aksenov, N.G. Bubnov, G.I. Klinova, A.V. Iospa, and S.G. Gevorkyan Permafrost and Cryopegs of the Anabar Shield / S.V. Alexeev, L.P. Alexeeva, and A.M. Kononov A First Estimate of Mountain Permafrost Distribution in the Mount Cook Region of New Zealand’s Southern Alps / S. Allen, I. Owens, and C. Huggel The Perennial Springs of Axel Heiberg Island as an Analogue for Groundwater Discharge on Mars / D.T. Andersen, W.H. Pollard, and C.P. McKay Geotechnical Considerations for Cut-Off Wall in Warm Permafrost / S.L. Anderson, T.G. Krzewinski, and J. Swendseid Water Chemistry of Hydrogenous Taliks in the Middle Lena / N.P. Anisimova and N.A. Pavlova A New Hypothesis on Ice Lens Formation in Frost-Susceptible Soils / L.U. Arenson, T.F. Azmatch, and D.C. Sego Impact of the August 2000 Storm on the Soil Thermal Regime, Alaska North Slope / D.E. Atkinson and L. Hinzman Global Simulation of Permafrost Distribution in the Past, Present, and Future Using the Frost Number Method / T. Aus der Beek and E. Teichert Remote Sensing Data for Monitoring Periglacial Processes in Permafrost Areas: Terrestrial Laser Scanning at the Hinteres Langtalkar Rock Glacier, Austria / M. Avian, A. Kellerer-Pirklbauer, and A. Bauer Permafrost Temperatures and Erosion Protection at Shishmaref, Alaska / M.T. Azelton and J.E. Zufelt Measuring Ice Lens Growth and Development of Soil Strains during Frost Penetration Using Particle Image Velocimetry (GeoPIV) / T.F. Azmatch, L.U. Arenson, D.C. Sego, and K.W. Biggar Evidence of Permafrost Formation Two Million Years Ago in Central Alaska / J.E. Beget, P. Layer, D. Stone, J. Benowitz, and J. Addison Recent Advances in Mapping Deep Permafrost and Gas Hydrate Occurrences Using Industry Seismic Data, Richards Island Area, Northwest Territories, Canada / G. Bellefleur, K. Ramachandran, M. Riedel, T. Brent, and S. Dallimore Massive Ground Ice on the Ural Coast of Baydaratskaya Bay, Kara Sea, Russia / N.G. Belova, V.I. Solomatin, and F.A. Romanenko A Direct Method for Obtaining Thermal Conductivity of Gravel Using TP02 Probes / H. Bing, P. He, N.I. Koemle, and W. Feng The Effect of Near-Freezing Temperatures on the Stability of an Underground Excavation in Permafrost / K.L. Bjella Distribution of Permafrost Types and Buried Ice in Ice-Free Areas of Antarctica / J.G. Bockheim, I.B. Campbell, M. Guglielmin, and J. López-Martínez Estimation of Ice Wedge Volume in the Big Lake Area, Mackenzie Delta, NWT, Canada / J.A. Bode, B.J. Moorman, C.W. Stevens, and S.M. Solomon High Resolution DEM Extraction from Terrestrial LIDAR Topometry and Surface Kinematics of the Creeping Alpine Permafrost: the Laurichard Rock Glacier Case Study (Southern French Alps) / X. Bodin, P. Schoeneich, and S. Jaillet Comparison of Exposure Ages and Spectral Properties of Rock Surfaces in Steep, High Alpine Rock Walls of Aiguille du Midi, France / R. Böhlert, S. Gruber, M. Egli, M. Maisch, D. Brandová, W. Haeberli, S. Ivy-Ochs, M. Christl, P.W. Kubik, and P. Deline Heat and Water Transfer Processes in Permafrost-Affected Soils: A Review of Field- and Modeling-Based Studies for the Arctic and Antarctic (Plenary Paper) / J. Boike, B. Hagedorn, and K. Roth Estimation of Hydraulic Properties in Permafrost-Affected Soils Using a Two-Directional Freeze-Thaw Algorithm / W.R. Bolton, J. Boike, and P.P. Overduin Engineering Solutions for Foundations and Anchors in Mountain Permafrost / C. Bommer, H.R. Keusen, and M. Phillips Carbon, Nitrogen, and Phosphorus Interactions in the Hyporheic Zones of Arctic Streams that Drain Areas of Continuous Permafrost / W.B. Bowden, M.J. Greenwald, BM.N. Gooseff, BJ.P. Zarnetske, BJ.P. McNamara, J. Bradford, and T. Brosten Geomorphology and Gas Release from Pockmark Features in the Mackenzie Delta, Northwest Territories, Canada / R.G. Bowen, S.R. Dallimore, M.M. Côté, J.F. Wright, and T.D. Lorenson Current Capabilities in Soil Thermal Representations Within a Large-Scale Hydrology Model for Regions of Continuous Permafrost / L.C. Bowling, K.A. Cherkauer, and J.C. Adam Effects of Soil Cryostructure on the Long-Term Strength of Ice-Rich Permafrost Near Melting Temperatures /M.T. Bray Warming of Cold Permafrost in Northern Alaska During the Last Half-Century / M.C. Brewer and H. Jin Characterization and Classification of Topsoils as a Tool to Monitor Carbon Pools in Frost-Affected Soils / G. Broll and C. Tarnocai The International Permafrost Association: 1983–2008 / J. Brown, H. French, and C. Guodong Experimental Study of the Thermal Conductivity of Frozen Sediments Containing Gas Hydrates / B.A. Buhanov, E.M. Chuvilin, O.M. Guryeva, and P.I. Kotov Permafrost Dynamics Within an Upper Lena River Tributary: Modeled Impact of Infiltration on the Temperature Field Under a Plateau / S. Buldovich, N. Romanovskiy, G. Tipenko, D. Sergeev, and V. Romanovsky Permafrost Distributions on the Seward Peninsula: Past, Present, and Future / R.C. Busey, L.D. Hinzman, J.J. Cassano, and E. Cassano Soil and Permafrost Properties in the Vicinity of Scott Base, Antarctica / I.B. Campbell and G.G.G.Claridge Patterned Ground Features and Vegetation: Examples from Continental and Maritime Antarctica / N. Cannone and M. Guglielmin Rainfall-Runoff Hydrograph Characteristics in A Discontinuous Permafrost Watershed and Their Relation to Ground Thaw / S.K. Carey and C.M. DeBeer Innovative Designs of the Permafrost Roadbed for the Qinghai-Tibet Railway (Plenary Paper) / G. Cheng, Q. Wu, and W. Ma Does Permafrost Deserve Attention in Comprehensive Climate Models? / J.H. Christensen, M. Stendel, P. Kuhry, V. Romanovsky, and J. Walsh Trace Gas Budgets of High Arctic Permafrost Regions (Plenary Paper) / T.R. Christensen, T. Friborg, and M. Johansson Interannual Variations in Active Layer Thickness in Svalbard / H.H. Christiansen and O. Humlum Experimental Study of the Self-Preservation Effect of Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments / E.M. Chuvilin and O.M. Guryeva Effects of Recent Climate Change on High Mountains of Western North America / J.J. Clague A Model of Permafrost Distribution and Disturbance Sensitivity for Denali National Park, Using Soil-Ecological Site Inventory Information / M.H. Clark A Multi-Disciplinary Approach to Assess the Impact of Global Climate Change on Infrastructure in Cold Regions / J. Clarke, C. Fenton, A. Gens, R. Jardine, C. Martin, D. Nethercot, S. Nishimura, S. Olivella, C. Reifen, P. Rutter, F. Strasser, and R. Toumi Freezeback of an Anthropogenic Talik Within Tailings at Nanisivik Mine, Canada / G. Claypool, J.W. Cassie, and R. Carreau Geologic Controls on the Occurrence of Permafrost-Associated Natural Gas Hydrates / T.S. Collett Laboratory Simulations of Martian Debris Flows / F. Costard, E. Védie, M. Font, and J.L. Lagarde Modeling the Erosion of Ice-Rich Deposits Along the Yukon Coastal Plain / N.J. Couture, M.A. Hoque, and W.H. Pollard Dynamics of Patterned Ground Evolution / J.G.A. Croll Legacy and Accomplishments of Frozen Ground Engineering Studies in Alaska 60 Years Ago / M. Cysewski and Y. Shur High-Resolution Surface and Subsurface Survey of a Non-Sorted Circle System / R. Daanen, V. Romanovsky, D. Walker, and M. LaDouceur Effect of Adsorbed Cations on Unfrozen Water in Silty Soil as Det
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  • 89
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Fairbanks, Alas. : Institute of Northern Engineering, University of Alaska
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI G3-16-90316-5
    In: Ninth International Conference on Permafrost, Volume 2
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xxx, 1055-2100, xl Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 978-0-9800179-3-9
    Series Statement: Ninth International Conference on Permafrost Volume 2
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface Acknowledgments NICOP Organizing Team Members NICOP Sponsors Associate Editors and Reviewers Volume 2 Experimental Research on Frost and Salt Heaving of Highway Foundation Soils in Seasonally Frozen Ground Regions in Gansu Province, Northwestern China / G. Li, W. Yu, H. Jin, Y. Sheng, J. Qi, and L. Lü Effects of Retrogressive Thaw Slumps on Sediment Chemistry, Submerged Macrophyte Biomass, and Invertebrate Abundance of Upland Tundra Lakes / P.S. Mesquita, F.J. Wrona, and T.D. Prowse The Vault Creek Tunnel (Fairbanks Region, Alaska): A Late Quaternary Palaeoenvironmental Permafrost Record / H. Meyer, K. Yoshikawa, L. Schirrmeister, and A. Andreev Properties of Eroding Coastline Soils Along Elson Lagoon Barrow, Alaska / G.J. Michaelson, C.L Ping, L.A. Lynn, M.T. Jorgenson, and F. Dou The Application of Tritium in Permafrost Ground-Ice Studies / F.A. Michel Twenty Years of Permafrost Research on the Furggentälti Rock Glaciers, Western Alps, Switzerland / D. Mihajlovic, B. Staub, A. Nussbaum, B. Krummenacher, and H. Kienholz Convective Heat Exchange Between Rivers and Floodplain Taliks / V.M. Mikhailov Geophysical Study of Talik Zones, Western Yakutia / S. Milanovskiy, S. Velikin, and V. Istratov Seasonally Frozen Ground Effects on the Dynamic Response of High-Rise Buildings / R. Miranda, Z. Yang, and U. Dutta Seasonal Thermal Regime of a Mid-Latitude Ventilated Debris Accumulation / S. Morard, R. Delaloye, and J. Dorthe Genetic, Morphological, and Statistical Characterization of Lakes in the Permafrost-Dominated Lena Delta / A. Morgenstern, G. Grosse, and L. Schirrmeister Vegetation and Permafrost Changes in the Northern Taiga of West Siberia / N. Moskalenko Experimental Study of Thermal Properties for Frozen Pyroclastic Volcanic Deposits (Kamchatka, Kluchevskaya Volcano Group) / R.G. Motenko, E.P. Tikhonova, and A.A. Abramov Spatial Analysis of Glacial Geology, Surficial Geomorphology, and Vegetation in the Toolik Lake Region: Relevance to Past and Future Land-Cover Changes / C.A. Munger, D.A. Walker, H.A. Maier, and T.D. Hamilton Choosing Geotechnical Parameters for Slope Stability Assessments in Alpine Permafrost Soils / P. Nater, L.U. Arenson, and S.M. Springman A Permafrost Observatory at Barrow, Alaska: Long-Term Observations of Active-Layer Thickness and Permafrost Temperature / F. Nelson, N.I. Shiklomanov, D.A. Streletskiy, V.E. Romanovsky, K. Yoshikawa, K.M. Hinkel, and J. Brown Decadal Results from the Circumpolar Active Layer Monitoring (CALM) Program (Plenary Paper) / F.E. Nelson, N.I. Shiklomanov, K.M. Hinkel, and J. Brown Modeling Observed Differential Frost Heave Within Non-Sorted Circles in Alaska / D.J. Nicolsky, V.E. Romanovsky, G.S. Tipenko, and D.A. Walker Engineering-Induced Environmental Hazards in Permafrost Regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau / F. Niu, J. Xu, Z. Lin, and P. Wang Comparison of Simulated 2D Temperature Profiles with Time-Lapse Electrical Resistivity Data at the Schilthorn Crest, Switzerland / J. Noetzli, C. Hilbich, C. Hauck, M. Hoelzle, and S. Gruber The Effect of Fines Content and Quality on Frost Heave Susceptibility of Crushed Rock Aggregates Used in Railway Track Structure / A. Nurmikolu and P. Kolisoja Contemporary Permafrost Degradation of Northern European Russia / N. Oberman MAGST in Mountain Permafrost, Dovrefjell, Southern Norway, 2001–2006 / R.S. Ødegård, K. Isaksen, T. Eiken, and J.L. Sollid Effects of Changing Climate and Sea Ice Extent on Pechora and Kara Seas Coastal Dynamics / S.A. Ogorodov Solifluction Lobes in Sierra Nevada (Southern Spain): Morphometry and Palaeoenvironmental Changes / M. Oliva, L. Schulte, and A. Gómez Ortiz Cyanobacteria Within Cryptoendolithic Habitats: The Role of High pH in Biogenic Rock Weathering in the Canadian High Arctic / C.R. Omelon, W.H. Pollard, F.G. Ferris, and P.C. Bennett Thermal State of Permafrost in Alaska During the Fourth Quarter of the Twentieth Century (Plenary Paper) / T.E. Osterkamp Field Trials of Surface Insulation Materials for Permafrost Preservation / J.M. Oswell and J.R. Everts The State of Subsea Permafrost in the Western Laptev Nearshore Zone / P.P. Overduin, V. Rachold, and M.N. Grigoriev Sources of Discrepancy Between CCSM Simulated and Gridded Observation-Based Soil Temperature Over Siberia: The Influence of Site Density and Distribution / D. Pai Mazumder and N. Mölders Remote Sensing-Based Study of Vegetation Distribution and Its Relation to Permafrost in and Around the George Lake Area, Central Alaska / S.K. Panda, A. Prakash, and D.N. Solie Electrical Freezing Potentials During Permafrost Aggradation at the Illisarvik Drained-Lake Experiment, Western Arctic Coast, Canada / V.R. Parameswaran and C.R. Burn Managing Permafrost Data: Past Approaches and Future Directions / M.A. Parsons, S.L. Smith, V.E. Romanovsky, N.I. Shiklomanov, H.H. Christiansen, P.P. Overduin, T. Zhang, M.R. Balks, and J. Brown Regional Geocryological Dangers Associated with Contemporary Climate Change / A.V. Pavlov and G.V. Malkova Wedge Structures in Southernmost Argentina (Rio Grande, Tierra del Fuego) / A. Perez-Alberti, A. Coronato, M.C. Casais, M. Valcarcel-Diaz, and J. Rabassa Modeling Interaction Between Filterable Solutions and Frozen Ground / G.Z. Perlshtein and G.S. Tipenko Russian Approaches to Permafrost Engineering (Plenary Paper) / G. Perlshtein Numerical Modeling of Differential Frost Heave / R.A. Peterson Energy Balance Response of a Shallow Subarctic Lake to Atmospheric Temperature and Advective Persistence / Richard M. Petrone, Wayne R. Rouse, and L. Dale Boudreau Numerical Analysis of Forced and Natural Convection in Waste-Rock Piles in Permafrost Environments / H.N. Pham, L.U. Arenson, and D.C. Sego Effects of Ground Temperature and Slope Deformation on the Service Life of Snow-Supporting Structures in Mountain Permafrost: Wisse Schijen, Randa, Swiss Alps / M. Phillips and S. Margreth Classification of Arctic Tundra Soils Along the Beaufort Sea Coast, Alaska / C.L Ping, L.A. Lynn, G.J. Michaelson, M.T. Jorgenson, Y.L. Shur, and M. Kanevskiy Thermal Diffusivity Variability in Alpine Permafrost Rock Walls / P. Pogliotti, E. Cremonese, U. Morra Di Cella, S. Gruber, and M. Giardino Massive Ground Ice in the Eureka Sound Lowlands, Canadian High Arctic / W.H. Pollard and N. Couture Long-Term Monitoring of Frost Heave and Thaw Settlement in the Northern Taiga of West Siberia / O. Ponomareva and Y. Shur The Permafrost of the Imuruk Lake Basaltic Field Area (Alaska) and Astrobiological Implications / O. Prieto-Ballesteros, D.C. Fernández-Remolar, J. Torres Redondo, M. Fernández-Sampedro, M.P. Martín Redondo, J.A. Rodriguez-Manfredi, J. Gómez-Elvira, D. Gómez-Ortiz, and F. Gómez What Dictates the Occurrence of Zero Curtain Effect? / J. Putkonen Definition of Warm Permafrost Based on Mechanical Properties of Frozen Soil / J. Qi and J. Zhang Active Layer Temperature Monitoring in Two Boreholes in Livingston Island, Maritime Antarctic: First Results for 2000–2006 / M. Ramos, G. Vieira, J.J. Blanco, S. Gruber, C. Hauck, M.A. Hidalgo, and D. Tomé Circumpolar Relationships Between Permafrost Characteristics, NDVI, and Arctic Vegetation Types / M.K. Raynolds and D.A. Walker Rock Glacier Distribution and the Lower Limit of Discontinuous Mountain Permafrost in the Nepal Himalaya / D. Regmi Frost-Protected Shallow Foundation Design Issues: A Case Study / C.H. Riddle, J.W. Rooney, and G.W. Carpenter Estimating Active Layer and Talik Thickness from Temperature Data: Implications from Modeling Results / D.W. Riseborough Mesoscale and Detailed Geocryological Mapping as a Basis for Carbon Budget Assessment (East European Russian Arctic, CARBO-North Project) / F.M. Rivkin, J.V. Vlasova, A.P. Popova, G. Mazhitova, P. Kuhry, I.S. Parmuzin, and I.V. Chehina Permafrost Degradation and Influx of Biogeogases into the Atmosphere / E. Rivkina and G. Kraev Observations and Considerations on Destabilizing Active Rock Glaciers in the European Alps / I. Roer, W. Haeber
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  • 90
    Call number: AWI G3-23-94987
    In: Dissertation / Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich, Nr. 11574
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: XIII, 137 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Dissertation / Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich No. 11574
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Kurzfassung Summary 1 Introduction 1.1 Water Regime of Mountain Forests in Winter 1.2 Thermodynamics of Frozen Soils 1.3 Water Flow Pathways in Frozen Soils 1.4 Water Infiltration into and Runoff from Frozen Soils 1.5 Objectives and Outline of this Study 2 Field Measurements of Water Transport in Frozen Soils 2.1 Abstract 2.2 Introduction 2.3 Materials and Methods 2.3.1 Test Site 2.3.2 Instrumentation 2.3.3 Soil Physical Properties 2.4 Results and Discussion 2.4.1 Entire Observation Period 2.4.2 Particular Snowmelt Events 2.4.3 Water Balance of Particular Snowmelt Events 2.5 Summary and Conclusions 3 Water and Solute Dynamics in Freezing Soil Columns 3.1 Abstract 3.2 Introduction 3.3 Materials and Methods 3.3.1 Experimental Setup 3.3.2 Determination of the Liquid Water Content 3.3.3 Determination of the Solute Concentration 3.3.4 Model Approach for the Freezing Characteristic Curve 3.4 Results and Discussion 3.4.l Calibration Results 3.4.2 The Freezing and Thawing Cycle 3.4.3 Freezing Characteristic Curves 3.5 Conclusions 4 Modelling Runoff Dynamics in Sloped Frozen Soils 4.1 Abstract 4.2 Introduction 4.3 Model Description 4.4 Model Application 4.5 Results and Discussion 4.5.1 Sensitivity Analysis 4.5.2 Model Calibration 4.5.3 Model Validation 4.5.4 Influence of Temporal Resolution on Model Output 4.5.5 Climate Change Scenarios 4.6 Summary and Conclusions 5 Concluding Remarks Appendices A Additional Field Measurements B Additional Cold-laboratory Measurements C Model Parameter File List of Symbols List of Figures List of Tables Bibliography Curriculum Vitae
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  • 91
    Call number: AWI E2-24-95714
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 216 Seiten , Illustrationen , 300 mm x 215 mm
    ISBN: 3865682855 , 9783865682857 , 978-3-86568-285-7
    Series Statement: Schriften des Historischen Museums Frankfurt am Main 26
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt Vorwort und Dank Widmung Frühes Wissen um den Nordpol Der Globus des Johannes Schöner von 1515 Theodor de Bry als Verleger von Barentsz und Hudsons Polarfahrten Die Globen von Andreae (1717), Doppelmayr (1730 und 1792) und Klinger (1792) in der Frankfurter Stadtbibliothek »Zwei Grönländer« im Prehn'schen Kabinett Die Nordfahrt des Georg Berna 1861 Das Personal Die Reise Der Beginn deutscher Polarforschung Das offene Polarmeer? Die erste Versammlung Deutscher Meister und Freunde der Erdkunde am 23. und 24. Juli 1865 in Frankfurt am Main Die Erste Deutsche Nordpolar-Expedition von 1868 Die Zweite Deutsche Nordpolar-Expedition von 1869/1870 Die Österreich-Ungarische Nordpolar-Expedition von 1872-1874 Julius Payer vor 1871 Carl Weyprecht vor 1871 Die Vorexpedition von 1871 Die Österreich-Ungarische Nordpolar-Expedition von 1872 bis 1874 Carl Weyprecht nach 1874: Die Begründung der Internationalen Polarjahre Julius Payer nach 1874 Nachruhm Erstes Internationales Polarjahr und Kontinentalverschiebung Das Erste Internationale Polarjahr Der Frankfurter Verein für Geographie und Statistik Die Senckenbergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft Theodor Lerner, Polarfahrer Andrée, »Fauna Árctica« und die Bäreninsel Eine Überwinterung auf Spitzbergen Die Rettungsexpedition von 1913 Forschen für Senckenberg Auf nach Grönland! Die Erste Hessische Grönlandexpedition von Hans Krüger und Fritz Klute 1925 Waldemar Coste und der Film »Milak der Grönlandjäger« 1926 Die Zweite Hessische Grönlandexpedition 1929/1930 und das Verschwinden Hans Krügers Friedrich Sieburg und Anne Schmücker als Propagandisten Grönlands Johannes Georgi »im Eis vergraben« 1930/1931 Die Internationalen Polarjahre Und der Südpol? Georg von Neumayers unermüdliche Agitation Die drei deutschen Expeditionen in antarktische Gewässer Anhang Literaturverzeichnis Abbildungsverzeichnis Impressum
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  • 92
    Call number: ZSP-168-596
    In: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Description / Table of Contents: [...] Der zentrale Teil dieser Arbeit behandelt den Abbruchprozeß Zealandias von der Antarktis und führt zu einer verbesserten Rekonstruktion Neuseelands. Dabei liegt der Schwerpunkt auf den submarinen Plateaus. Der Bountytrog, der die Chathamschwelle vom Campbellplateau trennt und das Great South Basin, das das Campbellplateau von der Südinsel Neuseelands trennt, wurde mit refraktions- und reflexionsseismischen Methoden untersucht und gemeinsam mit Magnetik- und Schwerefelddaten interpretiert.Diese Ergebnisse einer Modellierung von Krustenmächtigkeiten basierend auf Satellitenschwerefelddaten wurden überprüft und zusammengeführt mit gemessenen Krustenmächtigkeiten Zealandias. Aus diesem Datensatz ist eine Krustenmächtigkeitskarte berechnet worden, die die Grundlage darstellt für eine neuartige Technik zur plattenkinematischen Rekonstruktion in Gebieten gedehnter kontinentaler Kruste, in denen magnetischen Spreizungsanomalien fehlen. Diese Rekonstruktion arbeitet mit der vertikalen Aufteilung der Kruste und Zuweisung der Teile zu verschiedenen Platten (crustal balancing). Damit wird die Extension in den Becken und Trögen ausgeglichen [...]
    Type of Medium: 12
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung 596
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  • 93
    facet.materialart.12
    facet.materialart.12
    Bremerhaven : Alfred-Wegener-Inst. für Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Associated volumes
    Call number: ZSP-168-602
    In: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Type of Medium: 12
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 1866-3192
    Series Statement: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung 602
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  • 94
    Call number: ZSP-168-599
    In: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Description / Table of Contents: Der Fahrtabschnitt MSM 12/2 vom 17.6. bis 13.7.2009 mit FS Maria S. Merian bestand aus reflexionsseismischen und geologischen Untersuchungen der Eirik Drift, einer Sedimentstruktur südlich Grönlands. Die Eirik Drift dokumentiert seit dem Miozän die Sedimentation vor Südwest-Grönland und bildet so ein Archiv für die Ablagerungsprozesse in diesem Gebiet, die durch den Western Boundary Undercurrent (WBUC), die grönländische Eisbedeckung und den Eintrag aus der Labrador See/Davis Strait geprägt wurden. Eine detaillierte Erfassung und Analyse der Struktur und Zusammensetzung der Eirik Drift mittels seismischer und geologischer Methoden und ein Anschluß an bestehende ODP und IODP Bohrungen (ODP Leg 105 und IODP Expedition 303) wurde benötigt, um Informationen über die Entwicklung des WBUC und Dimension und Ausdehnung/Rückzug des grönländischen Eises zu erhalten. Das reflexionsseismische Programm während der Expedition MSM 12/2 wurde derart gestaltet, dass die Struktur der Eirik Drift bis zum Basement sowie laterale Relokationen der Hauptablagerungsgebiete erfasst wurden. Es wurden insgesamt ~2000 km an hochauflösenden reflexionsseismischen Daten registriert. Parallel zu den seismischen Profilarbeiten wurden bathymetrische und Parasound Messungen durchgeführt. Über die Parasound Registrierungen sind dann signifikante Lokationen für geologische Beprobungen ausgewählt worden, die die Verbindung mit den hochauflösenden seismischen Untersuchungen zu einer Kombination verschiedene Zeitskalen und somit eine entscheidenden schärfen Schärfung des Verständnisses für die Entwicklung des Klimas indieser Region ermöglichen. An 12 Lokationen wurden geologische Proben genommen. Ergänzt wurden die seismischen und geologischen Messungen durch 8 CTD Stationen undADCP Messungen im Gebiet der Eirik Drift.
    Type of Medium: 12
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 1866-3192
    Series Statement: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung 599
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  • 95
    Call number: AWI Bio-10-0050
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 259 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 5020320730 , 5-02-032073-0
    Language: Russian
    Note: In kyrillischer Schrift
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  • 96
    Call number: AWI P6-10-0062 ; AWI P6-11-0002
    Description / Table of Contents: This volume provides a comprehensive, up-to-date account of how the physical and biological environment of the Antarctic continent and Southern Ocean has changed from Deep Time until the present day. It also considers how the Antarctic environment may change over the next century in a world where greenhouse gas concentrations are much higher than occurred over the last few centuries. The Antarctic is a highly coupled system with non-linear interactions between the atmosphere, ocean, ice and biota, along with complex links to the rest of the Earth system. Inpreparing this volume our approach has been highly cross-disciplinary, with the goal of reflecting the importance of the continent in global issues, such as sea level rise, the separation of natural climate variability from anthropogenic influences, food stocks, biodiversity and carbon uptake by the ocean. One hundred experts in Antarctic science have contributed and drafts of the manuscript were reviewed by over 200 scientists. We hope that it will be of value to all scientists with an interest in the Antarctic continent and the Southern Ocean, policy makers and those concerned with the deployment of observing systems and the development of climate models.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXVIII, 526 S. : Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 9780948277221
    Language: English
    Note: CONTENTS: PREFACE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 THE ANTARCTIC ENVIRONMENT AND THE GLOBAL SYSTEM 1.1 THE PHYSICAL SETTING 1.2 THE ANTARCTIC CRYOSPHERE 1.3 THE ROLE OF THE ANTARCTIC IN THE GLOBAL CLIMATE SYSTEM 1.4 OBSERVATIONS FOR STUDIES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN THE ANTARCTIC 1.5 THE CLIMATE OF THE ANTARCTIC AND ITS VARIABILITY 1.6 BIOTA OF THE ANTARCTIC 1.6.1 Terrestrial 1.6.2 Marine 2 OBSERVATIONS, DATA ACCURACY AND TOOLS 2.1 OBSERVATIONS, DATA ACCURACY AND TOOLS 2.1.1 Introduction 2.1.2 Meteorological and ozone observing in the Antarctic 2.1.3 In-situ ocean observations 2.1.4 Sea ice observations 2.1.5 Observations of the ice sheet and permafrost 2.1.6 Sea level 2.1.7 Marine biology 2.1.8 Terrestrial biology 2.1.9 Models 2.2 FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS AND RESEARCH NEEDS 3 ANTARCTIC CLIMATE AND ENVIRONMENT HISTORY IN THE PREINSTRUMENTAL PERIOD 3.1 INTRODUCTION 3.2 DEEP TIME 3.2.1 The Greenhouse world: from Gondwana breakup to 34 million years 3.2.2 Into the Icehouse world: the last 34 million years 3.3 THE LAST MILLION YEARS 3.3.1 Glacial interglacial cycles: the ice core record 3.3.2 The transition to Holocene interglacial conditions: the ice core record 3.3.3 Deglaciation of the continental shelf, coastal margin and continental interior 3.3.4 Antarctic deglaciation and its impact on global sea level 3.3.5 Sea ice and climate 3.4 THE HOLOCENE 3.4.1 Holocene climate change: regional to hemispheric perspectives 3.4.2 Changes in sea ice extent through the Holocene 3.4.3 Regional patterns of Holocene climate change in Antarctica 3.5 BIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE 3.5.1 The terrestrial environment 3.5.2 The marine environment 3.4.3 Regional patterns of Holocene climate change in Antarctica 3.6 CONCLUDING REMARKS 4 THE INSTRUMENTAL PERIOD 4.1 INTRODUCTION 4.2 CHANGES OF ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION 4.2.1 Modes of variability ..? 4.2.2 Depression tracks 4.2.3 Teleconnections 4.3 TEMPERATURE 4.3.1 Surface temperature 4.3.2 Upper air temperature changes 4.3.3 Attribution 4.4 CHANGES IN ANTARCTIC SNOWFALL OVER THE PAST 50 YEARS 4.4.1 General spatial and temporal characteristics of Antarctic snowfall 4.4.2 Long-term Antarctic snowfall accumulation estimates 4.4.3 Recent trends in Antarctic snowfall 4.5 ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY 4.5.1 Antarctic stratospheric ozone in the instrumental period 4.5.2 Antarctic tropospheric chemistry 4.5.3 Aerosol, clouds and radiation 4.6 THE SOUTHERN OCEAN 4.6.1 Introduction 4.6.2 Australian sector 4.6.3 The Amundsen/Bellingshausen Seas 4.6.4 Variability and change in Ross Sea shelf waters 4.6.5 The Weddell Sea sector 4.6.6 Small-scale processes in the Southern Ocean 4.6.7 Dynamics of the circulation and water masses of the ACC and the polar gyres from model results 4.7 . ANTARCTIC SEA ICE COVER DURING THE INSTRUMENTAL PERIOD 4.7.1 Introduction 4.7.2 Sea ice cover in the pre-satellite era 4.7.3 Variability and trends in sea ice using satellite data 4.8 THE ICE SHEET AND PERMAFROST 4.8.1 Introduction 4.8.2 The Antarctic Peninsula 4.8.3 West Antarctica 4.8.4 East Antarctica 4.8.5 Calving 4.8.6 Sub-glacial water movement 4.8.7 Other changes in the ice sheet 4.8.8 Attribution of changes to the ice sheet 4.8.9 Conclusions regarding the ice sheet 4.8.10 Changes in Antarctic permafrost and active layer over the last 50 years 4.9 LONG TERM SEA LEVEL CHANGE 4.10 MARINE BIOLOGY 4.10.1 The open ocean system 4.10.2 Sea ice ecosystems 4.10.3 ENSO links and teleconnections to vertebrate life histories and population 4.10.4 Invertebrate physiology 4.10.5 Seasonality effect on the high Antarctic benthic shelf communities? 4.10.6 Macroalgal physiology and ecology 4.10.7 Marine/terrestrial pollution 4.11 BIOGEOCHEMISTRY - SOUTHERN OCEAN CARBON CYCLE RESPONSE TO HISTORICAL CLIMATE CHANGE 4.11.1 Introduction 4.11.2 CO2 fluxes in the Southern Ocean 4.11.3 Historical change - observed response 4.11.4 Historical change - simulated view 4.11.5 Changes in CO2 inventories 4.11.6 Concluding remarks 4.12 TERRESTRIAL BIOLOGY 5 THE NEXT 100 YEARS 5.1 INTRODUCTION 5.2 CLIMATE CHANGE 5.2.1 IPCC scenarios 5.2.2 Climate models 5.2.3 Atmospheric circulation 5.2.4 Temperature change over the Twenty First Century 5.2.5 Precipitation change over the Twenty First Century 5.2.6 Antarctic stratospheric ozone over the next 100 years 5.3 OCEAN CIRCULATION AND WATER MASSES 5.3.1 Simulation of present-day conditions in the Southern Hemisphere 5.3.2 Projections for the Twenty First Century 5.3.3 Long-term evolution of the Southern Ocean 5.3.4 Conclusions 5.4 SEA ICE CHANGE OVER THE TWENTY FIRST CENTURY 5.5 THE TERRESTRIAL CRYOSPHERE 5.5.1 Introduction 5.5.2 East Antarctic ice sheet 5.5.3 West Antarctic ice sheet 5.5.4 Antarctic Peninsula 5.5.5 Conclusions 5.5.6 Summary and needs for future research 5.6 EVOLUTION OF ANTARCTIC PERMAFROST 5.7 PROJECTIONS OF SEA LEVEL IN ANTARCTIC AND SOUTHERN OCEAN WATERS BY 2100 5.7.1 Regional projections of mean sea-level rise 5.8 BIOGEOCHEMISTRY - RESPONSE OF THE SOUTHERN OCEAN CARBON CYCLE TO FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE 5.8.1 Background 5.8.2 Future Southern Ocean carbon response 5.8.3 Response to increased CO2 uptake 5.8.4 Concluding remarks 5.9 BIOLOGY 5.9.1 Terrestrial Biology 5.9.2 Marine Biology 5.9.3 The Antarctic marine ecosystem in the year 2100 6 RECOMMENDATIONS 7 REFERENCES.
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  • 97
    Call number: ZSP-403-311
    In: Jare Data Reports
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 31 S. : graph. Darst.
    Series Statement: Jare Data Reports 311 : Marine Biology 39
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  • 98
    facet.materialart.12
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    Bremerhaven : Alfred-Wegener-Inst. für Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Associated volumes
    Call number: ZSP-168-595
    In: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Description / Table of Contents: Der Fahrtabschnitt 2 der Antarktisexpedition ANT-XXV führte in das östliche Weddellmeer und diente der Durchführung logistischer und wissenschaftlicher Vorhaben, die sich in stationsgebundene, vom fahrenden Schiff aus durchführbare, sowie helikoptergestützte Arbeiten unterteilen lassen.
    Type of Medium: 12
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 1866-3192
    Series Statement: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung 595
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  • 99
    facet.materialart.12
    facet.materialart.12
    Bremerhaven : Alfred-Wegener-Inst. für Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Associated volumes
    Call number: ZSP-168-597
    In: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Description / Table of Contents: Klares Ziel dieser Expedition war es, belastbare geowissenschafltiche Daten zuerheben, die Informationen über die ältere geologische Geschichte und die jüngere Vereisungsgeschichte des ostsibirischen Schelfs zu erhalten. [...] Daher standen u.a. sediment-akustische (Parasound) Profilfahrten und detaillierte Beprobungen und Untersuchungen von Sedimenten vom ostsibirischen Kontinentalrand und über den Mendelejew-Rücken im Vordergrund.
    Type of Medium: 12
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 1866-3192
    Series Statement: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung 597
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  • 100
    Call number: ZSP-168-594
    In: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung
    Description / Table of Contents: Eine große interdisziplinäre Gruppe von Wissenschaftlern aus mehreren Nationen befasste sich mit der Zusammensetzung und der chemischen Charakterisierung der gelösten organischen Substanzen im Meer in den verschiedenen Klimazonen. Parallel dazu wurde die chemische Zusammensetzung des Aerosols untersucht. Spurenelemente und der Fluss von elementarem Quecksilber zwischen Wasser und Atmosphäre wurden kontinuierlich während der gesamten Fahrt bestimmt. Einweiteres Projekt befasste sich mit der Bestimmung von mehrfach fluorierten Verbindungen ebenfalls im Oberflächenwasser und in der Atmosphäre. Der Kohlenstoffkreislauf im Oberflächenwasser wurde mit dem Ziel untersucht, ein autonomes System zur Messung der verschiedenen Kohlenstoffkomponenten zu entwickeln. Außerdem gehörte die Bestimmung von Dimethylsulfid (DMS) in der Wasseroberfläche und in der Atmosphäre zum Messprogramm. Um die globale marine Primärproduktion aus Satellitendaten besser abschätzen zu können, wurden optische in-situ Messungen durchgeführt und die Zusammensetzung des Phytoplanktons und des partikulären, organischen Kohlenstoffs bestimmt. Eine weitere Arbeitsgruppe befasste sich mit den Strahlungseigenschaften der Atmosphäre, insbesondere Aerosolen, deren Ergebnisse ebenfalls in die Fernerkundung und Klimamodelle eingehen sollen.
    Type of Medium: 12
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 1866-3192
    Series Statement: Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung 594
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