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  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Betzler, Christian; Lüdmann, Thomas; Hübscher, Christian; Fürstenau, Jörn (2013): Current and sea-level signals in periplatform ooze (Neogene, Maldives, Indian Ocean). Sedimentary Geology, 290, 126-137, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2013.03.011
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Periplatform ooze is an admixture of pelagic carbonate and sediment derived from neritic carbonate platforms. Compositional variations of periplatform ooze allow the rectonstruction of past sea-level changes. Periplatform ooze formed during sea-level highstands is finer grained and richer in aragonit through the elevated input of material from the flooded platform compared to periplatform ooze formed during the episodes of lowered sea level. In many cases, however, the sea floor around carbonate platforms is subjected to bottom currents which are expected to affect sediment composition, i.e. through winnowing of the fine fraction. The interaction of sea-level driven highstand shedding and current impact on the formation of periplatform ooze is influenced or even distorted by changing current activity, an integrated study using seismic, hydroacoustic and sedimentological data has been performed on periplatform ooze deposited in the Inner Sea of the Maldives. The Miocene to Pleistocene succession of drift deposits is subdivided into nine units; limits of seismostratigraphic units correspond to changes or turnarounds in grain size trends in cores recovered at ODP Site 716 and NEOMA Site 1143. For the Pleistocene it can be shown how changes in grain size occur in concert with sea-level changes and changes of the monsoonal system, which is thought to be a major driver bottom currents in the Maldives. A clear hightstand shedding pattern only appears in the data at a time of of relaxation of monsoonal strength during the last 315 ky. Results imply (1) that drift sediments provide a potential target for analyzing past changes in oceanic currents and (2) that the ooze composition bears a mixed signal of input and physical winnowing at the sea floor.
    Keywords: M74/4; M74/4_1143-1; Meteor (1986); NEOMA: The Neogene of the Maldives; PC; Piston corer
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bunzel, Dorothea; Schmiedl, Gerhard; Lindhorst, Sebastian; Mackensen, Andreas; Reolid, Jesus; Romahn, Sarah; Betzler, Christian (2017): A multi-proxy analysis of Late Quaternary ocean and climate variability for the Maldives, Inner Sea. Climate of the Past, 13(12), 1791-1813, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-13-1791-2017
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: As a natural sediment trap, marine sediments of the sheltered central part of the Maldives Inner Sea represent an exceptional archive for paleoenvironmental and climate changes of the equatorial Indian Ocean. To evaluate the complex interplay between high-latitude and monsoonal climate variability, related dust fluxes, and regional oceanographic responses, we focused on Fe/Al, Ti/Al and Si/Ca ratios as proxies for terrigenous sediment delivery, and total organic carbon (TOC) and Br XRF counts as proxies for marine productivity. Benthic foraminiferal fauna distributions, grain size, and stable d18O and d13C data were used for evaluating changes in the benthic ecosystem, as well as changes in the intermediate water circulation, bottom water current velocity and oxygenation. Our multi-proxy data record reveals an enhanced dust supply during the glacial intervals, causing elevated Fe/Al and Si/Ca ratios, an overall coarsening of the sediment and an increasing amount of agglutinated benthic foraminifera. The enhanced dust fluxes can be attributed to higher dust availability in the Asian desert and loess areas and its transport by intensified winter monsoon winds during glacial conditions. These combined effects of wind-induced mixing of surface waters and dust fertilisation during the cold phases resulted in an increased surface-water productivity and related organic carbon fluxes. Thus, the development of highly diverse benthic foraminiferal faunas with certain detritus and suspension feeders were fostered. The difference in the d13C signal between epifaunal and deep infaunal benthic foraminifera reveals intermediate water oxygen concentrations between approximately 40 and 100 µmol kg-1 during this time. The precessional fluctuation pattern of oxygen changes resembles that from the deep Arabian Sea, suggesting an expansion of the Oxygen Minimum Zone (OMZ) from the Arabian Sea into the tropical Indian Ocean with a probable regional signal of strengthened winter-monsoon-induced organic matter fluxes and oxygen consumption, and further controlled by the varying inflow intensity of the Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW). In addition, the bottom water oxygenation pattern of the Maldives Inner Sea reveals a long phase of reduced ventilation during the last glacial period. This process is likely linked to the combined effects of generally enhanced oxygen consumption rates during high-productivity phases, reduced AAIW production, and the restriction of upper bathyal environments of the Inner Sea during sea-level lowstands. Thus, our multi-proxy record reflects a close linkage between the Indian monsoon oscillation, intermediate water circulation, productivity and sea-level changes on orbital time-scale.
    Keywords: GC; Gravity corer; Lakshadweep Sea; MALSTROM; SO236; SO236_52-4; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas (SOCAT) is a synthesis activity by the international marine carbon research community (〉100 contributors). SOCAT version 6 has 23.4 million quality-controlled, surface ocean fCO2 (fugacity of carbon dioxide) observations from 1957 to 2017 for the global oceans and coastal seas. Calibrated sensor data are also available. Automation allows annual, public releases. SOCAT data is discoverable, accessible and citable. SOCAT enables quantification of the ocean carbon sink and ocean acidification and evaluation of ocean biogeochemical models. SOCAT represents a milestone in biogeochemical and climate research and in informing policy.
    Keywords: SOCAT; Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas Project
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 424 datasets
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Lochte, Annalena Antonia; Schneider, Ralph R; Kienast, Markus; Repschläger, Janne; Blanz, Thomas; Garbe-Schönberg, Dieter; Andersen, Nils (2020): Surface and subsurface Labrador Shelf water mass conditions during the last 6000 years. Climate of the Past, 16(4), 1127-1143, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-16-1127-2020
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The Labrador Sea is important for the modern global thermohaline circulation system through the formation of intermediate Labrador Sea Water (LSW) that has been hypothesized to stabilize the modern mode of North Atlantic deep-water circulation. The rate of LSW formation is controlled by the amount of winter heat loss to the atmosphere, the expanse of freshwater in the convection region and the inflow of saline waters from the Atlantic. The Labrador Sea, today, receives freshwater through the East and West Greenland Currents (EGC, WGC) and the Labrador Current (LC). Several studies have suggested the WGC to be the main supplier of freshwater to the Labrador Sea, but the role of the southward flowing LC in Labrador Sea convection is still debated. At the same time, many paleoceanographic reconstructions from the Labrador Shelf focussed on late Deglacial to early Holocene meltwater run-off from the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS), whereas little information exists about LC variability since the final melting of the LIS about 7,000 years ago. In order to enable better assessment of the role of the LC in deep-water formation and its importance for Holocene climate variability in Atlantic Canada, this study presents high-resolution middle to late Holocene records of sea surface and bottom water temperatures, freshening and sea ice cover on the Labrador Shelf during the last 6,000 years. Our records reveal that the LC underwent three major oceanographic phases from the Mid- to Late Holocene. From 6.2 to 5.6 ka BP, the LC experienced a cold episode that was followed by warmer conditions between 5.6 and 2.1 ka BP, possibly associated with the late Holocene Thermal Maximum. Although surface waters on the Labrador Shelf cooled gradually after 3 ka BP in response to the Neoglaciation, Labrador Shelf subsurface/bottom waters show a shift to warmer temperatures after 2.1 ka BP. Although such an inverse stratification by cooling of surface and warming of subsurface waters on the Labrador Shelf would suggest a diminished convection during the last two millennia compared to the mid-Holocene, it remains difficult to assess whether hydrographic conditions in the LC have had a significant impact on Labrador Sea deep-water formation.
    Keywords: 031-1; Alkenones; GC; Gravity corer; Labrador Sea; Maria S. Merian; Mg/Ca paleothermometry; MSM45; MSM45_431-1; Stable isotopes
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Werner, Kirstin; Müller, Juliane; Husum, Katrine; Spielhagen, Robert F; Kandiano, Evgenia S; Polyak, Leonid (2015): Holocene sea subsurface and surface water masses in the Fram Strait - comparisons of temperature and sea-ice reconstructions. PAST Gateways Special Issue (JQSR_4428), Quaternary Science Reviews, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.09.007
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Two high-resolution sediment cores from eastern Fram Strait have been investigated for sea subsurface and surface temperature variability during the Holocene (the past ca 12,000 years). The transfer function developed by Husum and Hald (2012) has been applied to sediment cores in order to reconstruct fluctuations of sea subsurface temperatures throughout the period. Additional biomarker and foraminiferal proxy data are used to elucidate variability between surface and subsurface water mass conditions, and to conclude on the Holocene climate and oceanographic variability on the West Spitsbergen continental margin. Results consistently reveal warm sea surface to subsurface temperatures of up to 6 °C until ca 5 cal ka BP, with maximum seawater temperatures around 10 cal ka BP, likely related to maximum July insolation occurring at that time. Maximum Atlantic Water (AW) advection occurred at surface and subsurface between 10.6 and 8.5 cal ka BP based on both foraminiferal and dinocyst temperature reconstructions. Probably, a less-stratified, ice-free, nutrient-rich surface ocean with strong AW advection prevailed in the eastern Fram Strait between 10 and 9 cal ka BP. Weakened AW contribution is found after ca 5 cal ka BP when subsurface temperatures strongly decrease with minimum values between ca 4 and 3 cal ka BP. Cold late Holocene conditions are furthermore supported by high planktic foraminifer shell fragmentation and high d18O values of the subpolar planktic foraminifer species Turborotalita quinqueloba. While IP25-associated indices as well as dinocyst data suggest a sustained cooling due to a decrease in early summer insolation and consequently sea-ice increase since about 7 cal ka BP in surface waters, planktic foraminiferal data including stable isotopes indicate a slight return of stronger subsurface AW influx since ca 3 cal ka BP. The observed decoupling of surface and subsurface waters during the later Holocene is most likely attributed to a strong pycnocline layer separating cold sea-ice fed surface waters from enhanced subsurface AW advection. This may be related to changes in North Atlantic subpolar versus subtropical gyre activity.
    Keywords: AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; GEOMAR; Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel; KAL; Kasten corer; Maria S. Merian; MSM05/5; MSM05/5_723-2; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bahr, André; Kaboth, Stefanie; Jiménez-Espejo, Francisco Jose; Sierro, Francisco Javier; Voelker, Antje H L; Lourens, Lucas Joost; Röhl, Ursula; Reichart, Gert-Jan; Escutia, Carlota; Hernandéz-Molina, Francisco Javier; Pross, Jörg; Friedrich, Oliver (2015): Persistent monsoonal forcing of Mediterranean Outflow Water dynamics during the late Pleistocene. Geology, 43(11), 951-954, https://doi.org/10.1130/G37013.1
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The mode and vigor of the global oceanic circulation critically depend on the salinity of (sub)surface water masses advected to the loci of deep-water formation. Within the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), an important supplier of high-salinity waters is the Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW), discharging into the North Atlantic via the Strait of Gibraltar. Despite its importance for the North Atlantic salinity budget, the long-term dynamics of MOW production have remained poorly understood. Here we present high-resolution records of bottom-current velocity from three drill sites within the Gulf of Cádiz that document a persistent low-latitude forcing of MOW flow speed over the past ~150 k.y. We demonstrate that the African monsoon is the predominant driver of orbital-scale MOW variability via its influence on the freshwater budget of the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Consequently, MOW formation fluctuates in concert with orbital precession overprinted by centennial-scale oscillations of high-latitude origin. We further document that Northern Hemisphere summer insolation minima stimulate maximal injection of MOW-derived salt into the North Atlantic, likely strengthening the intermediate AMOC branch. The direct coupling of MOW dynamics to low-latitude climate forcing represents a hitherto neglected process for propagating (sub)tropical climate signals into the high northern latitudes.
    Keywords: 339-U1386; 339-U1387; 339-U1389; Azores; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Exp339; IMAGES I; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program / International Ocean Discovery Program; IODP; Joides Resolution; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952037; MD95-2037; Mediterranean Outflow
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Studer, Anja S; Sigman, Daniel M; Martínez‐García, Alfredo; Benz, Verena; Winckler, Gisela; Kuhn, Gerhard; Esper, Oliver; Lamy, Frank; Jaccard, Samuel L; Wacker, Lukas; Oleynik, Sergey; Gersonde, Rainer; Haug, Gerald H (2015): Antarctic Zone nutrient conditions during the last two glacial cycles. Paleoceanography, 30(7), 845-862, https://doi.org/10.1002/2014PA002745
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: In a sediment core from the Pacific sector of the Antarctic Zone (AZ) of the Southern Ocean, we report diatom-bound N isotope (d15Ndb) records for total recoverable diatoms and two distinct diatom assemblages (pennate and centric rich). These data indicate tight coupling between the degree of nitrate consumption and Antarctic climate across the last two glacial cycles, with d15Ndb (and thus the degree of nitrate consumption) increasing at each major Antarctic cooling event. Coupled with evidence from opal- and barium-based proxies for reduced export production during ice ages, the d15Ndb increases point to ice age reductions in the supply of deep ocean-sourced nitrate to the AZ surface. The two diatom assemblages and species abundance data indicate that the d15Ndb changes are not the result of changing species composition. The pennate and centric assemblage d15Ndb records indicate similar changes but with a significant decline in their difference during peak ice ages. A tentative seasonality-based interpretation of the centric-to-pennate d15Ndb difference suggests that late summer surface waters became nitrate free during the peak glacials.
    Keywords: ANT-XXVI/2; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS75/072-4; PS75 BIPOMAC; SL; South Pacific Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Berg, Sonja; White, Duanne A; Bennike, Ole; Fülop, Réka-H; Fink, David; Wagner, Bernd; Melles, Martin (2016): Unglaciated areas in East Antarctica during the Last Glacial (Marine Isotope Stage 3) – New evidence from Rauer Group. Quaternary Science Reviews, 153, 1-10, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.08.021
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Limited information on the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) geometry during Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS 3; 60-25 ka) restricts our understanding of its behaviour during periods of climate and sea level change. Ice sheet models forced by global parameters suggest an expanded EAIS compared to the Holocene during MIS 3, but field evidence from East Antarctic coastal areas contradicts such modelling, and suggests that the ice sheet margins were no more advanced than at present. Here we present a new lake sediment record, and cosmogenic exposure results from bedrock, which confirm that Rauer Group (eastern Prydz Bay) was ice-free for much of MIS 3. We also refine the likely duration of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) glaciation in the region. Lacustrine and marine sediments from Rauer Group indicate the penultimate period of ice retreat predates 50 ka. The lacustrine record indicates a change from warmer/wetter conditions to cooler/drier conditions after ca. 35 ka. Substantive ice sheet re-advance, however, may not have occurred until much closer to 20 ka. Contemporary coastal areas were still connected to the sea during MIS 3, restricting the possible extent of grounded ice in Prydz Bay on the continental shelf. In contrast, relative sea levels (RSL) deduced from field evidence indicate an extra ice load averaging several hundred metres thicker ice across the Bay between 45 and 32 ka. Thus, ice must either have been thicker immediately inland (with a steeper ice profile), or there were additional ice domes on the shallow banks of the outer continental shelf. Further work is required to reconcile the differences between empirical evidence of past ice sheet histories, and the history predicted by ice sheet models from far-field temperature and sea level records.
    Keywords: ANT-XXIII/9; Co1008; Core; CORE; Polarstern; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; PS69; Skua Lake, Filla; SPP1158
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schröder, Jan F; Holbourn, Ann E; Kuhnt, Wolfgang; Küssner, Kevin (2016): Variations in sea surface hydrology in the southern Makassar Strait over the past 26 kyr. Quaternary Science Reviews, 154, 143-156, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.10.018
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: We present centennial-scale records of sea surface temperature and oxygen isotopes in a sediment core from Mandar Bay, offshore Sulawesi in the southern Makassar Strait, which provide new insights into the variability of Indonesian climate over the past 26 kyr. The age model for the core is constrained by 17 AMS radiocarbon ages, with a surface ocean reservoir age correction based on paired wood and foraminiferal samples. Small Holocene reservoir ages of 105 ± 180 years point to intense surface ocean-atmosphere interchange linked to increased monsoonal precipitation, whereas Last Glacial Maximum and deglacial reservoir ages are significantly higher. Mg/Ca derived sea surface temperature reconstructions based on Globigerinoides ruber (s. s., white) exhibit an extended plateau during the Antarctic Cold Reversal, suggesting an atmospheric connection to high-latitude Southern Hemisphere climate and a seasonal bias on G. ruber. This is in agreement with southern hemisphere sites along the track of the Indonesian Throughflow and in contrast to Northern Hemisphere records from the South China Sea, Sulu Sea and Western Pacific (off Mindanao), which exhibit warming during the Bølling-Allerød. Ice-volume corrected d18O seawater (d18Osw) increased during Heinrich Stadial 1 and the Younger Dryas, whereas the Bølling-Allerød is characterized by low d18Osw. We attribute d18Osw variability in the southern Makassar Strait during the Last Glacial Maximum and glacial termination to changes in provenance and seasonality of precipitation rather than to variability in the amount of local precipitation and runoff.
    Keywords: GIK/IfG; GIK18515-3; Institute for Geosciences, Christian Albrechts University, Kiel; KL; MAJA; Makasar Strait; Piston corer (BGR type); SO217; SO217_2-3; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Dreger, Derek (1999): Decadal-to-centennial-scale sediment records of ice advance on the Barents shelf and meltwater discharge into the northeastern Norwegian Sea over the last 40 kyr = Dekadische-bis-Jahrhundert-Variabilität von Eisvorstößen auf dem Barentsschelf und Schmelzwasserschüben in die nordöstliche Norwegensee während der letzten 40 ka. Berichte-Reports, Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Kiel, 3, 80 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/reports-ifg.1999.3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Two ultra-high resolution IMAGES sediment cores from the SW continental slope of the Barents Sea and the Vøring Plateau are used to reconstruct fluctuations of a Barents Sea ice sheet with respect to variations in flow intensity and direction of the Norwegian Current during the last glacial-to-interglacial cycle (〉 40 - 6.6 14C kyr BP equal to 45 - 7.5 cal. kyr BP). Detailed planktic AMS 14C records from both locations reveal a strong tendency towards higher ages during periods of intense meltwater and/or glacial activity on the Barents shelf. Ages in the core from the continental slope are heavily influenced by reworked 14C-free foraminiferal tests from the Barents shelf. Reworked foraminiferal accumulation rates were quantified by tuning the planktic d18O profile to the GISP2 d18O ice core record. In conjunction with the ice-rafted detritus record, this new proxy shows that ice reached the shelf edge at least twice during the mid-Weichselian and was used to develop a new glaciation curve for the SW Barents Sea. Ice sheet growth and decay on the Barents shelf was sensitive to variations in the intensity of the Norwegian Current, which ultimately lead to the final break-up of the Barents Sea ice sheet at the end of the last glacial maximum. A general analogy for major meltwater episodes is found in Heinrich Event 1 (H1): a strong inflow of Atlantic water, documented by a rapid rise in planktic d13C values, followed by the actual meltwater discharge, represented by pronounced d18O/d13C minima and massive ice-rafted detritus and reworked foraminiferal carbonate input. On the Vuring Plateau, 14C ages measured at the onset of HI were probably biased by an increased inflow and up-welling of 'old' North Atlantic Intermediate Water resulting from a reversal of the Norwegian Current in response to massive meltwater input from the Barents Sea. The younger 14C ages marking H1 in the Norwegian Sea suggest a delayed Barents Sea meltwater discharge of up to 1500 years with respect to the Laurentide H1 signal in the open N. Atlantic.
    Keywords: Bear Island Fan; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Global Environmental Change: The Northern North Atlantic; IMAGES; IMAGES I; International Marine Global Change Study; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952011; MD95-2011; MD952012; MD95-2012; SFB313; Voring Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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