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  • 1
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    GeoUnion, Berlin
    In:  Herausgeberexemplar
    Publication Date: 2021-08-30
    Description: During the past years there has been a great amount of new publications on varved sediment records, some of them describing methodological developments and others forming a basis of interpretation of climate and environmental change of mainly postglacial times. In many studies, the varve chronologies of lacustrine and marine sediments form a solid basis of dating, not to mention the environmental and climate signal that is stored in varves and laminae they contain. Since two years a step forward has been taken and the varve community is gathering during annual Varves Working Group (VWG) workshops to summarize what has been accomplished during the past decade and to exchange new ideas and promote their use in global climate reconstructions. The VWG has formed under the frame of the PAGES cross cutting theme 1 (CCT1) “Chronology” and CCT2 “Proxy development, calibration, validation” to address a number of topics with workshops and products. The main topics of the VWG include: •Methodological developments •Marine versus lacustrine varves •Varve chronologies, including quantification of age uncertainties •Calibration of archived climatic and environmental signals •Database management •Data processing •Learning from other annually resolved archives.
    Description: conference
    Keywords: 551 ; Rhythmite {Sedimentologie} ; Warvenmethoden ; Instrumentelle Ergebnisse zu Klimaänderungen und Klimaschwankungen ; Warve ; Rhythmit ; Warvenchronologie ; Kongress ; Manderscheid 2012 ; varve ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: English
    Type: anthology , publishedVersion
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  • 2
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    GeoUnion Alfred-Wegener-Stifung, Berlin
    In:  Herausgeberexemplar
    Publication Date: 2021-08-30
    Description: This 4th International PASADO Workshop is related to the research initiative “Potrok Aike Lake Sediment Archive Drilling Project” (PASADO) within the framework of the “International Continental Scientific Drilling Programme” (ICDP). PASADO addresses challenging issues of geoscientific and socioeconomic relevance related to Earth history and climate like qualitative and quantitative climatic and environmental reconstruction as well as reconstruction of the palaeosecular variation of the Earth's magnetic field but also natural hazards like fire history, frequency of volcanic activity including tephra fallout and dust deposition. The history of volcanic activities for the last ca. 50,000 years is another interesting topic. Moreover, dust and tephra records provide links of this unique southern hemispheric terrestrial record to marine sediment archives and to ice cores from Antarctica. Finally, obtained reconstructions of climate variability will be compared statistically with the output of Global Circulation Model (GCM) simulations to improve our understanding of forcing mechanisms of the global climate.
    Description: conference
    Keywords: 551 ; Geologische Bohrungen in einzelnen Regionen ; Argentinien {Geologie} ; Sedimente bestimmter Regionen ; Paläolimnologie {Geologie} ; Argentina ; sediments ; palaeoclimate ; palaeoenvironment ; tephra ; volcanism ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: English
    Type: anthology , publishedVersion
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  • 3
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    GeoUnion Alfred-Wegener-Stifung, Berlin
    In:  Herausgeberexemplar
    Publication Date: 2021-08-30
    Description: This 2nd International PASADO Workshop is based on the research initiative “Potrok Aike Lake Sediment Archive Drilling Project” (PASADO) within the framework of the “International Continental Scientific Drilling Programme” (ICDP). PASADO addresses several challenging issues of geoscientific and socioeconomic relevance related to Earth history and climate like qualitative and quantitative climatic and environmental reconstruction as well as reconstruction of the palaeosecular variation of the Earth's magnetic field and natural hazards like fire history, frequency of volcanic activity including tephra fallout or dust deposition. The history of volcanic activities for the last ca. 50,000 years is another interesting topic. Moreover, dust and tephra records will provide means to link this unique southern hemispheric terrestrial record to marine sediment archives and to ice cores from Antarctica. Finally, obtained reconstructions of climate variability will be compared statistically with the output of Global Circulation Model (GCM) simulations to improve our understanding of forcing mechanisms of the global climate.
    Description: conference
    Keywords: 551 ; Geologische Bohrungen in einzelnen Regionen ; Argentinien {Geologie} ; Sedimente bestimmter Regionen ; sediments ; Argentina ; palaeoenvironment ; palaeoclimate ; tephra ; volcanism ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: English
    Type: anthology , publishedVersion
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: Rapid eclogitisation of the Dabie–Sulu UHP terrane: Constraints from Lu–Hfgarnet geochronologyAlexander Schmidta,⁎, Stefan Weyera, Klaus Mezgerb, Erik E. Schererb, Yilin Xiaoc,d,Jochen Hoefsd, Gerhard P. BreyaaInstitut für Geowissenschaften, Facheinheit Mineralogie, JWG-Universität, Frankfurt, Altenhöferallee 1, 60438 Frankfurt, GermanybZentrallabor für Geochronologie, Institut für Mineralogie, Universität Münster, Corrensstr. 24, 48149 Münster, GermanycCAS Key Laboratory of Crust–Mantle Materials and Environments, School of Earth, and Space Sciences, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, 230026 ChinadGeowissenschaftliches Zentrum Göttingen, Universität Göttingen, Goldschmidtstr. 26 1-3, 37077 Göttingen, GermanyABSTRACTARTICLE INFOArticle history:Received 8 February 2008Received in revised form 18 June 2008Accepted 20 June 2008Available online 4 July 2008Editor: R.W. CarlsonKeywords:Lu–Hf geochronologySm–Nd geochronologyeclogiteultrahigh-pressureeclogitisationThe Qinling–Dabie–Sulu orogenic belt in eastern China is one of the largest ultrahigh-pressure (UHP)terranes worldwide. Mineral Sm–Nd- and zircon U–Pb dating has been widely used to reveal themetamorphic history of this collisional orogen. However, the exact timing of the UHP metamorphic event(s)remains controversial and ages ranging from 245 Ma to 220 Ma have been suggested. We present highprecision garnet–cpx Lu–Hf ages for six eclogites from the Dabie and Sulu areas. All ages fall in a narrowrange between 219.6 and 224.4 Ma. Five samples define a mean age of 223.0±0.9 Ma and one sample yields aslightly younger age of 219.6±1.4 Ma. This very tight age range is particularly remarkable considering thelarge regional distribution of sample localities (on the order of 100 km at the time of UHP metamorphism)and the wide variety of garnet and eclogite chemical compositions represented. Two samples yield Sm–Ndages that are indistinguishable from their Lu–Hf ages, albeit with larger uncertainties.The identical ages of eclogites from both the Dabie and the Sulu region emphasize their close geneticrelationship and similar metamorphic histories. The Lu–Hf results appear to date a punctuated event ofgarnet growth. Alternatively, the Lu–Hf garnet ages may represent the onset of rapid, contemporaneousuplift and subsequent cooling. However, trace element zoning of Lu and Hf is still preserved in garnetporphyroblasts, even in those with a homogeneous major element distribution. Thus, complete re-equilibration of the Lu–Hf system during peak-temperature conditions probably did not occur. The garnetforming event can be placed toward thefinal stage of the UHP metamorphism, in agreement with somepublished U–Pb zircon ages. A possible trigger for this short-lived and widespread mineral growth episodemay have been afluid that became available at that stage of the metamorphic history. Although HREE-depleted patterns of older zircon grains may indicate the presence of an older generation of garnet, completeeclogitisation may have been inhibited during the major part of the prograde P–T path due to dry conditionsduring most of the UHP metamorphism. The uniform Lu–Hf (and Sm–Nd) ages of all investigated Dabie andSulu eclogites suggest that garnet growth and thus possiblyfluid availability were limited to a short timeinterval over a remarkably large regional scale.
    Keywords: Lu–Hf geochronology; Sm–Nd geochronology; eclogite; ultrahigh-pressure; eclogitisation ; 551 ; Lu–Hf geochronology ; Sm–Nd geochronology ; eclogite ; ultrahigh-pressure ; eclogitisation
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2021-04-27
    Description: he fossil record of lichens is scarce and many putative fossil lichens do not show an actual physiological relationship between mycobionts and photobionts or a typical habit, and are therefore disputed. Amber has preserved a huge variety of organisms in microscopic fidelity, and so the study of amber fossils is promising for elucidating the fossil history of lichens. However, so far it has not been tested as to how amber inclusions of lichens are preserved regarding their internal characters, ultrastructure, and chemofossils. Here, we apply light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), and Raman spectroscopy to an amber-preserved Eocene lichen in order to gain information about the preservation of the fossil. The lichen thallus displays lifelike tissue preservation including the upper and lower cortex, medulla, photobiont layer, apothecia, and soredia. SEM analysis revealed globular photobiont cells in contact with the fungal hyphae, as well as impressions of possible former crystals of lichen compounds. EDX analysis permitted the differentiation between halite and pyrite crystals inside the lichen which were likely formed during the later diagenesis of the amber piece. Raman spectroscopy revealed the preservation of organic compounds and a difference between the composition of the cortex and the medulla of the fossil.
    Description: Open Access Publikationsfonds 2015
    Keywords: Lichen; amber; morphology; ultrastructure; chemofossils; taphonomic alteration ; 551
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-04-27
    Description: Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2016
    Keywords: Fossils; Leaves; Paleobiology; Mosses, Plant fossils; Eocene epoch, Bryology; Nonvascular plants ; 551
    Language: English , English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-04-27
    Description: The range of substrates that the bone-eating marine worm Osedax is able to consume has important implications for its evolutionary history, especially its potential link to the rise of whales. Once considered a whale specialist, recent work indicates that Osedax consumes a wide range of vertebrate remains, including whale soft tissue and the bones of mammals, birds and fishes. Traces resembling those produced by living Osedax have now been recognized for the first time in Oligocene whale teeth and fish bones from deep-water strata of the Makah, Pysht and Lincoln Creek formations in western Washington State, USA. The specimens were acid etched from concretions, and details of the borehole morphology were investigated using micro-computed tomography. Together with previously published Osedax traces from this area, our results show that by Oligocene time Osedax was able to colonize the same range of vertebrate remains that it consumes today and had a similar diversity of root morphologies. This supports the view that a generalist ability to exploit vertebrate bones may be an ancestral trait of Osedax.
    Keywords: Deep-sea; Trace fossil; Osedax; Whale; Fish; Micro-CT; Tiefsee; Spurenfossil; Osedax; Wal; Fisch; Micro-CT ; 551 ; Earth Sciences; Paleontology
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-04-27
    Description: Preservation of liverworts in amber, a fossilized tree resin, is often exquisite. Twenty-three fossil species of liverworts have been described to date from Eocene (35-50 Ma) Baltic amber. In addition, two inclusions have been assigned to the extant species Ptilidium pulcherrimum (Ptilidiales or Porellales). However, the presence of the boreal P. pulcherrimum in the subtropical or warm-temperate Baltic amber forest challenges the phytogeographical interpretation of the Eocene flora. A re-investigation of one of the fossils believed to be P. pulcherrimum reveals that this specimen in fact represents the first fossil evidence of the genus Tetralophozia, and thus is re-described here as Tetralophozia groehnii sp. nov. A second fossil initially assigned to P. pulcherrimum is apparently lost, and can be reassessed only based on the original description and illustrations. This fossil is morphologically similar to the extant North Pacific endemic Ptilidium californicum, rather than P. pulcherrimum. Divergence time estimates based on chloroplast DNA sequences provide evidence of a Miocene origin of P. pulcherrimum, and thus also argue against the presence of this taxon in the Eocene. Ptilidium californicum originated 25-43 Ma ago. As a result, we cannot rule out that the Eocene fossil belongs to P. californicum. Alternatively, the fossil might represent a stem lineage element of Ptilidium or an early crown group species with morphological similarities to P. californicum.
    Description: Open-Access Publikationsfonds 2015
    Keywords: Leaves; Paleobiology; Eocene epoch; Fossils; Fossil record; Plant fossils; Paleobotany; Cilia ; 551
    Language: English , English
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-04-27
    Description: One of the most important issues in molecular dating studies concerns the incorporation of reliable fossil taxa into the phylogenies reconstructed from DNA sequence variation in extant taxa. Lichens are symbiotic associations between fungi and algae and/or cyanobacteria. Several lichen fossils have been used as minimum age constraints in recent studies concerning the diversification of the Ascomycota. Recent evolutionary studies of Lecanoromycetes, an almost exclusively lichen-forming class in the Ascomycota, have utilized the Eocene amber inclusion Alectoria succinic as a minimum age constraint. However, a re-investigation of the type material revealed that this inclusion in fact represents poorly preserved plant remains, most probably of a root. Consequently, this fossil cannot be used as evidence of the presence of the genus Alectoria (Parmeliaceae, Lecanorales) or any other lichens in the Paleogene. However, newly discovered inclusions from Paleogene Baltic and Bitterfeld amber verify that alectorioid morphologies in lichens were in existence by the Paleogene. The new fossils represent either a lineage within the alectorioid group or belong to the genus Oropogon.
    Description: Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2015
    Keywords: Crystal structure; Fossils; Fungal structure; Lichenology; Marine fossils; Paleobiology; Paleogene period; Plant fossils ; 551
    Language: English , English
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2021-04-27
    Description: One of the most unexpected insights that followed from the completion of the human genome a decade ago was that more than half of our DNA is derived from transposable elements (TEs). Due to advances in high throughput sequencing technologies it is now clear that TEs comprise the largest molecular class within most metazoan genomes. TEs, once categorised as "junk DNA", are now known to influence genomic structure and function by increasing the coding and non-coding genetic repertoire of the host. In this way TEs are key elements that stimulate the evolution of metazoan genomes. This review highlights several lines of TE research including the horizontal transfer of TEs through host-parasite interactions, the vertical maintenance of TEs over long periods of evolutionary time, and the direct role that TEs have played in generating morphological novelty.
    Keywords: transposable element; junk DNA; molecular parasite; molecular domestication; functionalisation; exonisation; exaptation; SINE; LINE ; 551
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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