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  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wilson, Moyra E J; Hirano, Satoshi; Fergusson, Christopher L; Steurer, Joan; Underwood, Michael B (2003): Data report: Sedimentological and petrographic characteristics of volcanic ashes and siliceous claysontes (altered ashes) from Sites 1173, 1174, and 1177, Leg 190. In: Mikada, H; Moore, GF; Taira, A; Becker, K; Moore, JC; Klaus, A (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 190/196, 1-9, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.190196.204.2003
    Publication Date: 2024-06-15
    Description: Leg 190 was the first of a two-leg program across the Nankai accretionary prism and Trough, offshore Japan, aiming to evaluate existing models for prism evolution and to constrain syntectonic sedimentation, deformation styles, mechanical properties, and prism hydrology (Moore, Taira, Klaus, et al., 2001; Moore et al., 2001). More than 400 volcanic ash and siliceous claystone (altered ash) layers were penetrated and sampled during drilling of the six sites from two transects across the accretionary prism (Sites 1173-1178). In sites from the subducting Shikoku Basin (Sites 1173 and 1177) and in the trench axis (Site 1174), recognition of ash layers and diagenetically altered ashes was initially important in defining major lithostratigraphic units. However, it is clear that understanding the diagenesis of the volcanic ashes has considerable implications for prism evolution, mechanical properties, prism hydrology, geochemistry, and fluid flow in the accretionary prism and associated subducting sediments (cf. Masuda et al., 1996, doi 10.1346/CCMN.1996.0440402). Particle size, chemical composition, temperature, depth of burial, and time are all thought to be factors that may affect volcanic ash diagenesis and preservation (Kuramoto et al., 1992, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.127128-2.235.1992; Underwood et al., 1993, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.131.137.1993). The overall aim of this research is to evaluate factors influencing volcanic ash diagenesis in the Nankai Trough area. This data report presents just the results of the sedimentological and petrographic analysis of the volcanic ashes and siliceous claystones from Sites 1173, 1174, and 1177. It is anticipated that when the results of additional geochemical analysis of these lithologies is available a more meaningful evaluation of factors influencing volcanic ash alteration will be possible.
    Keywords: 190-1173A; 190-1174A; 190-1174B; 190-1177A; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Joides Resolution; Leg190; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Philippine Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Instituto Antártico Chileno, Punta Arenas, Chile & Instituto Antártico Argentino, Buenos Aires, Argentina
    Publication Date: 2024-06-15
    Description: We present here a new geological map of Potter Peninsula (King George Island, South Shetland Islands). Like on adjacent Barton Peninsula, the morphology on Potter Peninsula is predominantly characterized by a glacial landscape with abrasion platforms offshore, in parts steep cliffs along the coast, and a rather smooth, hilly countryside in the interior. Potter Peninsula forms part of the downthrown Warszawa Block. The volcanic sequence cropping out here belongs to the King George Island Supergroup, with an observed local minimum thickness of approx. 90 m (Kraus 2005). The most prominent morphological feature is Three Brothers Hill (196 m), a well known andesitic plug showing conspicuous columnar jointing. It marks the final stage of activity of a Paleogene volcano, whose eruption products (lava flows and pyroclastic rocks), together with hypabyssal intrusions related to the volcanism, make up most of the lithology observed on Potter Peninsula (Kraus 2005). The Three Brothers Hill volcanic complex is eroded down to its deepest levels. Thus, the stratigraphically deepest units from the initial phase of volcanic activity are cropping out in some parts (Kraus & del Valle, in Wienke et al. 2008). The lithology on Potter Peninsula comprises lava flows (~50%), pyroclastic rocks (ash-fallout, pyroclastic flow deposits, volcanic breccia and agglomerates, ~30%) and hypabyssal intrusions (dykes, sills and small subvolcanic intrusive bodies, ~20%). 40Ar/39Ar datings carried out on magmatic dykes from Potter Peninsula indicate a short, but intense intrusive event during the Lutetian (Kraus et al. 2007).
    Keywords: IMCOAST/IMCONet; Impact of climate induced glacier melt on marine coastal systems, Antarctica
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/pdf, 1.9 MBytes
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-15
    Keywords: 190-1173A; Biotite; Carbonates; Clay; Clay minerals; Color description; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, reference; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Description; Diatom abundance; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Epoch; Feldspar; Foraminifera; Grain size description; Igneous rock; Joides Resolution; Leg190; Lithic grains; Lithologic unit/sequence; Lithology/composition/facies; Minerals; Muscovite; Nannofossil abundance; Nannofossil zone; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Opaque minerals; Philippine Sea; Pyrite; Quartz; Radiolarians abundance; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Sample thickness; Sand; Section; Section position; Silicoflagellate abundance; Silt; Smear slide analysis; Sorting description; Sponge spiculae; Volcanic glass; Volcanic glass, altered; Zeolite
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 4035 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-06-15
    Keywords: 190-1174A; 190-1174B; Biotite; Carbonates; Clay; Clay minerals; Color description; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, reference; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Description; Diatom abundance; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Epoch; Event label; Feldspar; Foraminifera; Grain size description; Joides Resolution; Leg190; Lithic grains; Lithologic unit/sequence; Lithology/composition/facies; Mica; Minerals; Nannofossil abundance; Nannofossil zone; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Opaque minerals; Philippine Sea; Quartz; Radiolarians abundance; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Sample thickness; Sand; Section; Section position; Silt; Smear slide analysis; Sorting description; Volcanic glass; Volcanic glass, altered; Zeolite
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 3363 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-06-15
    Keywords: 190-1177A; Carbonates; Clay; Clay minerals; Color description; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, reference; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Description; Diatom abundance; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Epoch; Feldspar; Foraminifera; Grain size description; Joides Resolution; Leg190; Lithic grains; Lithologic unit/sequence; Lithology/composition/facies; Mica; Minerals; Nannofossil abundance; Nannofossil zone; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Opaque minerals; Organic matter; Philippine Sea; Quartz; Radiolarians abundance; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Sample thickness; Sand; Section; Section position; Silt; Smear slide analysis; Sorting description; Volcanic glass; Volcanic glass, altered; Zeolite
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1385 data points
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  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schwamborn, Georg; Rachold, Volker; Grigoriev, Mikhail N (2002): Late Quaternary Sedimentation History of the Lena Delta. Quaternary International, 89(1), 119-134, https://doi.org/10.1016/S1040-6182(01)00084-2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-14
    Description: Core and outcrop analysis from Lena mouth deposits have been used to reconstruct the Late Quaternary sedimentation history of the Lena Delta. Sediment properties (heavy mineral composition, grain size characteristics, organic carbon content) and age determinations (14C AMS and IR-OSL) are applied to discriminate the main sedimentary units of the three major geomorphic terraces, which form the delta. The development of the terraces is controlled by complex interactions among the following four factors: (1) Channel migration. According to the distribution of 14C and IR-OSL age determinations of Lena mouth sediments, the major river runoff direction shifted from the west during marine isotope stages 5-3 (third terrace deposits) towards the northwest during marine isotope stage 2 and transition to stage 1 (second terrace), to the northeast and east during the Holocene (first terrace deposits). (2) Eustasy. Sea level rise from Last Glacial lowstand to the modern sea level position, reached at 6-5 ka BP, resulted in back-filling and flooding of the palaeovalleys. (3) Neotectonics. The extension of the Arctic Mid-Ocean Ridge into the Laptev Sea shelf acted as a halfgraben, showing dilatation movements with different subsidence rates. From the continent side, differential neotectonics with uplift and transpression in the Siberian coast ridges are active. Both likely have influenced river behavior by providing sites for preservation, with uplift, in particular, allowing accumulation of deposits in the second terrace in the western sector. The actual delta setting comprises only the eastern sector of the Lena Delta. (4) Peat formation. Polygenetic formation of ice-rich peaty sand (''Ice Complex'') was most extensive (7-11 m in thickness) in the southern part of the delta area between 43 and 14 ka BP (third terrace deposits). In recent times, alluvial peat (5-6 m in thickness) is accumulated on top of the deltaic sequences in the eastern sector (first terrace).
    Keywords: Arga Island; AWI_PerDyn; AWI Arctic Land Expedition; ChekanovskyHighl; HAND; Laptev Sea System; LD00-1316-1; LD00-1316-2; LD00-1316-3; LD98-D01; LD98-D06; LD98-D07; LD98-D08; LD98-D10; LD98-S04; LD98-S05; LD98-S06; Lena-Delta1998; Lena-Delta1999; Lena-Delta2000; LSS; minerals; Nikolay Lake, Lena Delta, Russia; Olenyok Channel; PERM; Permafrost Research (Periglacial Dynamics) @ AWI; PG1440; radiocarbon; RCD; river delta; Rotary core drilling; RU-Land_1998_Lena; RU-Land_1999_Lena; RU-Land_2000_Lena; Samoylov Island, Lena Delta, Siberia; Sampling by hand; Sampling permafrost; Sardakh Channel; Sediment core; sediments; Seismic, shallow profile; SEISS
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-14
    Description: Abstract
    Description: SeisComP is a seismological software for data acquisition, processing, distribution and interactive analysis. The seismological software package has evolved within a decade from pure acquisition modules to a fully featured real-time earthquake monitoring software. The SeedLink protocol for seismic data transmission has been the core of SeisComP from the very beginning. Later additions included simple, purely automatic event detection, location and magnitude determination capabilities. Especially within the development of the 3rd-generation SeisComP, also known as SeisComP3 automatic processing capabilities have been augmented by graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for visualization, rapid event review and quality control.Communication between the modules is achieved using a dedicated messaging system that allows distributed computing and remote review. For seismological metadata exchange export/import tools to/from QuakeML and FDSN StationXML are available, which also provide convenient interfaces with 3rd-party software. The initial SeisComP3 development took place at GFZ between 2006 and 2008 within the GITEWS project (German Indonesian Tsunami Early Warning System) and continued with increasing engagement of gempa GmbH, a software company established by the initial development team of the GFZ.
    Keywords: real-time ; data ; processing ; earthquakes ; monitoring ; fdsn ; standards ; seismology ; C++ ; python ; AGPL ; open ; EARTH SCIENCE SERVICES 〉 DATA ANALYSIS AND VISUALIZATION ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 TECTONICS 〉 EARTHQUAKES ; EARTH SCIENCE
    Language: English
    Type: Software
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-06-13
    Keywords: ANT-III/2; ANT-VII/5; Atlantis II (1963); BATS; BI-2; BIGSET-1; BIGSET-2/JGOFS-IN-4; Calcium carbonate, flux; Canary Islands; CB1_trap; CB2_trap; CB3_trap; CB4_trap; CI1; CI1_trap; CI10; CI10_trap; CI11; CI11_trap; CI2; CI2_trap; CI3; CI3_trap; CI4; CI4_trap; CI5; CI5_trap; CI6; CI6_trap; CI7; CI7_trap; CI8; CI8_trap; CI9; CI9_trap; compiled data; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; EA1_trap; EA2_trap; EA3_trap; EA4_trap; EA5_trap; EBC2; EBC2-1_trap; Event label; GBN3_trap; GBN6_trap; GBZ4_trap; GBZ5_trap; Guinea Basin; IOS_trap_G3; IOS_trap_G4; IOS_trap_J1; IOS_trap_J2; IOS_trap_NJ1; IOS_trap_NJ2; IOS_trap_O3; IOS_trap_O4; IOS_trap_O5; IOS_trap_O6; IOS_trap_S3; IOS_trap_S4; Jan-Mayen Current; John P. Tully; KG1_trap; Latitude of event; Lofoten Basin; Longitude of event; LP1; LP1_trap; M12/1; M16/1; M16/2; M22/1; M6/6; M9/4; Meteor (1986); MOOR; Mooring; Mooring (long time); MOORY; N34-Phase_I; N34-Phase_II; N48-Phase_I; N48-Phase_II; NABE-Mooring; NABE-N34.1; NABE-N34.2; NABE-N48.1; NABE-N48.2; NB6; Northern Guinea Basin; OE90/3; OE90/4; OG4; OG5; ORFOIS; Origin and Fate of Biogenic Particle Fluxes in the Ocean; Polarstern; PS06; PS14; Sargasso Sea; see reference(s); SFB313Moorings; SO118; SO118_ST-01; SO118_ST-01_d; SO118_ST-03; SO118_ST-03_d; SO118_ST-04; SO118_ST-04_d; SO118_ST-05; SO118_ST-05_d; SO129; SO129_ST-01; SO129_ST-01_d; SO129_ST-02a; SO129_ST-03; SO129_ST-03_d; SO129_ST-04; SO129_ST-04_d; SO129_ST-05; Sonne; South Atlantic Ocean; Southwest Guinea Basin; Trap; TRAP; Trap, sediment; TRAPS; TUL94/31; TUL95/30; TUL95/7; TUL96/8; WA1_trap; WA2_trap; Walvis Ridge, Southeast Atlantic Ocean; WR1_trap; WR2_trap; WR3_trap; WR4_trap; WS3_trap; WS4_trap
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1643 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-06-13
    Keywords: Acer aegopodifolium; Acer palaeosaccharinum; Acer sp.; Age, maximum/old; Age, minimum/young; Carpinus grandis; Cotinus sp.; Cunninghamia sp.; Cupressaceae; Environment; Epoch; Eucommia palaeoulmoides; Fagus altaensis; Fagus sp.; Fossil determination; Juglans zaisanica; Kazakhstan, Kustanay District; Krugloye; Lithology/composition/facies; Mediterranean stages; Metasequoia disticha; Metasequoia sp.; NECLIME; NECLIME_campaign; Neogene Climate Evolution in Eurasia; Nyssa sibirica; ORDINAL NUMBER; Periploca graeca; Pinus hampeana; Pterocarya paradisiaca; Quercus castaneaefolia; Quercus sp.; Sequoia abietina; Stage; Stratigraphy; Taxodium dubium; Ulmus carpinoides; Visual description; Zelkova zelkovaefolia
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 30 data points
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  • 10
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Ragueneau, Olivier; Tréguer, Paul; Leynaert, Aude; Anderson, Robert F; Brzezinski, Mark A; DeMaster, David J; Dugdale, Richard; Dymond, Jack R; Fischer, Gerhard; Francois, Roger; Heinze, Christoph; Maier-Reimer, Ernst; Martin-Jézéquel, Véronique; Nelson, David M; Quéguiner, Bernard (2000): A review of the Si cycle in the modern ocean: recent progress and missing gaps in the application of biogenic opal as a paleoproductivity proxy. Global and Planetary Change, 26(4), 317-365, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0921-8181(00)00052-7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-13
    Description: Due to the major role played by diatoms in the biological pump of CO2, and to the presence of silica-rich sediments in areas that play a major role in air-sea CO2 exchange (e.g. the Southern Ocean and the Equatorial Pacific), opal has a strong potential as a proxy for paleoproductivity reconstructions. However, because of spatial variations in the biogenic silica preservation, and in the degree of coupling between the marine Si and C biogeochemical cycles, paleoreconstructions are not straitghtforward. A better calibration of this proxy in the modern ocean is required, which needs a good understanding of the mechanisms that control the Si cycle, in close relation to the carbon cycle. This review of the Si cycle in the modern ocean starts with the mechanisms that control the uptake of silicic acid (Si(OH)4) by diatoms and the subsequent silicification processes, the regulatory mechanisms of which are uncoupled. This has strong implications for the direct measurement in the field of the kinetics of Si(OH)4 uptake and diatom growth. It also strongly influences the Si:C ratio within diatoms, clearly linked to environmental conditions. Diatoms tend to dominate new production at marine ergoclines. At depth, they also succeed to form mats, which sedimentation is at the origin of laminated sediments and marine sapropels. The concentration of Si(OH)4 with respect to other macronutrients exerts a major influence on diatom dominance and on the rain ratio between siliceous and calcareous material, which severely impacts surface waters pCO2. A compilation of biogenic fluxes collected at about 40 sites by means of sediment traps also shows a remarkable pattern of increasing BSi:Corg ratio along the path of the "conveyor belt", accompanying the relative enrichment of waters in Si compared to N and P. This observation suggests an extension of the Si pump model described by Dugdale and Wilkerson (1989, doi:10.1038/34630), giving to Si(OH)4 a major role in the control of the rain ratio, which is of major importance in the global carbon cycle. The fate of the BSi produced in surface waters is then described, in relation to Corg, in terms of both dissolution and preservation mechanisms. Difficulties in quantifying the dissolution of biogenic silica in the water column as well as the sinking rates and forms of BSi to the deep, provide evidence for a major gap in our understanding of the mechanisms controlling the competition between retention in and export from surface waters. The relative influences of environmental conditions, seasonality, food web structure or aggregation are however explored. Quantitatively, assuming steady state, the measurements of the opal rain rate by means of sediment traps matches reasonably well those obtained by adding the recycling and burial fluxes in the underlying abyssal sediments, for most of the sites where such a comparison is possible. The major exception is the Southern Ocean where sediment focusing precludes the closing of mass balances. Focusing in fact is also an important aspect of the downward revision of the importance of Southern Ocean sediments in the global biogenic silica accumulation. Qualitatively, little is known about the duration of the transfer through the deep and the quality of the material that reaches the seabed, which is suggested to represent a major gap in our understanding of the processes governing the early diagenesis of BSi in sediments. The sediment composition (special emphasis on Al availability), the sedimentation rate or bioturbation are shown to exert an important control on the competition between dissolution and preservation of BSi in sediments. It is suggested that a primary control on the kinetic and thermodynamic properties of BSi dissolution, both in coastal and abyssal sediments, is exerted by water column processes, either occuring in surface waters during the formation of the frustules, or linked to the transfer of the particles through the water column, which duration may influence the quality of the biogenic rain. This highlights the importance of studying the factors controlling the degree of coupling between pelagic and benthic processes in various regions of the world ocean, and its consequences, not only in terms of benthic biology but also for the constitution of the sediment archive. The last section, first calls for the end of the "NPZD" models, and for the introduction of processes linked to the Si cycle, into models describing the phytoplankton cycles in surface waters and the early diagenesis of BSi in sediments. It also calls for the creation of an integrated 1-D diagnostic model of the Si:C coupling, for a better understanding of the interactions between surface waters, deep waters and the upper sedimentary column. The importance of Si(OH)4 in the control of the rain ratio and the improved parametrization of the Si cycle in the 1-D diagnostic models should lead to a reasonable incorporation of the Si cycle into 3-D regional circulation models and OGCMs, with important implications for climate change studies and paleoreconstructions at regional and global scale.
    Keywords: Barcelona Coast; ORFOIS; Origin and Fate of Biogenic Particle Fluxes in the Ocean; Pertuis Charentais; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; Taranto Mare Piccolo
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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