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  • 1
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Auffret, Gérard A; Zaragosi, Sebastien; Dennielou, Bernard; Cortijo, Elsa; Van Rooij, David; Grousset, Francis E; Pujol, Claude; Eynaud, Frédérique; Siegert, Martin J (2002): Terrigenous fluxes at the Celtic Margin during the last glacial cycle. Marine Geology, 188(1-2), 79-108, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(02)00276-1
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The sedimentary sections of three cores from the Celtic margin provide high-resolution records of the terrigenous fluxes during the last glacial cycle. A total of 21 14C AMS dates allow us to define age models with a resolution better than 100 yr during critical periods such as Heinrich events 1 and 2. Maximum sedimentary fluxes occurred at the Meriadzek Terrace site during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Detailed X-ray imagery of core MD95-2002 from the Meriadzek Terrace shows no sedimentary structures suggestive of either deposition from high-density turbidity currents or significant erosion. Two paroxysmal terrigenous flux episodes have been identified. The first occurred after the deposition of Heinrich event 2 Canadian ice-rafted debris (IRD) and includes IRD from European sources. We suggest that the second represents an episode of deposition from turbid plumes, which precedes IRD deposition associated with Heinrich event 1. At the end of marine isotopic stage 2 (MIS 2) and the beginning of MIS 1 the highest fluxes are recorded on the Whittard Ridge where they correspond to deposition from turbidity current overflows. Canadian icebergs have rafted debris at the Celtic margin during Heinrich events 1, 2, 4 and 5. The high-resolution records of Heinrich events 1 and 2 show that in both cases the arrival of the Canadian icebergs was preceded by a European ice rafting precursor event, which took place about 1–1.5 kyr before. Two rafting episodes of European IRD also occurred immediately after Heinrich event 2 and just before Heinrich event 1. The terrigenous fluxes recorded in core MD95-2002 during the LGM are the highest reported at hemipelagic sites from the northwestern European margin. The magnitude of the Canadian IRD fluxes at Meriadzek Terrace is similar to those from oceanic sites.
    Keywords: CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Celtic Shelf; CH-NKS12; IMAGES; IMAGES I; International Marine Global Change Study; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952002; MD95-2002; Meriadzec; NO-MKS03; PC; Piston corer
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Michels, Klaus; Kuhn, Gerhard; Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Diekmann, Bernhard; Fütterer, Dieter K; Grobe, Hannes; Uenzelmann-Neben, Gabriele (2002): The southern Weddell Sea: combined contourite-turbidite sedimentation at the southeastern margin of the Weddell Gyre. In: Stow, D A V; Pudsey, C; Howe, J C; Faugères, J-C & Viana, A R (eds.), Deep-water contourite systems: modern drifts and ancient series, seismic and sedimentary characteristics. Geological Society of London, Memoirs, London, 22, 305-323, hdl:10013/epic.14690.d001
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Sedimentary processes in the southeastern Weddell Sea are influenced by glacial-interglacial ice-shelf dynamics and the cyclonic circulation of the Weddell Gyre, which affects all water masses down to the sea floor. Significantly increased sedimentation rates occur during glacial stages, when ice sheets advance to the shelf edge and trigger gravitational sediment transport to the deep sea. Downslope transport on the Crary Fan and off Dronning Maud and Coats Land is channelized into three huge channel systems, which originate on the eastern-, the central and the western Crary Fan. They gradually turn from a northerly direction eastward until they follow a course parallel to the continental slope. All channels show strongly asymmetric cross sections with well-developed levees on their northwestern sides, forming wedge-shaped sediment bodies. They level off very gently. Levees on the southeastern sides are small, if present at all. This characteristic morphology likely results from the process of combined turbidite-contourite deposition. Strong thermohaline currents of the Weddell Gyre entrain particles from turbidity-current suspensions, which flow down the channels, and carry them westward out of the channel where they settle on a surface gently dipping away from the channel. These sediments are intercalated with overbank deposits of high-energy and high-volume turbidity currents, which preferentially flood the left of the channels (looking downchannel) as a result of Coriolis force. In the distal setting of the easternmost channel-levee complex, where thermohaline currents are directed northeastward as a result of a recirculation of water masses from the Enderby Basin, the setting and the internal structures of a wedge-shaped sediment body indicate a contourite drift rather than a channel levee. Dating of the sediments reveals that the levees in their present form started to develop with a late Miocene cooling event, which caused an expansion of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet and an invigoration of thermohaline current activity.
    Keywords: ANT-IV/3; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/5; AWI_Paleo; Camp Norway; gcmd1; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Halley Bay; KL; Lyddan Island; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS08; PS08/333; PS12; PS12/319; PS12/340; PS12/458; PS1367-2; PS1599-1; PS1599-3; PS16; PS16/409; PS16/410; PS16/419; PS1607-3; PS1635-1; PS1789-1; PS1790-1; PS1794-2; SL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 13 datasets
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Cortese, Giuseppe; Abelmann, Andrea (2002): Radiolarian-based paleotemperatures during the last 160 kyrs at ODP Site 1089 (Southern Ocean, Atlantic Sector). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 182(3-4), 259-286, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(01)00499-0
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Two cores, Site 1089 (ODP Leg 177) and PS2821-1, recovered from the same location (40°56'S; 9°54'E) at the Subtropical Front (STF) in the Atlantic Sector of the Southern Ocean, provide a high-resolution climatic record, with an average temporal resolution of less than 600 yr. A multi-proxy approach was used to produce an age model for Core PS2821-1, and to correlate the two cores. Both cores document the last climatic cycle, from Marine Isotopic Stage 6 (MIS 6, ca. 160 kyr BP, ka) to present. Summer sea-surface temperatures (SSSTs) have been estimated, with a standard error of ca. +/-1.16°C, for the down core record by using Q-mode factor analysis (Imbrie and Kipp method). The paleotemperatures show a 7°C warming at Termination II (last interglacial, transition from MIS 6 to MIS 5). This transition from glacial to interglacial paleotemperatures (with maximum temperatures ca. 3°C warmer than present at the core location) occurs earlier than the corresponding shift in delta18O values for benthic foraminifera from the same core; this suggests a lead of Southern Ocean paleotemperature changes compared to the global ice-volume changes, as indicated by the benthic isotopic record. The climatic evolution of the record continues with a progressive temperature deterioration towards MIS 2. High-frequency, millennial-scale climatic instability has been documented for MIS 3 and part of MIS 4, with sudden temperature variations of almost the same magnitude as those observed at the transitions between glacial and interglacial times. These changes occur during the same time interval as the Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles recognized in the delta18Oice record of the GRIP and GISP ice cores from Greenland, and seem to be connected to rapid changes in the STF position in relation to the core location. Sudden cooling episodes ('Younger Dryas (YD)-type' and 'Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR)-type' of events) have been recognized for both Termination I (ACR-I and YD-I events) and II (ACR-II and YD-II events), and imply that our core is located in an optimal position in order to record events triggered by phenomena occurring in both hemispheres. Spectral analysis of our SSST record displays strong analogies, particularly for high, sub-orbital frequencies, to equivalent records from Vostok (Antarctica) and from the Subtropical North Atlantic ocean. This implies that the climatic variability of widely separated areas (the Antarctic continent, the Subtropical North Atlantic, and the Subantarctic South Atlantic) can be strongly coupled and co-varying at millennial time scales (a few to 10-ka periods), and eventually induced by the same triggering mechanisms. Climatic variability has also been documented for supposedly warm and stable interglacial intervals (MIS 1 and 5), with several cold events which can be correlated to other Southern Ocean and North Atlantic sediment records.
    Keywords: 177-1089; Agulhas Basin; Agulhas Ridge; ANT-IV/3; ANT-IV/4; ANT-IX/2; ANT-IX/4; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-VIII/6; ANT-X/5; ANT-XI/2; ANT-XI/4; Astrid Ridge; Atka Bay; Atlantic Ridge; AWI_Paleo; Brazil Basin; Cape Basin; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Filchner Shelf; Fram Strait; GeoB2004-1; GeoB2007-1; GeoB2008-1; GeoB2016-3; GeoB2018-1; GeoB2019-2; GeoB2021-4; GeoB2022-3; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Indian-Antarctic Ridge; Joides Resolution; Lazarev Sea; Leg177; M23/1; Maud Rise; Meteor (1986); Meteor Rise; MIC; MiniCorer; MSN; MUC; MultiCorer; Multiple opening/closing net; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; PLA; Plankton net; Polarstern; PS08; PS08/356; PS08/364; PS08/365; PS08/374; PS08/610; PS1380-1; PS1386-1; PS1387-1; PS1394-1; PS1455-4; PS16; PS16/267; PS16/271; PS16/281; PS16/294; PS16/306; PS16/311; PS16/316; PS16/321; PS16/323; PS16/329; PS16/334; PS16/337; PS16/342; PS16/345; PS16/351; PS16/354; PS16/362; PS16/366; PS16/372; PS16/507; PS16/518; PS16/534; PS16/540; PS16/547; PS16/557; PS1751-2; PS1752-5; PS1755-1; PS1759-1; PS1765-1; PS1768-1; PS1771-4; PS1772-2; PS1773-2; PS1774-1; PS1775-5; PS1776-6; PS1777-7; PS1778-1; PS1779-3; PS1780-1; PS1782-6; PS1783-2; PS1786-2; PS18; PS18/055; PS18/075; PS18/084; PS18/088; PS18/092; PS18/096; PS18/229; PS18/232; PS18/236; PS18/237; PS18/238; PS18/239; PS18/241; PS18/244; PS18/261; PS18/262; PS18/263; PS18/267; PS1805-5; PS18 06AQANTIX_2; PS1813-3; PS1821-5; PS1823-1; PS1825-5; PS1831-5; PS1957-1; PS1967-1; PS1973-1; PS1975-1; PS1977-1; PS1979-1; PS2073-1; PS2076-1; PS2080-1; PS2081-1; PS2082-3; PS2083-2; PS2084-2; PS2087-1; PS2103-2; PS2104-2; PS2105-2; PS2109-3; PS22/690; PS22 06AQANTX_5; PS2254-1; PS2256-4; PS2487-2; PS2488-1; PS2489-4; PS2491-4; PS2492-1; PS2493-3; PS2494-1; PS2495-1; PS2496-2; PS2498-2; PS2557-2; PS2560-3; PS2561-1; PS2562-1; PS2563-3; PS2564-2; PS28; PS28/236; PS28/243; PS28/256; PS28/264; PS28/277; PS28/280; PS28/289; PS28/293; PS28/298; PS28/304; PS30; PS30/004; PS30/023; PS30/030; PS30/038; PS30/043; PS30/048; Shona Ridge; SL; South African margin; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; South Sandwich Basin; South Sandwich Islands; South Sandwich Trough; Water sample; Weddell Sea; WS
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Weldeab, Syee; Emeis, Kay-Christian; Hemleben, Christoph; Schmiedl, Gerhard; Schulz, Hartmut (2003): Spatial productivity variations during formation of sapropels S5 and S6 in the Mediterranean Sea: Evidence from Ba contents. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 191(2), 169-190, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(02)00711-3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: We investigated five time-equivalent core sections (180-110 kyr BP) from the Balearic Sea (Menorca Rise), the easternmost Levantine Basin and southwest, south, and southeast of Crete to reconstruct spatial patterns of productivity during deposition of sapropels S5 and S6 in the Mediterranean Sea. Our indicators are Ba, total organic carbon and carbonate contents. We found no indications of Ba remobilization within the investigated core intervals, and used the accumulation rate of biogenic Ba to compute paleoproductivity. Maximum surface water productivity (up to 350 g C/m2/yr) was found during deposition of S5 (isotope stage 5e) but pronounced spatial variability is evident. Coeval sediment intervals in the Balearic Sea show very little productivity change, suggesting that chemical and biological environments in the eastern and western Mediterranean basins were decoupled in this interval. We interpret the spatial variability as the result of two different modes of nutrient delivery to the photic zone: riverderived nutrient input and shoaling of the pycnocline/nutricline to the photic zone. The productivity increase during the formation of S6 was moderate compared to S5 and had a less marked spatial variability within the study area of the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Given that S6 formed during a glacial interval, glacial boundary conditions such as high wind stress and/or cooler surface water temperatures apparently favored lateral and vertical mixing and prevented the development of the spatial gradients within the Eastern Mediterranean Sea (EMS) observed for S5. A non-sapropel sediment interval with elevated Ba content and depleted 18O/16O ratios in planktonic foraminifer calcite was detected between S6 and S5 that corresponds to the weak northern hemisphere insolation maximum at 150 kyr. At this time, productivity apparently increased up to five times over surrounding intervals, but abundant benthic fauna show that the deep water remained oxic. Following our interpretation, the interval denotes a failed sapropel, when a weaker monsoon did not force the EMS into permanent stratification. The comparison of interglacial and glacial sapropels illustrates the relevance of climatic boundary conditions in the northern catchment in determining the facies and spatial variability of sapropels within the EMS.
    Keywords: 160-964A; 160-966A; 160-969E; 160-970A; 160-971A; 160-973A; 67; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Eastern Basin; Eastern Mediterranean Sea; E of Crete; GeoB; GeoB5846-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; GeoTü; GeoTü SL71; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Joides Resolution; KL_Mg; Leg160; M40/4; M40/4_87-6SL; M40/4_KL51; M40/4_MUC65; M40/4_MUC66; M40/4_MUC67; M40/4_MUC68; M40/4_MUC69; M40/4_MUC70; M40/4_MUC71; M40/4_MUC72; M40/4_MUC75; M40/4_MUC76-3; M40/4_MUC77A; M40/4_SL67; M40/4_SL71; M40/4_SL87; M44_1 GeoTü KL-83; M44/3; M44/3_KL83; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Paleoceanography at Tübingen University; Piston corer Meischner large; SESAME; SL; Southern European Seas: Assessing and Modelling Ecosystem Changes
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 19 datasets
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Diekmann, Bernhard; Kuhn, Gerhard (2002): Sedimentary record of the mid-Pleistocene climate transition in the southeastern South Atlantic (ODP Site 1090). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 182(3-4), 241-258, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(01)00498-9
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: One important goal of Leg 177 of the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) was to explore the nature of the mid-Pleistocene climate transition (MPT) on the southern hemisphere. A suitable MPT record was encountered at Site 1090 in the southeastern South Atlantic, where a 44-m-thick sequence of Quaternary diatom-bearing foraminiferal muds and oozes was recovered on the Agulhas Ridge. Environmental responses to the MPT comprised changes in terrestrial climate, biological productivity, and regional ocean circulation, as inferred from compositional sediment data and clay mineralogy. A shift towards more arid conditions occurred between 900 and 800 ka in southern Africa. Changes in palaeoceanography already started earlier. Since 1150 ka, northward displacements of the Polar Front appeared during glacial periods and shifted the area of dominant diatom deposition towards Site 1090. Likewise, glacial-interglacial contrasts in regional conveyor circulation strengthened after 1200 ka and became most severe after 650 ka. However, while changes in regional conveyor circulation likely responded in tune with global ice-volume changes and show the onset of 100-kyr cycles after 1200 ka, an unusual 130-kyr pattern characterises the pattern of frontal movements between 1200 ka and 650 ka, probably in response to imperfect adaptation of regional climate to the global 100-kyr climate cycles.
    Keywords: 177-1090B; 177-1090D; 177-1090E; Agulhas Ridge; ANT-XI/2; AWI_Paleo; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Joides Resolution; KL; Leg177; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS2489-2; PS28; PS28/256; South Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kuhn, Gerhard; Diekmann, Bernhard (2002): Late Quaternary variability of ocean circulation in the southeastern South Atlantic inferred from the terrigenous sediment record of a drift deposit in the southern Cape Basin (ODP Site 1089). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 182(3-4), 287-303, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(01)00500-4
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: During Leg 177 of the Ocean Drilling Program, an expanded sequence of Pliocene to Holocene calcareous muds was recovered at Site 1089 on a drift deposit in the southern Cape Basin (SE South Atlantic). The reconstruction of detrital sources and modes of sediment transport gives insight into the operational modes of regional current systems in response to climate variability over the last 590kyr, as inferred from sedimentological and mineralogical parameters of the terrigenous sediment fraction. Terrigenous sediments mainly originate from African sources with minor contributions from distant southern sources (South America and Antarctica) and are supplied by circumpolar water masses, North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW), and surface currents of the Agulhas Current. Changes in clay mineralogy as tracers of deep and shallow ocean circulation, best displayed by variations in quartz/feldspar ratios and kaolinite/chlorite ratios of clay, reflect both the northward displacement of NADW injection into the Antarctic Circumpolar Current and a weakening of Agulhas Current leakage from the Indian Ocean around South Africa to the South Atlantic during glacial stages, sub-stages, and stadials. Modifications of these regional current patterns are consistent with perturbations in global conveyor circulation and climate variability on Milankovitch and sub-Milankovitch time scales. Elevated mass-accumulation rates of terrigenous matter generally document high particle fluxes and focusing effects by bottom-current action throughout the late Quaternary. Current sorting and coarsening of terrigenous mud, independently of its source signals, prevails during interglacial periods and is linked to a stronger flow of Antarctic Bottom Water and the invigoration of deep contour currents in response to long-term changes (100-kyr cyclicity) in Antarctic ice-sheet dynamics, high-amplitude fluctuations in global sea level, and increased bottomwater formation.
    Keywords: 177-1089A; 177-1089B; 177-1089C; 177-1089D; ANT-XIV/3; AWI_Paleo; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Joides Resolution; KL; Leg177; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS2821-1; PS43; PS43/057; South Atlantic Ocean; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Fütterer, Dieter K; Grobe, Hannes; Frederichs, Thomas (2002): No evidence for a Pleistocene collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet from continental margin sediments recovered in the Amundsen Sea. Geo-Marine Letters, 22(2), 51-59, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00367-002-0097-7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Records of glaciomarine deposition recovered from the West Antarctic continental margin in the Amundsen Sea allow the reconstruction of the behaviour of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) in response to the natural climatic changes of the last 1.8 million years. Contents of gravel-sized and lithogenic components represent the input and redeposition of glaciogenic debris, whereas variations in the proportions of the calcareous sediment fraction reflect palaeoproductivity changes. All proxies, which are regarded as sensitive to a WAIS collapse, changed markedly during the global climatic cycles, but do not confirm a complete disintegration of the WAIS during the Pleistocene.
    Keywords: Adelaide Island; Amundsen Sea; Antarctic Peninsula; ANT-VI/2; ANT-XI/3; Anvers Island; Argentine Islands; AWI_Paleo; Bellingshausen Sea; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Marguerite Bay; MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS12; PS12/185; PS12/186; PS12/193; PS12/194; PS12/195; PS12/196; PS12/199; PS12/200; PS1554-1; PS1555-1; PS1557-1; PS1558-1; PS1559-1; PS1560-1; PS1563-1; PS1564-1; PS2522-1; PS2524-1; PS2525-1; PS2526-1; PS2527-1; PS2528-1; PS2529-1; PS2531-1; PS2532-2; PS2533-1; PS2534-2; PS2537-1; PS2538-1; PS2539-2; PS2540-1; PS2541-2; PS2542-1; PS2543-3; PS2544-1; PS2545-1; PS2546-1; PS2547-2; PS2547-3; PS2548-2; PS2550-2; PS2551-1; PS2553-2; PS2556-1; PS29; PS29/010; PS29/012; PS29/016; PS29/018; PS29/021; PS29/022; PS29/024; PS29/033; PS29/039; PS29/040; PS29/042; PS29/045; PS29/046; PS29/047; PS29/048; PS29/049; PS29/050; PS29/051; PS29/054; PS29/057; PS29/062; PS29/063; PS29/064; PS29/066; PS29/067; PS29/070; PS29/075; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Gerhardt, Sabine; Groth, H; Rühlemann, Carsten; Henrich, Rüdiger (2000): Aragonite preservation in late Quaternary sediment cores on the Brazilian Continental Slope: implications for intermediate water circulation. International Journal of Earth Sciences, 88(4), 607-618, https://doi.org/10.1007/s005310050291
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: We present late Quaternary records of aragonite preservation determined for sediment cores recovered on the Brazilian Continental Slope (1790-2585 m water depth) where North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) dominates at present. We have used various indirect dissolution proxies (carbonate content, aragonite/calcite contents, and sand percentages) as well as gastropodal abundances and fragmentation of Limacina inflata to determine the state of aragonite preservation. In addition, microscopic investigations of the dissolution susceptibility of three Limacina species yielded the Limacina Dissolution Index which correlates well with most of the other proxies. Excellent preservation of aragonite was found in the Holocene section, whereas aragonite dissolution gradually increases downcore. This general pattern is attributed to an overall increase in aragonite corrosiveness of pore waters. Overprinted on this early diagenetic trend are high-frequency fluctuations of aragonite preservation, which may be related to climatically induced variations of intermediate water masses.
    Keywords: Brazil Basin; GeoB2204-1; GeoB2204-2; GeoB2205-4; GeoB2207-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M23/3; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; SFB261; SL; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Meier, K J Sebastian; Willems, Helmut (2003): Calcareous dinoflagellate cysts in surface sediments from the Mediterranean Sea: distribution patterns and influence of main environmental gradients. Marine Micropaleontology, 48(3), 321-354, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(03)00028-8
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The distribution of calcareous dinoflagellate cysts in surface sediments from the Mediterranean Sea was quantitatively analysed. The samples contain 11 cyst species and the vegetative coccoid Thoracosphaera heimii. Cyst abundance increases towards the deeper parts of the basins and is generally higher in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Three major distribution characteristics exist: (1) different assemblages in oceanic and neritic regions, (2) little agreement with the associations of areas studied so far like the Atlantic Ocean, and (3) a unique oceanic assemblage in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. A gradual change in cyst assemblages from the western to the eastern Mediterranean Sea was observed and statistically compared with the main environmental gradients in the upper water column. Temperature, nitrate concentration and possibly salinity appear to be the most important factors controlling cyst production. Three groups containing cysts with similar environmental preferences can be distinguished: (1) an eastern Mediterranean group related to relatively high temperature and salinity but low nitrate concentration, (2) a group of more or less consistently abundant cosmopolitan species tolerating or even preferring relatively low temperature and salinity but high nitrate concentration, and (3) a group containing species that are possibly adapted to neritic environments and have probably been transported from coastal areas into the studied regions. In contrast to other calcareous plankton, calcareous dinoflagellate cysts correlate strongly with the main environmental gradients in the Mediterranean Sea, bearing a high potential for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions.
    Keywords: 560; 561; 562; 563; 564; 565; 566; 569; 570; 572; 574; 575; 576; 577; 65; 66; 67; 68; 69; 70; 71; 72; 73; 74; 75; 76; 77; 78; 79; 83; 85; 86; 87; 88; 89; 90; Balearic Islands, western Mediterranean Sea; Barcelona Coast; Cyprus; Eastern Mediterranean Sea; Eratosthenes Seamount; GeoB5845-1; GeoB5847-1; GeoTü; Golf of Lion; Greece; Haifa; Ionian Sea; Izmit Bay; Lybia; M40/4; M40/4_MC523; M40/4_MC524; M40/4_MC525; M40/4_MC526; M40/4_MC527; M40/4_MC528; M40/4_MC529; M40/4_MC530; M40/4_MC531; M40/4_MC532; M40/4_MC533; M40/4_MC534; M40/4_MC535; M40/4_MC536; M40/4_MC537; M40/4_MC538; M40/4_MC540A; M40/4_MC540C; M40/4_MC540D; M40/4_MC540E; M40/4_MC540F; M40/4_MC540G; M40/4_MC90; M44/3; M51/3; M51/3_560-1; M51/3_561-4; M51/3_562-5; M51/3_563-5; M51/3_564-2; M51/3_565-1; M51/3_566-3; M51/3_569-3; M51/3_570-2; M51/3_572-2; M51/3_574-2; M51/3_575-6; M51/3_576-3; M51/3_577-1; Malta; Mediterranean Sea, east of Crete; Mediterranean Sea, Ionian Sea; Mediterranean Sea, north of Crete; Mediterranean Sea, southern Pelepones; Mediterranean Sea, southest of Crete; Mediterranean Sea, south of Crete; Mediterranean Sea, Urania Basin; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; off NE Spain; Paleoceanography at Tübingen University; SESAME; Southern European Seas: Assessing and Modelling Ecosystem Changes; Strait of Sicili; Taranto Mare Piccolo; Thermaikos Gulf; Turkey; Tyrrhenian Sea; Zyprus
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 10
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schmidt, Daniela N; Renaud, Sabrina; Bollmann, Jörg; Schiebel, Ralf; Thierstein, Hans R (2004): Size distribution of Holocene planktic foraminifer assemblages: biogeography, ecology and adaptation. Marine Micropaleontology, 50(3-4), 319-338, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(03)00098-7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The size of any organism is influenced by the surrounding ecological conditions. In this study, we investigate the effects of such factors on the size spectra of planktic foraminiferal assemblages from Holocene surface sediments. We analyzed assemblages from 69 Holocene samples, which cover the major physical and chemical gradients of the oceans. On a global scale, the range of sizes in assemblages triples from the poles to the tropics. This general temperature-related size increase is interrupted by smaller sizes at temperatures characteristic of the polar and subtropical fronts, at 2°C and 17°C, respectively, as well as in upwelling areas. On a regional scale, surface water stratification, seasonality and primary productivity are highly correlated with the size patterns. Such environmentally controlled size changes are not only characteristic for entire assemblage, but also for the dominant single species.
    Keywords: 06MT41_3; 269; 661; Agulhas Basin; Agulhas Ridge; Amundsen Basin; Angola Basin; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-VIII/6; ANT-XI/2; ANT-XII/4; Arabian Sea; ARK-VI/2; ARK-VII/1; ARK-VIII/3; Atlantic Ridge; BC; Box corer; Brazil Basin; Cape Basin; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; ELT20; ELT20.018-PC; ELT21; ELT21.011-PC; ELT21.014-PC; ELT21.015-PC; ELT33; ELT33.022-PC; ELT48; ELT48.027-PC; ELT48.031-PC; ELT48.036-PC; Eltanin; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB1048-3; GeoB1104-5; GeoB1204-1; GeoB1212-2; GeoB1709-2; GeoB1710-1; GeoB3915-1; GeoB5142-2; Giant box corer; GIK21736-1 PS15/017; GIK21893-1 PS17/068; GIK21901-2 PS17/076; GIK21912-4 PS17/087; GKG; Greenland Sea; Greenland Slope; INMD; INMD-051BX; INMD-065BX; INMD-104BX; INMD-109BX; INMD-110BX; INMD-115BX; INMD-127BX; KAL; Kasten corer; M12/1; M20/2; M33/1; M33/1_MC398; M34/4; M35/1; M35003-3; M35006-7; M36/4; M36/4_MC440; M41/3; M6/6; M9/4; Melville; Meteor (1986); Meteor Rise; MSN; MUC; MultiCorer; Multiple opening/closing net; Namibia continental slope; North Atlantic; Northeast Brasilian Margin; PC; Piston corer; Polarstern; PS15; PS16; PS16/278; PS16/345; PS16/520; PS16/554; PS17; PS1736-1; PS1754-2; PS1778-1; PS1815-2; PS1829-5; PS1893-1; PS19/194; PS19/198; PS1901-2; PS1912-4; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2190-3; PS2192-1; PS2487-2; PS2489-4; PS2498-2; PS2676-1; PS2690-1; PS2695-1; PS2703-2; PS28; PS28/236; PS28/256; PS28/304; PS35/056; PS35/151; PS35/158; PS35/195; PS35 06AQANTXII_4; RC08; RC08-91; RC08-94; RC09; RC09-126; RC09-150; RC11; RC11-10; RC11-118; RC1112; RC11-120; RC11-145; RC11-147; RC12; RC12-339; RC13; RC13-38; RC17; RC17-125; RC17-69; Robert Conrad; South Atlantic; Southeast Pacific; Southern East Pacific Rise; V07; V07-67; V10; V10-89; V12; V12-66; V16; V16-209; V20; V20-175; V20-228; V22; V22-211; V22-26; V23; V23-101; V26; V26-46; V27; V27-215; V28; V28-195; Vema; Walvis Ridge; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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