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  • 11
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Seiter, Katherina; Hensen, Christian; Zabel, Matthias (2005): Benthic carbon mineralization on a global scale. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 19, GB1010, https://doi.org/10.1029/2004GB002225
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: In this study we present a global distribution pattern and budget of the minimum flux of particulate organic carbon to the sea floor (J POC alpha). The estimations are based on regionally specific correlations between the diffusive oxygen flux across the sediment-water interface, the total organic carbon content in surface sediments, and the oxygen concentration in bottom waters. For this, we modified the principal equation of Cai and Reimers [1995] as a basic monod reaction rate, applied within 11 regions where in situ measurements of diffusive oxygen uptake exist. By application of the resulting transfer functions to other regions with similar sedimentary conditions and areal interpolation, we calculated a minimum global budget of particulate organic carbon that actually reaches the sea floor of ~0.5 GtC yr**-1 (〉1000 m water depth (wd)), whereas approximately 0.002-0.12 GtC yr**-1 is buried in the sediments (0.01-0.4% of surface primary production). Despite the fact that our global budget is in good agreement with previous studies, we found conspicuous differences among the distribution patterns of primary production, calculations based on particle trap collections of the POC flux, and J POC alpha of this study. These deviations, especially located at the southeastern and southwestern Atlantic Ocean, the Greenland and Norwegian Sea and the entire equatorial Pacific Ocean, strongly indicate a considerable influence of lateral particle transport on the vertical link between surface waters and underlying sediments. This observation is supported by sediment trap data. Furthermore, local differences in the availability and quality of the organic matter as well as different transport mechanisms through the water column are discussed.
    Keywords: 0021PG; 0026PG; 0029PG; 0032PG; 0036PG; 0038PG; 0044PG; 0050PG; 0055PG; 0058PG; 0066PG; 0071PG; 0075PG; 0091PG; 104-642B; 104-643A; 104-644A; 105-646A; 108-663A; 10BC35-2; 10GC1; 11.5BC46-2; 112-688; 117-723; 11B; 11BC39; 11TW1; 12BC47-2; 13B; 151-908A; 151-909A; 159-959C; 15B; 167-1011; 167-1020; 167-1021; 175-1077B; 1BC1-2; 21B; 22B; 26B; 28B; 2B; 2BC5-1; 3BC8-1; 4B; 4BC14-2; 5B; 6B; 6BC20-2; 75-532_Site; 7BC26-1; 8B; 8BC27-3; A150/180; A180-74; A210709-0131PG; A4/3_287; A4/3_296; ADS; AG-1994; AG94/08; AG94/60; AG94/64; Agulhas Basin; Akademik Golitsyn; also published as VM28-122; Amazon Fan; Amerasian Basin; Angola Basin; Antarctic Ocean; ANT-IV/1c; ANT-IX/4; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-X/5; ANT-XI/2; APSARA2; APSARA4; Arabian Sea; Arctic Ocean; ARK-I/3; ARK-II/5; ARK-III/3; ARK-IV/3; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VI/2; ARK-VII/1; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; ARK-XI/1; Atlantic Ocean; Barents Sea; BC; BC713; BCR; Bear Island Fan; Benguela Current, South Atlantic Ocean; BIOTRANS; BNTH-3-CBC; BNTH-3-SBC; Box corer; Box corer (Reineck); Brazil Basin; BT4; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Cap_Verde_AP; Cape Basin; Cardno Seamount; CD92A; CD92A_N1500; CD92A_N2000; CD92A_R1000; CD92A_S700; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CEPAG; CH182-36; CH73-013; CH75-03; CH75-04; CH7X; Charles Darwin; COMPCORE; Composite Core; CONDOR-Ia; Congo Fan; DOS1; DOS2; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; East Atlantic; Eastern Equatorial Pacific; eastern Romanche Fracture Zone; EN06601; EN066-21PG; EN066-24PG; EN066-26PG; EN066-29PG; EN066-32PG; EN066-34PG; EN066-36PG; EN066-38PG; EN066-39GGC; EN066-44PG; EN066-45PG; EN066-47PG; EN066-51PG; Endeavor; Equatorial Atlantic; ERDC; ERDC-077BX; ERDC-079BX; ERDC-083BX; ERDC-092BX; ERDC-108BX; ERDC-112BX; ERDC-120BX; ERDC-123BX; ERDC-125BX; ERDC-128BX; ERDC-129BX; ERDC-131BX; ERDC-135BX; ERDC-136BX; ERDC-139BX; ERDC-141BX; EW9209-1JPC; EW9504-17PC; FA-527-3; FGGE-Equator 79 - First GARP Global Experiment; FL-124; Fram Strait; G-255; GC; GeoB1008-3; GeoB1028-5; GeoB1113-4; GeoB1117-2; GeoB1118-3; GeoB1209-2; GeoB1401-4; GeoB1408-2; GeoB1515-1; GeoB1523-1; GeoB1706-2; GeoB1707-1; GeoB1711; GeoB1711-4; GeoB1719-7; GeoB1720-2; GeoB1721-7; GeoB1722-1; GeoB2202-4; GeoB2810-2; GeoB2811-1; GeoB2812-3; GeoB3302-1; GeoB3606-1; GeoB3718-10; GeoB3720-3; GeoB3722-2; GEOTROPEX 83, NOAMP I; Giant box corer; GIK10127-2; GIK10132-1; GIK10140-1; GIK10141-1; GIK10145-1; GIK10147-1; GIK10175-1; GIK12310-3; GIK12327-4; GIK12328-4; GIK12329-4; GIK12336-1; GIK12337-4; GIK12344-3; GIK12345-4; GIK12347-1; GIK12392-1; GIK13519-1; GIK13521-1; GIK15612-2; GIK16067; GIK16365-1; GIK16408-2; GIK16415-1; GIK16453-2; GIK16455-1; GIK16457-1; GIK16458-2; GIK16459-1; GIK16771-2; GIK16772-1; GIK16773-1; GIK16856-2; GIK16867-1; GIK17728-1; GIK21294-4 PS07/584; GIK21295-4 PS07/586; GIK21295-5 PS07/586; GIK21297-4 PS07/588; GIK21311-4 PS07/605; GIK21320-2 PS07/620; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK21745-5 PS15/054-5; GIK21906-1 PS17/081; GIK21906-2 PS17/081; GIK21911-1 PS17/086; GIK23062-1; GIK23065-2; GIK23068-3; GIK23071-2; GIK23199-1 PS03/199; GIK23243-1 PS05/431; GIK23244-2 PS05/449; GIK23245-1 PS05/450; GIK23256-1; GIK23259-2; GIK23341-1; GIK23342-3; GIK23352-2; GIK23400-3; GIK23411-5; GIK23414-6; GIK23414-7; GIK23414-9; GIK23424-3; GKG; Glomar Challenger; Goban_Spur; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Gulf of Guinea; H-238; HU91-045-090; Iceland Sea; IMAGES I; INMD; INMD-097BX; INMD-101BX; INMD-104BX; INMD-109BX; INMD-110BX; INMD-111BX; INMD-113BX; INMD-115BX; Island_Becken; J-208; Jean Charcot; Joides Resolution; K-218; K51_D; K51_E; K51_F; K51_G; K51_H; K51_I; K51_J; K51_K; K51_L; K51_M; K708-007; K90_I(2); KAL; KAL15; Kasten corer; Kasten corer 15 cm; KL; KN11002; KN11002-0043; Knorr; KNR110-50; KNR110-55; KNR110-58; KNR110-66; KNR110-71; KNR110-75; KNR110-91; KOL; Labrador Sea; Laptev Sea; Laptev Sea, Taymyr Island; Leg104; Leg105; Leg108; Leg112; Leg117; Leg151; Leg159; Leg167; Leg175; Leg75; Le Suroît; LGC02; LGC05; Lofoten; M12/1; M12392-1; M13/2; M13/2_543; M13/2_547; M13/2_562; M13/2_576; M13/2_586; M13/2_593; M13/2_596; M13/2_598; M16/1; M16/2; M17/1; M17/2; M17/2_533; M17/2_538; M17/2_541; M17/2_548; M17/2_551; M17/2_554; M2/1; M2/1_66; M2/1_91; M2/2; M2/2_103; M2/2_108; M2/2_111; M2/2_114; M2/2_117; M20/2; M21/4; M23/3; M-231; M23414; M25; M26/2; M26/2_D2; M26/2_E2; M26/2_L1; M29/2; M34/1; M34/2; M39; M51; M57; M6/5; M6/6; M65; M7/2; M7/3; M7/3_400; M7/3_402; M7/3_413; M7/3_415; M7/3_431; M7/3_434; M7/3_437; M7/3_439; M7/3_444; M7/3_448; M7/3_449; M7/3_450; M7/3_452; M7/3_460; M7/5; M7/5_549; M7/5_552; M7/5_554; M7/5_556; M7/5_564; M7/5_568; M7/5_574; M7/5_576; M7/5_579; M9/4; MANOP; Marion Dufresne (1972); Marion Dufresne (1995); MARUM; MD101; MD38; MD84-551; MD88-770; MD952011; MD95-2011; MD952012; MD95-2012; MD952039; MD95-2039; Melville; Meteor (1964); Meteor (1986); Meteor Rise; MIC; MiniCorer; MM; MUC; MULT; MultiCorer; Multiple investigations; Namibia continental slope; New Horizon; NIOP-D2; NIOP-D2_451; NIOP-D2_452; NIOP-D2_453; NIOP-D2_454; NIOP-D2_455; NIOP-D2_463; NIOP-D2_464; NIOP-D2_466; NIOZ78; NIOZ80; NN; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; Northern Cape Basin; North Greenland Sea; North Pacific/Gulf of California/SLOPE; North Pacific Ocean; Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Norwegian Sea; off Gabun; off Nigeria; PACFLUX-I_PFSC-1; Pacific; PC; Piston corer; Piston corer (BGR type); Piston corer (Kiel type); PLDS-066BX; PLDS-068BX; PLDS-070BX; PLDS-072BX; PLDS-074BX; PLDS-077BX; PLDS-079BX; PLDS-081BX; PLDS-083BX; PLDS-085BX; PLDS-089BX; PLDS-090BX; PLDS-092BX; PLDS-107BX; PLDS-3; Pleiades; PLTO; PLTO-003HBC; PLTO-003MBC; PO142A; Polarstern; Porcupine_AP; Porto Seamount; POS137; POS137_186; POS142; POS142_1184; Poseidon; PS03; PS05; PS07; PS08; PS11; PS1113-1; PS1243-1; PS1244-2; PS1245-1; PS1294-4; PS1295-4; PS1295-5; PS1297-4; PS1311-4; PS1320-2; PS15; PS1533-3; PS16; PS16/278; PS16/284; PS16/311; PS17; PS1745-5; PS1754-1; PS1754-2; PS1756-6; PS1768-1; PS1768-8; PS18; PS18/238; PS19/091; PS19/094; PS19/100; PS19/111; PS19/112; PS19/113; PS19/114; PS19/117; PS19/150; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19/252; PS1906-1; PS1906-2; PS1911-1; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS2082-1; PS2125-1; PS2127-1; PS2129-2; PS2137-1; PS2138-1; PS2139-1; PS2140-1; PS2143-1; PS2157-3; PS22/814; PS22/817; PS22/818; PS22/826; PS22 06AQANTX_5; PS2212-6; PS2213-4; PS2214-1; PS2215-1; PS2316-4; PS2319-1; PS2320-3; PS2328-4; PS2446-2; PS2446-4; PS2447-3; PS2448-3; PS2453-2; PS2455-2; PS2456-1; PS2458-2; PS2459-1; PS2460-2; PS2462-2; PS2480-2; PS2515-3; PS27; PS27/020; PS27/024; PS27/025; PS27/031; PS27/033; PS27/034; PS27/038; PS27/039; PS27/040; PS27/043; PS27/067; PS2723-4; PS2731-6; PS2732-5; PS2733-5; PS2734-4; PS2735-5; PS2736-5; PS2737-4; PS2747-7; PS2748-2; PS2749-3; PS2750-6; PS2752-8; PS2753-1; PS2755-5; PS2756-6; PS2757-6; PS2758-2; PS2759-7; PS2760-5; PS2761-8; PS2762-4; PS2763-8; PS2764-7; PS2765-6; PS2767-6; PS2768-3; PS2770-6; PS2771-5; PS28; PS28/378; PS36; PS36/007; PS36/018; PS36/019; PS36/020; PS36/021; PS36/022; PS36/023; PS36/024; PS36/040a; PS36/042; PS36/044; PS36/045; PS36/047; PS36/048a; PS36/050; PS36/051; PS36/052; PS36/053; PS36/055; PS36/056; PS36/057; PS36/059; PS36/060; PS36/062; PS36/064; PS36/066; PS36/067; PS36/071; PS36/072; RC08; RC08-18; RC11; RC1112; RC11-210; RC13; RC13-184; RC13-189; RC13-228; RC13-229; RC15; RC15-93; RC16; RC16-66; RC17; RC17-177; RC24; RC24-1; RC24-12; RC24-27; RC24-7; Reimers_G-255_BC; Reimers_H-238_BC; Reimers_J-208_BC; Reimers_K-218_BC; Reimers_M-231_BC; Robert Conrad; Sampling/drilling ice; SC; Scotia Sea; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; Shona Ridge; Sierra Leone Basin/Guinea Basin; SL; Slope9102079; SO101; SO101/3_2-1; Soil combustion; Sonne; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; South-East Pacific; South Indian Ocean; South Pacific; South Pacific Ocean; St. Anna Trough, Kara Sea; SU81-14; SU81-18; Svalbard; T-3; T78-42; T78-46; T80-11; TC; TC05; TGT013-#058; TGT013-#063; TGT013-#066; TGT013-#088; TGT013-#093; TGT013-#104; TGT013-#113;
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 12
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Nam, Seung-Il (1997): Late Quaternary glacial history and paleoceanographic reconstructions along the East Greenland continental margin: Evidence from high-resolution records of stable isotopes and ice-rafted debris (Spätquartäre Vereisungsgeschichte und paläozeanographische Rekonstruktionen am ostgrönlandischen Kontinentalrand). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 241, 257 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0241_1997
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: High-resolution stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses and detailed sedimentological and geochemical investigations were performed in order to i) reconstruct the paleoclimate and paleoceanography of the Greenland Sea associated with late Quaternary glacial-interglacial cycles, and ii) to link the terrestrial and deep-sea climatic records. The reconstruction of the paleoenvironmental history of the East Greenland margin and the correlation between the terrestrial and deep sea records are major objectives of the ESF-PONAM-Programme (European Science Foundation - Polar North Atlantic Margins). For this study 16 gravity and 2 box cores were recovered along the East Greenland continental margin between 69°N and 72°N on three W-E transects running from the shelf to the deep sea. The glaciomarine sediments recovered from the heavily ice-covered East Greenland continental margin reflect changes associated with the glacial/interglacial climatic cycles of the last 240 ka. The glaciomarine sediments are characterised by a dominance of terrestrially derived components and a lower content of biogenic components. Glaciomarine sedimentation processes, terrigenous sediment input, and biogenic productivity in the study area are strongly influenced by fluctuations in the extent of the Greenland Ice Sheet, extent of the sea-ice cover, rate of iceberg drifting, meltwater input, and changes in the East Greenland Current (EGC). The relatively low carbonate content (〈10 %) and the dominant occurrence of N. pachyderma sin. (〉95 %) throughout the sediment sequences indicate a low biological productivity in the surface water resulting from the extensive sea-ice cover and the strong influence of cold and low-saline polar waters of the EGC. An increase in the surface-water productivity, on the other hand, occurred during certain periods within interglacial and glacial stages. This indicates that the sea ice along the Western margin of the Greenland Sea was at least seasonally reduced during these time intetvals. Based on the accumulation rates of the coarse terrigenous matter (〉63 µm) and amounts of IRD, the advance and retreat of East Greenland glaciers over the past 200 ka can be correlated with those postulated from the terrestrial records. At least five repeated advances and retreats of glaciers beyond the coastline are proposed between the late Early to Middle Weichselian (65-61, 59-51, 48-42, 35-31, and 28-25 ka). Maximum fluxes of IRD recorded along the continental margin between 21 and 16 ka, reflect the maximum extent of East Greenland glaciers probably reaching the shelf break at that time. The stable oxygen isotope records measured on the planktonic foraminifer N. pachyderma sin. reveal some excursions from the global climate record due to a local andlor regional overprint through meltwater supply andlor cold water masses of the EGC. Distinct meltwater events are documented during Terminations II and l and at the beginning of Stage 3 resulting from the collapse of the Greenland Ice Sheet. The early period of all glacial stages (i.e. 716, 514, and 312) was subjected to an abrupt and rapid build-up of a sea-ice cover. Hence, a distinct decrease in the carbonate content, the low number of planktonic foraminifers, and light d13C values reflect the strong reduction in the C02 exchange between the atmosphere and ocean, and the surface-water productivity, resulting from a meltwater cap andlor an extensive sea-ice cover. The onset of Termination l is characterised by a distinct shift towards light d180 values, a dramatic decrease in the IRD-flux, and a marked increase in organic matter, indicating the rapid retreat of East Greenland glaciers and a reduced sea-ice cover. According to distinct shifts toward light d180 and heavy d13C values of N. pachyderma sin. and O. umbonatus, the present-day circulation Patterns of surface- and deep-water masses were probably established between 7.4 and 6.1 ka. This is very similar to the timing estimated from studies On microfossil assemblages of the Greenland Sea. In particular, the distinct IRD peaks correlate with the fluctuations of the Greenland Ice Sheet during the last two glacial-interglacial cycles. Most of the major IRD peaks correspond to periods of cooling of air temperatures over Greenland. During the interval between 225 and 60 ka, the IRD peaks are in phase (at the 23-kyr orbital processional cycle) with maximum Summer Insolation at 70°N This suggests that the Greenland Ice Sheet may have experienced a predominantly 23-kyr cycle of growth and decay, and therefore, collapsed and discharged large volumes of icebergs to the Greenland Sea when Summer insolation reached its maxima. During the last glacial period, there is a strong correlation between major pulses in the supply of IRD, and the Bond Cycles and the Heinrich Events recorded in the GRIP ice core and North Atlantic deep-sea sediments. Furthermore, the higher frequency of IRD events on millennial scales matches the cooling phase of the abrupt Dansgaard-Oeschger Cycles recorded in the GRIP ice core. Consequently, the apparent evidence of millennial scale IRD events in the North Atlantic and the GIN Sea suggests coherent fluctuations of the large northern hemisphere ice sheets (i.e. the Fennoscandian/Barents Sea and Laurentide/Greenland ice sheets) during the last glacial period.
    Keywords: ARK-V/3b; ARK-VII/3b; AWI_Paleo; Giant box corer; GIK21723-1 PS13/187; GIK21724-2 PS13/191; GIK21725-2 PS13/192; GIK21726-1 PS13/193; GIK21726-2 PS13/193; GIK21730-1 PS13/224; GIK21730-2 PS13/224; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Greenland Shelf; Greenland Slope; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS13 GRÖKORT; PS17; PS17/247; PS17/248; PS17/249; PS17/250; PS17/251; PS17/285; PS17/286; PS17/287; PS17/288; PS17/289; PS17/290; PS1723-1; PS1724-2; PS1725-2; PS1726-1; PS1726-2; PS1730-1; PS1730-2; PS1923-2; PS1924-1; PS1925-2; PS1926-1; PS1927-2; PS1946-2; PS1947-1; PS1948-2; PS1949-1; PS1950-2; PS1951-1; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Scoresby Sund; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 63 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 13
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Jacot des Combes, Hélène; Abelmann, Andrea (2009): From species abundance to opal input: Simple geometric models of radiolarian skeletons from the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 56(5), 757-771, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2008.12.019
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Radiolarian-based paleoceanographic reconstructions generally use the abundance of selected radiolarian species. However, the recent focus on the opal flux and the development of isotope measurements in biogenic opal and the organic matter embedded in it demands a better knowledge of the origin of the opal. We present here an estimation of the opal content of the skeleton of 63 radiolarian species from two sites in the Southern Ocean. The skeletons are modelled as associations of simple geometrical shapes, and the volume thus obtained is combined with opal density to obtain the amount of opal. These data are, thus, used to determine the most important opal carriers in the radiolarian assemblage in both cores.
    Keywords: ANT-VIII/3; ANT-XI/2; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; PS16; PS16/311; PS1768-8; PS2498-1; PS28; PS28/304; Shona Ridge; SL; South Atlantic; SPP1158
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 14
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Eynaud, Frédérique; de Abreu, Lucia; Voelker, Antje H L; Schönfeld, Joachim; Salgueiro, Emilia; Turon, Jean-Louis; Penaud, Aurélie; Toucanne, Samuel; Naughton, Filipa; Sanchez Goñi, Maria Fernanda; Malaizé, Bruno; Cacho, Isabel (2009): Position of the Polar Front along the western Iberian margin during key cold episodes of the last 45 ka. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 10(7), Q07U05, https://doi.org/10.1029/2009GC002398
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: This paper documents the migration of the Polar Front (PF) over the Iberian margin during some of the cold climatic extremes of the last 45 ka. It is based on a compilation of robust and coherent paleohydrological proxies obtained from eleven cores distributed between 36 and 42°N. Planktonic delta18O (Globigerina bulloides), ice-rafted detritus concentrations, and the relative abundance of the polar foraminifera Neogloboquadrina pachyderma sinistral were used to track the PF position. These three data sets, compared from core to core, show a consistent evolution of the sea surface paleohydrology along the Iberian margin over the last 45 ka. We focused on five time slices representative of cold periods under distinct paleoenvironmental forcings: the 8.2 ka event and the Younger Dryas (two recent cold events occurring within high values of summer insolation), Heinrich events 1 and 4 (reflecting major episodes of massive iceberg discharges into the North Atlantic), and the Last Glacial Maximum (typifying the highest ice volume accumulated in the Northern Hemisphere). For each event, we generated schematic maps mirroring past sea surface hydrological conditions. The maps revealed that the Polar Front presence along the Iberian margin was restricted to Heinrich events. The sea surface conditions during the Last Glacial Maximum were close to those at present day, except for the northern sites which briefly experienced subarctic conditions.
    Keywords: 94a; 95; Atlantic Ocean; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; CEPAG; GEOSCIENCES, MARMARCORE; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Gulf of Cádiz, Atlantic Ocean; IMAGES; IMAGES I; IMAGES V; International Marine Global Change Study; Le Suroît; M39/1; M39/1_08-3; M39008-3; Marge Ibérique; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD01-2444; MD03-2697; MD101; MD114; MD123; MD134; MD952039; MD95-2039; MD952040; MD95-2040; MD952041; MD95-2041; MD952042; MD95-2042; MD99-2331; MD99-2339; MD99-2341; Meteor (1986); PC; PICABIA; Piston corer; Porto Seamount; SL; SU81-18; Vigo
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 15
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Holz, Christine; Stuut, Jan-Berend W; Henrich, Rüdiger; Meggers, Helge (2007): Variability in terrigenous sedimentation processes off northwest Africa and its relation to climatic changes: inferrence from grain-size distributions of a Holocene marine sediment record. Sedimentary Geology, 202(3), 499-508, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2007.03.015
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Variations in deposition of terrigenous fine sediments and their grain-size distributions from a high-resolution marine sediment record offshore northwest Africa (30°51.0'N; 10°16.1'W) document climate changes on the African continent during the Holocene. End-member grain-size distributions of the terrigenous silt fraction, which are related to fluvial and aeolian dust transport, indicate millennial-scale variability in the dominant transport processes at the investigation site off northwest Africa as well as recurring periods of dry conditions in northwest Africa during the Holocene. The terrigenous record from the subtropical North Atlantic reflects generally humid conditions before the Younger Dryas, during the early to mid-Holocene, as well as after 1.3 kyr BP. By contrast, continental runoff was reduced and arid conditions were prevalent at the beginning of the Younger Dryas and during the mid- and late Holocene. A comparison with high- and low-latitude Holocene climate records reveals a strong link between northwest African climate and Northern Hemisphere atmospheric circulation throughout the Holocene. Due to its proximal position, close to an ephemeral river system draining the Atlas Mountains as well as the adjacent Saharan desert, this detailed marine sediment record, which has a temporal resolution between 15 and 120 years, is ideally suited to enhance our understanding of ocean-continent-atmosphere interactions in African climates and the hydrological cycle of northern Africa after the last deglaciation.
    Keywords: GeoB; GeoB6007-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M45/5a; Meteor (1986); SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 16
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Derkachev, A N; Nikolaeva, N A; Mozherovsky, A V; Grigorieva, T N; Ivanova, E D; Pletnev, S P; Barinov, N N; Chubarov, Valerii M (2007): Mineralogical and geochemical indicators of anoxic sedimentation conditions in local depressions within the Sea of Okhotsk in Late Pleistocene-Holocene. Tikhookeanskaya Geologiya, No 3, 3-33
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The paper reports specific mineralogical and geochemical characteristics of deposits from local depressions of the Derugin Basin. They were formed in an environment with periodic changes from oxic to anoxic conditions and show evidence for presence of hydrogen sulfide in bottom waters. Deposits of this type can be considered as a modern model for ancient ore-bearing black shale associations. Compared with typical metalliferous black shale sequences, which are characterized by high contents of organic matter, the sediments described here are depleted in elements of the organophilic association (Mo, Ni, Cu, Zn, V, and U), but have higher Mn contents.
    Keywords: Akademik M.A. Lavrentyev; Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Derugin Basin; GC; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Russian type); KOL; KOMEX; KOMEX I; KOMEX II; LV28; LV28-37-1; LV29-103-2; LV29-104-2; LV29-2; Piston corer (Kiel type); RGC; Sakhalin shelf and slope; Sea of Okhotsk; SO178; SO178-13-4; SO178-78-1; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 17
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Arning, Esther T; Birgel, Daniel; Brunner, B; Peckmann, Jörn (2009): Bacterial formation of phosphatic laminites off Peru. Geobiology, 7, 295-307, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1472-4669.2009.00197.x
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Authigenic phosphatic laminites enclosed in phosphorite crusts from the shelf off Peru (10°01' S and 10°24' S) consist of carbonate fluorapatite layers, which contain abundant sulfide minerals including pyrite (FeS2) and sphalerite (ZnS). Low d34Spyrite values (average -28.8 per mill) agree with bacterial sulfate reduction and subsequent pyrite formation. Stable sulfur isotopic compositions of sulfate bound in carbonate fluorapatite are lower than that of sulfate from ambient sea water, suggesting bacterial reoxidation of sulfide by sulfide-oxidizing bacteria. The release of phosphorus and subsequent formation of the autochthonous phosphatic laminites are apparently caused by the activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria and associated sulfide-oxidizing bacteria. Following an extraction-phosphorite dissolution-extraction procedure, molecular fossils of sulfate-reducing bacteria (mono-O-alkyl glycerol ethers, di-O-alkyl glycerol ethers, as well as the short-chain branched fatty acids i/ai-C15:0, i/ai-C17:0 and 10MeC16:0) are found to be among the most abundant compounds. The fact that these molecular fossils of sulfate-reducing bacteria are distinctly more abundant after dissolution of the phosphatic laminite reveals that the lipids are tightly bound to the mineral lattice of carbonate fluorapatite. Moreover, compared with the autochthonous laminite, molecular fossils of sulfate-reducing bacteria are: (1) significantly less abundant and (2) not as tightly bound to the mineral lattice in the other, allochthonous facies of the Peruvian crusts consisting of phosphatic coated grains. These observations confirm the importance of sulfate-reducing bacteria in the formation of the phosphatic laminite. Model calculations highlight that organic matter degradation by sulfate-reducing bacteria has the potential to liberate sufficient phosphorus for phosphogenesis.
    Keywords: 54GA; 84GA; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM; PERU-AUFTRIEB; SO147; SO147_54GA; SO147_84GA; Sonne; Television-Grab; TVG
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 18
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Van Gaever, Saskia; Moodley, Leon; de Beer, Dirk; Vanreusel, Ann (2006): Meiobenthos at the Arctic Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano with a parental caring nematode thriving in sulphide-rich sediments. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 321, 143-155, https://doi.org/10.3354/meps321143
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano (HMMV, SW Barents Sea slope, 1280 m) is one of the numerous cold methane-venting seeps existing along the continental margins. Analyses of video-guided core samples revealed extreme differences in the diversity and density of the metazoan meiobenthic communities associated with the different sub-habitats (centre, microbial mats, Pogonophora field, outer rim) of this mud volcano. Diversity was lowest in the sulphidic, microbial mat sediments that supported the highest standing stock, with unusually high densities (11000 ind./10 cm**2) of 1 nematode species related to Geomonhystera disjuncta. Stable carbon isotope analyses revealed that this nematode species was thriving on chemosynthetically derived food sources in these sediments. Ovoviviparous reproduction has been identified as an important adaptation of parents securing the survival and development of their brood in this toxic environment. The proliferation of this single species in exclusive association with free-living, sulphide-oxidising bacteria (Beggiatoa) indicates that its dominance is strongly related to trophic specialisation, evidently uncommon among the meiofauna. This chemoautotrophic association was replaced by copepods in the bare, sulphide-free sediments of the volcano's centre, dominated by aerobic methane oxidation as the chemosynthetic process. Copepods and nauplii reached maximum densities and dominance in the volcano's centre (500 ind./10 cm**2). Their strongly depleted carbon isotope signatures indicated a trophic link with methane-derived carbon. This proliferation of only selected meiobenthic species supported by chemosynthetically derived carbon suggests that, in addition to the sediment geochemistry, the associated reduced meiobenthic diversity may equally be related to the trophic resource specificity in HMMV sub-habitats.
    Keywords: ARK-XIX/3b; HERMES; Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European Seas; MUC; MultiCorer; Norwegian Sea; Polarstern; PS64; PS64/312-1; PS64/313-1; PS64/314-1; PS64/321-1; PS64/323-1; PS64/324-1; PS64/356-1; PS64/357-1; PS64/362-1; PS64/363-1a; PS64/363-1b; PS64/367-1; PS64/390-1a; PS64/390-1c; PS64/395-1
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 30 datasets
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  • 19
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Dickson, Alexander J; Austin, William EN; Hall, Ian R; Maslin, Mark; Kucera, Michal (2008): Centennial-scale evolution of Dansgaard-Oeschger events in the northeast Atlantic Ocean between 39.5 and 56.5 ka B.P. Paleoceanography, 23(3), PA3206, https://doi.org/10.1029/2008PA001595
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: There is much uncertainty surrounding the mechanisms that forced the abrupt climate fluctuations found in many palaeoclimate records during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS)-3. One of the processes thought to be involved in these events is the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC), which exhibited large changes in its dominant mode throughout the last glacial period. Giant piston core MD95-2006 from the northeast Atlantic Ocean records a suite of palaeoceanographic proxies related to the activity of both surface and deep water masses through a period of MIS-3 when abrupt climate fluctuations were extremely pronounced. A two-stage progression of surface water warming during interstadial warm events is proposed, with initial warming related to the northward advection of a thin warm surface layer within the North Atlantic Current, which only extended into deeper surface layers as the interstadial progressed. Benthic foraminifera isotope data also show millennial-scale oscillations but of a different structure to the abrupt surface water changes. These changes are argued to partly be related to the influence of low-salinity deepwater brines. The influence of deepwater brines over the site of MD95-2006 reached a maximum at times of rapid warming of surface waters. This observation supports the suggestion that brine formation may have helped to destabilize the accumulation of warm, saline surface waters at low latitudes, helping to force the MOC into a warm mode of operation. The contribution of deepwater brines relative to other mechanisms proposed to alter the state of the MOC needs to be examined further in future studies.
    Keywords: CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; IMAGES I; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952006; MD95-2006
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 20
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Keywords: ARA-4/97; ARA-4/97-B1; Aranda (1989); Baltic Sea System Study; BASYS; Bornholm Basin, Baltic Sea; Carbon, organic, total; Chlorins a; Chlorophyll a per unit sediment mass; Chlorophyll b per unit sediment mass; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Event label; Gemini Niemistoe Corer; GNC; High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC); Pheophorbide per unit sediment mass; Pheophytin a per unit sediment mass; Pheophytin b per unit sediment mass; Pyrochlorophyll a per unit sediment mass; Pyropheophytin a per unit sediment mass; Steryl chlorins a per unit sediment mass; Volumetric wet titration, Gaudette et al, 1974
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 132 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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