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  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Two Polarstern expeditions were conducted in 1995 (ANT-XII/4) and 2001 (ANT-XVIII/5a) to the Bellingshausen Sea and Amundsen Sea and the suspected Eltanin meteorite impact in the SE-Pacific. A survey of the sediment distribution and its acoustic structure along the cruise track was performed. The seafloor topography was sampled using the multibeam sonar system Hydrosweep DS2 which operates on a frequency of 15.5 kHz. The resulting AWI Bathymetric Chart of the Eltanin Meteorite Impact Area is based on a Digital Terrain Model of this area. The mapping was performed using ArcGIS. The Eltanin impact area which covers the 4.100 m high Freden Seamount is visualized by one overview sheet of the scale 1:200,000 and four 1:100,000 subsheets.
    Keywords: ANT-XII/4; AWI_Paleo; Eltanin-impact-area; Eltanin Meteorite Impact Area, Freeden Seamount, SE-Pacific; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS35 06AQANTXII_4
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: During the fourth Antarctic voyage ANT-IV of the research icebreaker POLARSTERN standard meteorological measurements have been performed. The measurements include 3-hourly synoptic observations as well as daily upper air soundings. The measurements started on September 6 1985 at Bremerhaven and were terminated at April 28 1986 in Punta Arenas. The 3-hourly synoptic observations are performed following the instructions of the FM 13 ships code defined by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). The datasets include automatic measurements such as mean ship's speed, wind velocity, wind direction, air temperature, water temperature as well as visual observations such as total cloud amount, present weather, clouds, height and period of swell waves, ice classification. The visual observation are not performed during night time. For the upper air soundings VAISALA RS80 radiosondes, carried by helium-filled balloons (TOTEX 350 - 1500) were used. Data reception and evaluation were carried out by a MicroCora System (VAISALA). The upper air soundings include profile measurements of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind vector. Usually the soundings started at the heliport (10 m above sea level) and terminated between 15 and 37 km. The height of the measurements was calculated by applying the barometric formula. The wind vector was determined with the aid of the OMEGA navigation system.
    Keywords: ANT-IV/1a; ANT-IV/1b; ANT-IV/1c; ANT-IV/2; ANT-IV/3; ANT-IV/4; AWI_Meteo; Canarias Sea; CT; Meteorological Long-Term Observations @ AWI; North Atlantic Ocean; North Sea; Polarstern; PS08; PS08/01331; PS08/01332; PS08/01333; PS08/01334; PS08/01335; PS08/01336; PS08/01337; PS08/01338; PS08/01339; PS08/01340; PS08/01341; PS08/01342; PS08/01343; PS08/01344; PS08/01345; PS08/01346; PS08/01347; PS08/01348; PS08/01349; PS08/01350; PS08/01351; PS08/01352; PS08/01353; PS08/01354; PS08/01355; PS08/01356; PS08/01357; PS08/01358; PS08/01359; PS08/01360; PS08/01361; PS08/01362; PS08/01363; PS08/01364; PS08/01365; PS08/01366; PS08/01367; PS08/01368; PS08/01369; PS08/01370; PS08/01371; PS08/01372; PS08/01373; PS08/01374; PS08/01375; PS08/01376; PS08/01377; PS08/01378; PS08/01379; PS08/01380; PS08/01381; PS08/01382; PS08/01383; PS08/01384; PS08/01385; PS08/01386; PS08/01387; PS08/01388; PS08/01389; PS08/01390; PS08/01391; PS08/01392; PS08/01393; PS08/01394; PS08/01395; PS08/01396; PS08/01397; PS08/01398; PS08/01399; PS08/01400; PS08/01401; PS08/01402; PS08/01403; PS08/01404; PS08/01405; PS08/01414; PS08/01415; PS08/01416; PS08/01417; PS08/01418; PS08/01419; PS08/01420; PS08/01421; PS08/01422; PS08/01423; PS08/01424; PS08/01425; PS08/01426; PS08/01427; PS08/01428; PS08/01429; PS08/01430; PS08/01431; PS08/01432; PS08/01433; PS08/01434; PS08/01435; PS08/01436; PS08/01437; PS08/01438; PS08/01439; PS08/01440; PS08/01441; PS08/01442; PS08/01443; PS08/01444; PS08/01445; PS08/01446; PS08/01447; PS08/01448; PS08/01449; PS08/01450; PS08/01451; PS08/01452; PS08/01453; PS08/01454; PS08/01455; PS08/01456; PS08/01457; PS08/01458; PS08/01459; PS08/01460; PS08/01461; PS08/01462; PS08/01463; PS08/01464; PS08/01465; PS08/01466; PS08/01467; PS08/01468; PS08/01469; PS08/01470; PS08/01471; PS08/01472; PS08/01473; PS08/01474; PS08/01475; PS08/01476; PS08/01477; PS08/01478; PS08/01479; PS08/01480; PS08/01481; PS08/01482; PS08/01483; PS08/01484; PS08/01485; PS08/01486; PS08/01487; PS08/01488; PS08/01489; PS08/01490; PS08/01491; PS08/01492; PS08/01493; PS08/01494; PS08/01495; PS08/01496; PS08/01497; PS08/01498; PS08/01499; PS08/01500; PS08/01501; PS08/01502; PS08/01503; PS08/01504; PS08/01505; PS08/01506; PS08/01507; PS08/01508; PS08/01509; PS08/01510; PS08/01511; PS08/01512; PS08/01513; PS08/01514; PS08/01515; PS08/01516; PS08/01517; PS08/01518; PS08/01519; PS08/01520; PS08/01521; PS08/01522; PS08/01523; PS08/1a-track; PS08/1b-track; PS08/1c-track; PS08/2-track; PS08/3-track; PS08/4-track; PS08 NOAMP; RADIO; Radiosonde; South Atlantic Ocean; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 191 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    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
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 4
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    Unknown
    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
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Berner, Heinrich (1991): Mechanismen der Sedimentbildung in der Framstrasse, im Arktischen Ozean und in der Norwegischen See. Berichte aus dem Fachbereich Geowissenschaften der Universität Bremen, 20, 167 pp, urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-ep000106655
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The grain size distribution and clay mineral composition of lithogenic particles of ice-rafted material, sinking matter, surface sediments, as well as from deep-sea cores are analysed. The samples were collected in the Fram Strait, the Arctic Ocean, and the Norwegian Sea during several expeditions with the research vessels "Polarstern", "Meteor" and "Poseidon", and Norwegian rearch vessels. Sinking matter was caught with sediment traps, fitted with timer-controlled sample changers, which had been deployde in the sea for usually one year.
    Keywords: 104-1; 109-1; 111-2; 114-1; 117-1; 120-1; 121-1; 122-2; 57-04; 57-06; 57-07; 57-08; 57-09; 57-11; 57-12; 57-13; 57-14; 57-20; 58-08; Arctic Ocean; ARK-I/3; ARK-II/4; ARK-II/5; ARK-III/3; ARK-IV/3; BC; BI-1_trap; Box corer; Fram Strait; FS-1_trap; FS-2_trap; FS-3_trap; GC; GeoB; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Giant box corer; GIK16103-1; GIK16104-1; GIK16105-1; GIK16109-1; GIK16122-1; GIK16129-1; GIK16131-1; GIK16132-1; GIK16133-1; GIK16135-1; GIK16136-1; GIK16138-1; GIK16139-1; GIK16143-1; GIK16144-1; GIK16145-1; GIK16146-1; GIK16147-1; GIK16149-1; GIK16150-1; GIK16152-1; GIK16156-1; GIK16157-1; GIK16158-1; GIK16161-1; GIK16162-1; GIK16163-1; GIK16167-1; GIK16168-1; GIK16169-1; GIK16170-1; GIK16172-1; GIK16175-1; GIK16176-1; GIK16180-1; GIK21289-1 PS07/578; GIK21290-3 PS07/579; GIK21291-3 PS07/581; GIK21292-3 PS07/582; GIK21293-3 PS07/583; GIK21294-3 PS07/584; GIK21295-3 PS07/586; GIK21295-5 PS07/586; GIK21296-3 PS07/587; GIK21297-3 PS07/588; GIK21298-3 PS07/590; GIK21300-3 PS07/592; GIK21301-2 PS07/593; GIK21302-2 PS07/594; GIK21303-2 PS07/595; GIK21305-1 PS07/597; GIK21306-2 PS07/598; GIK21307-2 PS07/599; GIK21308-3 PS07/601; GIK21309-3 PS07/602; GIK21310-4 PS07/603; GIK21311-3 PS07/605; GIK21312-3 PS07/606; GIK21314-3 PS07/608; GIK21316-5 PS07/612; GIK21318-4 PS07/615; GIK21319-2 PS07/617; GIK21322-3 PS07/626; GIK21323-3 PS07/627; GIK21513-8 PS11/276-8; GIK21514-5 PS11/278-5; GIK21515-10 PS11/280-10; GIK21516-5 PS11/282-5; GIK21518-13 PS11/287-13; GIK21519-10 PS11/296-10; GIK21520-10 PS11/310-10; GIK21521-13 PS11/340-13; GIK21522-18 PS11/358-18; GIK21523-14 PS11/362-14; GIK21524-1 PS11/364-1; GIK21525-2 PS11/365-2; GIK21528-7 PS11/372-7; GIK21529-7 PS11/376-7; GIK21530-3 PS11/382-3; GIK21532-1 PS11/396-1; GIK23055-1; GIK23056-2; GIK23057-1; GIK23058-1; GIK23059-1; GIK23060-1; GIK23061-3; GIK23062-2; GIK23063-1; GIK23064-2; GIK23065-1; GIK23066-1; GIK23067-2; GIK23068-1; GIK23069-1; GIK23070-2; GIK23071-1; GIK23072-1; GIK23073-2; GIK23074-2; GIK23126-1 PS03/126; GIK23138-1 PS03/138; GIK23150-1 PS03/150; GIK23189-1 PS03/189; GIK23206-1 PS03/206; GIK23207-1 PS03/207; GIK23210-1 PS03/210; GIK23211-1 PS03/211; GIK23216-1 PS03/216; GIK23217-1 PS03/217; GIK23220-1 PS03/220; GIK23221-1 PS03/221; GIK23222-1 PS03/222; GIK23229-1 PS05/414; GIK23230-1 PS05/416; GIK23231-2 PS05/417; GIK23232-1 PS05/418; GIK23233-1 PS05/420; GIK23235-1 PS05/422; GIK23240-1 PS05/428; GIK23241-1 PS05/429; GIK23243-2 PS05/431; GIK23244-1 PS05/449; GIK23247-2 PS05/452; GIK23248-1 PS05/453; GKG; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Håkon Mosby; HM52; HM52-02; HM57; HM57-04; HM57-05; HM57-06; HM57-07; HM57-08; HM57-09; HM57-11; HM57-12; HM57-13; HM57-14; HM57-20; HM58; HM58-02; HM58-08; HM82/83; ICE; Iceland Sea; Ice station; LB-1_trap; Lofoten Basin; M107-1; M118-1; M2/2; Meteor (1986); Mooring (long time); MOORY; Na-1_trap; Nansen Basin; NB-1_trap; Norway Slope; Norwegian Sea; Polarstern; PS03; PS05; PS07; PS1050-1; PS1060-1; PS1071-1; PS11; PS11/269-1; PS1105-1; PS1120-2; PS1121-1; PS1124-1; PS1125-1; PS1127-1; PS1128-1; PS1130-1; PS1131-1; PS1132-1; PS1229-1; PS1230-1; PS1231-2; PS1232-1; PS1233-1; PS1235-1; PS1240-1; PS1241-1; PS1243-2; PS1244-1; PS1247-2; PS1248-1; PS1289-1; PS1290-3; PS1291-3; PS1292-3; PS1293-3; PS1294-3; PS1295-3; PS1295-5; PS1296-3; PS1297-3; PS1298-3; PS1300-3; PS1301-2; PS1302-2; PS1303-2; PS1305-1; PS1306-2; PS1307-2; PS1308-3; PS1309-3; PS1310-4; PS1311-3; PS1312-3; PS1314-3; PS1316-5; PS1318-4; PS1319-2; PS1322-3; PS1323-3; PS1511-1; PS1513-8; PS1514-5; PS1515-10; PS1516-5; PS1518-13; PS1519-10; PS1520-10; PS1521-13; PS1522-18; PS1523-14; PS1524-1; PS1525-2; PS1528-7; PS1529-7; PS1530-3; PS1532-1; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Sea_Ice_A; Sea_Ice_B; Sea_Ice_C; Sea_Ice_D; SL; SP-1; SP-1_trap; Svalbard; Trap, sediment; TRAPS; Voering Plateau; Voring Plateau; VP-2_trap; Western Djupet
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 18 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Müller, Peter J (1975): Diagenese stickstoffhaltiger organischer Subtanzen in oxischen and anoxischen marinen Sedimenten. Meteor Forschungsergebnisse, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Reihe C Geologie und Geophysik, Gebrüder Bornträger, Berlin, Stuttgart, C22, 1-60
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: A. Continental slope sediments off Spanish-Sahara and Senegal contain up to 4% organic carbon and up to 0.4% total nitrogen. The highest concentrations were found in sediments from water depths between 1000 and 2000 m. The regional and vertical distribution of organic matter differs significantly. Off Spanish-Sahara the organic matter content of sediment deposited during glacial times (Wuerm, Late Riss) is high whereas sediments deposited during interglacial times (Recent, Eem) are low in organic matter. Opposite distribution was found in sediments off Senegal. The sediments contain 30 to 130 ppm of fixed nitrogen. In most sediments this corresponds to 2-8 % of the total nitrogen. Only in sediments deposited during interglacial times off Spanish-Sahara up to 20 % of the total nitrogen is contained as inorganically bound nitrogen. Positive correlations of the fixed nitrogen concentrations to the amounts of clay, alumina, and potassium suggest that it is primarily fixed to illites. The amino acid nitrogen and hexosamine nitrogen account for 17 to 26 % and 1.3 to 2.4 %, respectively of the total nitrogen content of the sediments. The concentrations vary between 200 and 850 ppm amino acid nitrogen and 20 to 70 ppm hexosamine nitrogen, both parallel the fluctiations of organic matter in the sediment. Fulvic acids, humic acids, and the total organic matter of the sediments may be clearly differentiated from one another and their amino acid and hexosamine contents and their amino acid composition: a) Fulvic acids contain only half as much amino acids as humic acids b) The molar amino acid/hexosamine ratios of the fulvic acids are half those of the humic acids and the total organic matter of the sediment c) The amino acid spectra of fulvic acids are characterized by an enrichment of aspartic acid, alanine, and methionine sulfoxide and a depletion of glycine, valine, isoleucine, leucine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, lysine, and arginine compared to the spectra of the humic acids and those of the total organic matter fraction of the sediment. d) The amino acid spectra of the humic acids and those of the total organic matter fraction of the sediments are about the same with the exception that arginine is clearly enriched in the total organic matter. In general, as indicated by the amino compounds humic acids resemble closer the total organic matter composition than the low molecular fulvic acids do. This supports the general idea that during the course of diagenesis in reducing sediments organic matter stabilizes from a fulvic-like structure to humic-like structure and finally to kerogen. The decomposition rates of single aminio acids differ significantly from one another. Generally amino acids which are preferentially contained in humic acids and the total organic matter fraction show a smaller loss with time than those preferably well documented in case of the basic amino acids lysine and arginine which- although thermally unstable- are the most stable amino acids in the sediments. A favoured incorporation of these compounds into high molecular substances as well as into clay minerals may explain their relatively high “stability” in the sediment. The nitrogen loss from the sediments due to the activity of sulphate-reducing bacteria amounts to 20-40 % of the total organic nitrogen now present. At least 40 % of the organic nitrogen which is liberated by sulphate-reducing bacteria can be explained ny decomposition of amino acids alone. B. Deep-sea sediments from the Central Pacific The deep-seas sediments contain 1 to 2 orders of magnitude less organic matter than the continental slope sediments off NW Africa, i.e. 0.04 to 0.3 % organic carbon. The fixed nitrogen content of the deep-sea sediments ranges from 60 to 270 ppm or from 20 to 45 % of the total nitrogen content. While ammonia is the prevailing inorganic nitrogen compound in anoxic pore waters, nitrate predominates in the oxic environment of the deep-sea sediments. Near the sediment/water interface interstital nitrate concentrations of around 30 µg-at. N/l were recorded. These generally increase with sediment depth by 10 to 15 µg-at. NO3- N/l. This suggests the presence of free oxygen and the activity of nitrifying bacteria in the interstitial waters. The ammonia content of the interstitial water of the oxic deep-sea sediments ranges from 2 to 60 µg-at. N/l and thus is several orders of magnitude less than in anoxic sediments. In contrast to recorded nitrate gradients towards the sediments/water interface, there are no ammonia concentration gradients. However, ammonia concentrations appear to be characteristic for certain regional areas. It is suggested that this regional differentiation is caused by ion exchange reactions involving potassium and ammonium ions rather than by different decomposition rates of organic matter. C. C/N ratios All estimated C/N ratios of surface sediments vary between 3 and 9 in the deep-sea and the continental margin, respectively. Whereas the C/N ratios generally increase with depth in the sediment cores off NW Africa they decrease in the deep-sea cores. The lowest values of around 1.3 were found in the deeper sections of the deep-sea cores, the highest of around 10 in the sediments off NW Africa. The wide range of the C/N ratios as well as their opposite behaviour with increasing sediment depth in both the deep-sea and continental margin sediment cores, can be attributed mainly to the combination of the following three factors: 1. Inorganic and organic substances bound within the latticed of clay minerals tend to decrease the C/N ratios. 2. Organic matter not protected by absorption on the clay minerals tends to increase C/N ratios 3. Diagenetic alteration of organic matter by micro-organisms tends to increase C/N ratios through preferential loss of nitrogen The diagenetic changes of the microbially decomposable organic matter results in both oxic and anoxic environments in a preferential loss of nitrogen and hence in higher C/N ratios of the organic fraction. This holds true for most of the continental margin sediments off NW Africa which contain relatively high amounts of organic matter so that factors 2 and 3 predominate there. The relative low C/N ratios of the sediments deposited during interglacial times off Spanish-Sahara, which are low in organic carbon, show the increasing influence of factor 1 – the nitrogen-rich organic substances bound to clay minerals. In the deep-sea sediments from the Central Pacific this factor completely predominates so that the C/N rations of the sediments approach that of the substance absorbed to clay minerals with decreasing organic matter content. In the deeper core sections the unprotected organic matter has been completely destroyed so that the C/N ratios of the total sediments eventually fall into the same range as those of the pure clay mineral fraction.
    Keywords: Atlantic Ocean; BC; BCR; Box corer; Box corer (Reineck); East Atlantic; GIK/IfG; GIK10127-2; GIK10127-3; GIK10128-1; GIK10129-1; GIK10130-1; GIK10132-1; GIK10136-1; GIK10140-1; GIK10141-1; GIK10142-1; GIK10144-1; GIK10145-1; GIK10147-1; GIK10148-1; GIK10149-1; GIK10175-1; GIK10176-1; GIK10178-1; GIK12310-3; GIK12310-4; GIK12327-4; GIK12327-5; GIK12328-4; GIK12328-5; GIK12329-4; GIK12329-5; GIK12331-1; GIK12331-2; GIK12344-3; GIK12344-6; GIK12347-1; GIK12347-2; GIK12379-1; Institute for Geosciences, Christian Albrechts University, Kiel; KAL; KAL15; Kasten corer; Kasten corer 15 cm; M25; Meteor (1964); Pacific; VA-05/4; VA-08/1; Valdivia (1961)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 38 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Agwu, Chiori O C; Beug, Hans-Jürgen (1982): Palynological studies of marine sediments off the West African coast. Meteor Forschungsergebnisse, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Reihe C Geologie und Geophysik, Gebrüder Bornträger, Berlin, Stuttgart, C36, 1-30
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Seven sediment cores from the cruises of the "Meteor" and "Valdivia" were examined palynologically. The cores were retrieved from the lower continental slope in the area of between 33.5° N and 8° N, off the West African coast. Most of the cores contain sediments from the last Glacial and Interglacial period. In some cases, the Holocene sediments are missing. Some individual cores contain sediments also from earlier Glacial and Interglacial periods. The main reason for making this palynological study was to find out the differences between the vegetation of Glacial and Interglacial periods in those parts of West Africa which at present belong to the Mediterranean zone, the Sahara and the zones of the savannas and tropical forests. In today's Mediterranean vegetation zone at core 33.5° N, forests and deciduous forests in particular, are missing during Glacial conditions. Semi-deserts are found instead of these. In the early isotope stage 1, there is a very significant development of forests which contain evergreen oaks; this is the Mediterranean type of vegestation development. The Sahara type of vegetation development is shown in four cores from between 27° N and 19° N. The differences between Glacial and Interglacial periods are very small. It must be assumed therefore that in this latitudes, both Glacial and Interglacial conditions gave rise to desert generally. The results are in favour of a slightly more arid climate during Glacial and more humid one during Interglacial periods. The southern boundary of the Sahara and the adjacent savannas with grassland and tropical woods were situated more to the south during the Glacial periods than they were during the Interglacial ones. In front of today's savanna belt, it can be seen from the palynological results that there are considerable differences between the vegetation of Glacial and Interglacial periods. The woods are more important in Interglacial periods. During the Glacial periods these are replaced from north to south decreasingly by grassland (savanna and rainforest type of vegetation development). The southern limit of the Sahara during stage 2 was somewhat between 12° N and 8° N which is between 1.5 and 5 degrees in latitude further south than it i s today. Not only do these differences in climate and vegetation apply to the maximum of the last Glacial and for the Holocene, but they apparently apply also to the older Glacial and Interglacial periods, where they have been found in the profiles. The North African deset belt can be said to have expanded during Glacial times both towards the north and towards the south. All the available evidence of this study indicates that the grass land or the semi-desert of the Southern Europe cam einto connection with those of the N Africa; there could not have been any forest zone between them. The present study was also a good opportunity for investigating some of the basic marine palynological problems. The very well known overrepresentation of pollen grains of the genus Pinus in marine sediments can be traced as fa as 21° N. The present southern limit for the genus Pinus is on the Canaries and on the African continent as approximately 31° N. Highest values of Ephedra pollen grains even occur south of the main area of the present distribution of that genus. These does not seem to be any satisfactory explanation for this. In general, it would appear that the transport of pollen grains from the north is more important than transport from the south. The results so far, indicate strongly that further palynological studies are necessary. These should concentrate particularly on cores from between 33° N and 27° N as well as between 17° N and 10° N. It would also be useful to have a more detailed examination of sediments from the last Intergalcial period (substage 5 e). Absolute pollen counts and more general examination of surface samples would be desirable. Surface samples should be taken from the shelf down to the bottom of the continental slope in different latitudes.
    Keywords: ARKTIS 1993; East Atlantic; GIK12309-3; GIK12310-4; GIK12329-6; GIK12392-1; KAL; Kasten corer; M12392-1; M25; M30; M30_184; M8_017-2; M8017B; Meteor (1964); PC; Piston corer; South Atlantic Ocean; SPC; Sphincter corer; VA132; VA132-18-1; Valdivia (1961); Westafrika 1973
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 8
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hooghiemstra, Henry; Agwu, Chiori O C; Beug, Hans-Jürgen (1986): Pollen and spore distribution in recent marine sediments: a record of NW-African seasonal wind patterns and vegetation belts. Meteor Forschungsergebnisse, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Reihe C Geologie und Geophysik, Gebrüder Bornträger, Berlin, Stuttgart, C40, 87-135
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Over 100 samples of recent surface sediments from the bottomn of the Atlantic Ocean offshore NW Africa between 34° and 6° N have been analysed palynologically. The objective of this study was to reveal the relation between source areas, transport systems, and resulting distribution patterns of pollen and spores in marine sediments off NW Africa, in order to lay a sound foundation for the interpretation of pollen records of marine cores from this area. The clear zonation of the NW-African vegetation (due to the distinct climatic gradient) is helpful in determining main source areas, and the presence of some major wind belts facilitates the registration of the average course of wind trajectories. The present circulation pattern is driven by the intertropical front (ITCZ) which shifts over the continent between c. 22° N (summer position) and c. 4° N (winter position) in the course of the year. Determination of the period of main pollen release and the average atmospheric circulation pattern effective at that time of the years is of prime importance. The distribution patterns in recent marine sediments of pollen of a series of genera and families appear to record climatological/ecological variables, such as the trajectory of the NE trade, January trades, African Easterly Jet (Saharan Air Layer), the northernmost and southernmost position of the intertropical convergence zone, and the extent and latitudinal situation of the NW-African vegetation belt. Pollen analysis of a series of dated deep-sea cores taken between c. 35° and the equator off NW African enable the construction of paleo-distribution maps for time slices of the past, forming a register of paleoclimatological/paleoecological information.
    Keywords: 371; 373; 375; 376; 377; 378; 388; Atlantic Ocean; BC; BCR; Box corer; Box corer (Reineck); Dredge, frame; DRG_F; East Atlantic; FGGE-Equator 79 - First GARP Global Experiment; GEOTROPEX 83, NOAMP I; Giant box corer; GIK12301-5; GIK12306-4; GIK12308-3; GIK12309-3; GIK12313-2; GIK12316-1; GIK12326-4; GIK12327-4; GIK12328-4; GIK12331-3; GIK12336-1; GIK12340-5; GIK12342-1; GIK12343-1; GIK12344-6; GIK12345-5; GIK12349-7; GIK12350-2; GIK12360-3; GIK12361-3; GIK12362-1; GIK12367-3; GIK12378-1; GIK13209-2; GIK13211-3; GIK13218-1; GIK13228-1; GIK13530-1; GIK13532-1; GIK13533-3; GIK13534-1; GIK13556-1; GIK13585-1; GIK15628-1; GIK15629-1; GIK15630-1; GIK15632-2; GIK15634-1; GIK15635-4; GIK15638-2; GIK15639-1; GIK15640-1; GIK15641-2; GIK15642-1; GIK15643-1; GIK15644-1; GIK15645-1; GIK15646-1; GIK15648-1; GIK15651-4; GIK15652-1; GIK15653-1; GIK15654-1; GIK15657-1; GIK15658-5; GIK15659-1; GIK15660-1; GIK15663-2; GIK15664-2; GIK15666-2; GIK15667-1; GIK15669-1; GIK15677-1; GIK15678-1; GIK16017-1; GIK16019-1; GIK16401-2; GIK16402-1; GIK16403-1; GIK16407-1; GIK16408-2; GIK16410-1; GIK16411-1; GIK16412-1; GIK16413-1; GIK16415-1; GIK16416-1; GIK16417-1; GIK16419-1; GIK16420-1; GIK16421-1; GIK16422-2; GIK16424-1; GIK16425-1; GIK16426-3; GIK16427-2; GIK16437-3; GIK16751-1; GIK16753-1; GIK16754-1; GIK16755-1; GIK16756-1; GIK16757-1; GIK16758-2; GIK16759-1; GIK16760-1; GIK16761-1; GIK16762-2; GIK16763-1; GIK16764-1; GIK16765-1; GIK16766-1; GIK16767-1; GIK16768-1; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; KOL; M25; M30; M30_221; M30_226; M30_249; M30_250; M30_253; M30_314; M30_316; M30_331; M51; M53; M53_158-3; M53_164-1; M53_166-1; M53_167; M53_169; M6/5; M60; M65; Meteor (1964); Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; Northeast Atlantic; off Guinea; off West Africa; Piston corer (Kiel type); SL; South Atlantic Ocean; SPC; Sphincter corer; SUBTROPEX 82; VA-10/3; Valdivia (1961); van Veen Grab; VGRAB; Westafrika 1973
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wollenburg, Jutta Erika; Mackensen, Andreas; Kuhnt, Wolfgang (2007): Benthic foraminiferal biodiversity response to a changing Arctic palaeoclimate in the last 24.000 years. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 255(3-4), 195-222, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2007.05.007
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Four sediment cores recovered from 1000 to 2500 m water depth in the Arctic Ocean, tracing the inflowing Atlantic water from Fram Strait, Yermak Plateau, northern Barents Sea continental slope as far as the Laptev Sea, have been analyzed for species richness and diversity. Samples were wet sieved after freeze-drying using a 63-µm sieve. Where possible at least 300 specimens were counted from the size fraction 〉63 µm, however, samples from deglacial periods are often affected by carbonate dissolution. In such samples foraminiferal numbers are low. Samples containing less than 40 specimens were excluded from statistical analyses. Because we are aware that specimen numbers 〈100 specimen are still critical for H analyses, core sections containing less than 100 specimens are highlighted in the figures. Here, we will characterize biodiversity trends by the two most widely used biodiversity measurements, the information function H (Buzas and Gibson, 1969) with its decomposition equation ln(S) and ln(E) (Buzas and Hayek, 1996), and the Fisher Alpha Index (Fisher, Corbett, and Williams, 1943). For spectral analysis the Fisher alpha record of core PS2837-5 was resampled at equally spaced 100-year intervals. For the spectral analysis, two methodes were used within the ANALYSERIES software package (Paillard et al., 1996): 1. The Blackman-Tuckey (1958) for its high confidence of the results; 2. The maximum entropy method (e.g. Haykin, 1983) for its high resolution. The cores reveal well-correlated biodiversity maxima and minima. Distinct periodicities of species richness variability of 1.57 kyr and 0.76 kyr characterize the Late Weichselian, and of 1.16 kyr and 0.54 kyr even more pronounced the Holocene. The biodiversity maxima/minima coincide with terrestrial and marine warm and cool events at high northern latitude. We suggest that either the physiology of most rare species is temperature sensitive, or sustained food supply increased the taxonomic richness during warmer intervals.
    Keywords: ARK-III/3; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/3; ARK-XIII/2; AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; GIK21290-4 PS07/579; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Laptev Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS07; PS1290-4; PS19/245; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2212-3; PS2458-4; PS27; PS27/038; PS2837-5; PS44; PS44/065; SL; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Not filtered water samples were taken in 10 ml ampoules (sealed immediately after being acidified with phosphoric acid to pH〈2, sampling), or 40 ml screw-lid vials, and measured onboard at sampling or next days, or frozen (-20°C) until being acidified and measured in home labs. Carbon measurement was by high-temperature catalytic oxydation in a 10 cm column packed with 5% Pt on aluminum oxide beads at 900°C in a stream of oxygen, and CO2 detection by infrared extinction after the removal of moisture and SO2 by appropriate traps (cold trap, Mg-percarbonate, Na-pyrophosphate, tin, bronze or Sulfix). The apparatus was the dual channel Dimatek 2000 equipped with a Binos 200 detector. Nitrogen was measured by chemoluminescence detection of NO2 in the combustion gases after leaving the Binos detector in one of the two channels of the setup. Most measurements of samples containing high nitrate were discarded, when data were inconsistent. The nature of nitrate interference is not clear.
    Keywords: AL79A; AL79A_BY38; AL79A_F1; AL79A_F10; AL79A_F11; AL79A_F14; AL79A_F19; AL79A_F2; AL79A_F20; AL79A_F22; AL79A_F23; AL79A_F3; AL79A_F4; AL79A_F5; AL79A_F7; AL79A_F8; AL79A_F9; AL79A_S21; Alkor (1990); Baltic Sea; Bottle, Niskin 10-L; NIS_10L
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 17 datasets
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