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  • Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total  (128)
  • Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM  (119)
  • PANGAEA  (247)
  • American Chemical Society
  • MDPI Publishing
  • 2015-2019  (247)
Collection
Keywords
Publisher
  • PANGAEA  (247)
  • American Chemical Society
  • MDPI Publishing
Years
Year
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Tristan da Cunha is assumed to be the youngest subaerial expression of the Walvis Ridge hot spot. Based on new hydroacoustic data, we propose that the most recent hot spot volcanic activity occurs west of the island. We surveyed relatively young intraplate volcanic fields and scattered, probably monogenetic, submarine volcanoes with multibeam echosounders and sub-bottom profilers. Structural and zonal GIS analysis of bathymetric and backscatter results, based on habitat mapping algorithms to discriminate seafloor features, revealed numerous previously-unknown volcanic structures. South of Tristan da Cunha, we discovered two large seamounts. One of them, Isolde Seamount, is most likely the source of a 2004 submarine eruption known from a pumice stranding event and seismological analysis. An oceanic core complex, identified at the intersection of the Tristan da Cunha Transform and Fracture Zone System with the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, might indicate reduced magma supply and, therefore, weak plume-ridge interaction at present times.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Tamborrino, Leonardo; Himmler, Tobias; Elvert, Marcus; Conti, Daniel; Gualtieri, Alessandro F; Fontana, Daniela; Bohrmann, Gerhard (2019): Formation of tubular carbonate conduits at Athina mud volcano, eastern Mediterranean Sea. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 107, 20-31, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2019.05.003
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Tubular carbonate conduits (TCC) represent the termination of fluid plumbing systems in environments of hydrocarbon seepage and play a relevant role in the discharge of methane from sub-seafloor sediments to the water column. However, the biogeochemical reactions and biological activities involved in their formation are not fully understood. To address this, TCC samples were collected with a remotely operated vehicle from the seabed on the SW flank of the Athina mud volcano in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Petrographic, mineralogical, stable carbon and oxygen isotope and lipid biomarker analyses were performed to elucidate the formation processes of the tubular carbonates. Clotted and fibrous aragonite form the internal lining of the cavities, while the outer portion of the tubes is formed by micritic Mg-calcite cementing hemipelagic sediment. 13C-depleted Mg-calcite and aragonite (as low as −14.4‰ V-PDB) and lipid biomarkers (archaeol, −89.8‰ V-PDB) indicate that carbonate precipitation was influenced by sulfate-dependent anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM). AOM locally enhances aragonite precipitation, thereby facilitating early lithification of the conduits within the mud volcano sediments. The size and morphology of the TCC comparable with the buried portion of tubeworm colonies found in the proximity of the sampling site. However, our results suggest that TCC likely formed by the action of burrowing organism rather than being mineralizations of the tubeworm colonies. This study provides new insights into the interpretation and understanding of TCC, highlighting the role of macrofaunal activity in the formation of migration pathways for hydrocarbon-rich fluids on the flank of a mud volcano.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Cheng, Zhongjing; Weng, Chengyu; Steinke, Stephan; Mohtadi, Mahyar (2018): Anthropogenic modification of vegetated landscapes in southern China from 6,000 years ago. Nature Geoscience, 11, 939-943, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-018-0250-1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Vegetation dynamics during previous warm interglacial periods shed light on the human impacts on natural ecosystems during the Holocene. However, reliable terrestrial records that span such periods are rare and provide little information on regional scale. Here we present a high-resolution marine pollen record from the northern South China Sea, which reveals that during five peak interglacial periods, Marine Isotope Stages 13a, 11c, 9c, 5e and 1 (the Holocene), the vegetation successions in southern China were similar. At the beginning of each interglacial period, tropical rainforest conifers, which include Dacrydium, Dacrycarpus and Podocarpus, and associated broadleaved taxa, such as Altingia, expanded quickly at the expense of the subtropical/temperate montane conifer Pinus. Near the end of the warm periods, Pinus recovered and the tropical taxa retreated. However, the Holocene displays subtle but significant differences in which the species turnover was interrupted and the rainforest conifers did not fully expanded. The Mg/Ca-based sea surface temperature record from the same site reveals that temperature was the major control of the rise and fall of the peak interglacial vegetation. However, exceptionally high charcoal fluxes during the Holocene suggest that human activities through land-use modifications completely, and possibly permanently, altered the natural vegetation trend five to six thousand years ago.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hollstein, Martina; Mohtadi, Mahyar; Rosenthal, Yair; Prange, Matthias; Oppo, Delia W; Martínez Méndez, Gema; Tachikawa, Kazuyo; Moffa-Sanchez, Paola; Steinke, Stephan; Hebbeln, Dierk (2018): Variations in Western Pacific Warm Pool surface and thermocline conditions over the past 110,000 years: Forcing mechanisms and implications for the glacial Walker circulation. Quaternary Science Reviews, 201, 429-445, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.10.030
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Surface and thermocline conditions of the Western Pacific Warm Pool (WPWP) reflect changes in regional and basin scale ocean and atmosphere circulations and in turn may affect climate globally. Previous studies suggest that a range of factors influences the WPWP on different timescales, however the precise forcings and mechanisms are unclear. Combining surface and thermocline records from sediment cores offshore Papua New Guinea we explore the influence of local and remote processes on the WPWP in response to astronomical forcing and changing glacial-interglacial boundary conditions over the past 110 kyr. We find that thermocline temperatures change with variations in Earth's obliquity with higher temperatures coinciding with high obliquity, which is attributed to variations in subduction and advection of the South Pacific Tropical Water. In contrast, rainfall variations associated with meridional migrations of the Intertropical Convergence Zone are primarily driven by changes in insolation due to precession. Records of bulk sedimentary Ti/Ca and foraminiferal Nd/Ca indicate an additional influence of obliquity, which, however, cannot unambiguously be related to changes in precipitation. Finally, our results suggest a thermocline deepening during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). A compilation of available proxy records illustrates a dipole-like pattern of LGM thermocline depth anomalies with a shoaling (deepening) in the northern (southern) WPWP. A comparison of the proxy compilation with an ensemble of Paleoclimate Model Intercomparison Project (PMIP) climate model simulations reveals that the spatial pattern of LGM thermocline depth anomalies is mainly attributable to a contraction of the Pacific Walker circulation on its western side.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-08-12
    Description: We report on the geochemistry of hydrocarbons and pore waters down to 62.5 mbsf, collected by drilling with the MARUM‐MeBo70 and by gravity coring at the Lunde pockmark in the Vestnesa Ridge. Our data document the origin and transformations of volatiles feeding gas emissions previously documented in this region. Gas hydrates are present where a fracture network beneath the pockmark focusses migration of thermogenic hydrocarbons characterized by their C1/C2+ and stable isotopic compositions (δ2H‐CH4, δ13C‐CH4). Measured geothermal gradients (~80°C km‐1) and known formation temperatures (〉70°C) suggest that those hydrocarbons are formed at depths 〉800 mbsf. A combined analytical/modeling approach, including concentration and isotopic mass balances, reveals that pockmark sediments experience diffuse migration of thermogenic hydrocarbons. However, at sites without channeled flow this appears to be limited to depths 〉 ~50 mbsf. At all sites we document a contribution of microbial methanogenesis to the overall carbon cycle that includes a component of secondary carbonate reduction (CR) – i.e. reduction of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) generated by anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) in the uppermost methanogenic zone. AOM and CR rates are spatially variable within the pockmark and are highest at high‐flux sites. These reactions are revealed by δ13C‐DIC depletions at the sulfate‐methane interface at all sites. However, δ13C‐CH4 depletions are only observed at the low methane flux sites because changes in the isotopic composition of the overall methane pool are masked at high‐flux sites. 13C‐depletions of TOC suggest that at seeps sites, methane‐derived carbon is incorporated into de novo synthesized biomass.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 26 datasets
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-11-21
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 28 data points
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 31 data points
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 30 data points
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 31 data points
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  • 11
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 31 data points
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  • 12
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 29 data points
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  • 13
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 30 data points
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  • 14
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 30 data points
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  • 15
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 31 data points
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  • 16
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 31 data points
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  • 17
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 31 data points
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  • 18
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Petrovic, Alexander; Lantzsch, Hendrik; Schwenk, Tilmann; Marquardt, J; Titschack, Jürgen; Hanebuth, Till J J (2019): Post-LGM upward shift of the Mediterranean Outflow Water recorded in a contourite drift off NW Spain. Marine Geology, 407, 334-349, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2018.11.015
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The NW Iberian continental margin is characterised by a complex morphology and by a sedimentary system which was highly dynamic over glacial to interglacial times. The sedimentary history of the continental slope was strongly influenced by the interaction of bottom currents with topographic highs of structural origin leading to the accumulation of several sediment drifts. A combined analysis of gravity cores from different water depth with hydroacoustic data reveals the vertical behaviour of the upper Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW) core after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). A coarser grained interval during Deglacial and early Holocene times (17.2 to 9.9 cal ka BP) points to an increase in bottom current strength. This increase in velocity was probably related to oceanic density fronts, which migrated through the 300 m thick transition zone between the underlying Labrador Sea Water and the overlying MOW. Radiocarbon dates timed the current strengthening to 17.2 cal ka BP, and a following weakening of the bottom current to 13.3 cal ka BP at 1965 m water depth and to 9.9 cal ka BP at 1885 m water depth. The depth-dependent current weakening suggests an upward shifting of the transition zone by 80 m that was related either to an overall shallowing of MOW or a vertical contraction of this water mass. The upward movement happened over a time interval of approximately 3.4 thousand years. In addition sediment core analysis reveals significant lateral heterogeneities within cm to dm thick sediment layers in the contourite drift. These heterogeneities suggest a need of a detailed core coverage across current-influenced deposits for palaeoceanographic studies to minimize misinterpretations.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 19
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hollstein, Martina; Mohtadi, Mahyar; Rosenthal, Yair; Moffa-Sanchez, Paola; Oppo, Delia W; Martínez Méndez, Gema; Steinke, Stephan; Hebbeln, Dierk (2017): Stable Oxygen Isotopes and Mg/Ca in Planktic Foraminifera From Modern Surface Sediments of the Western Pacific Warm Pool: Implications for Thermocline Reconstructions. Paleoceanography, 32(11), 1174-1194, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017PA003122
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Mg/Ca and stable oxygen isotope compositions (d18O) of planktic foraminifera tests are commonly used as proxies to reconstruct past ocean conditions including variations in the vertical water column structure. Accurate proxy calibrations require thorough regional studies, since parameters such as calcification depth and temperature of planktic foraminifera depend on local environmental conditions. Here we present radiocarbon-dated, modern surface sediment samples and water column data (temperature, salinity, and seawater d18O) from the Western Pacific Warm Pool. Seawater d18O (d18OSW) and salinity are used to calculate individual regressions for western Pacific surface and thermocline waters (d18OSW = 0.37 × S-12.4 and d18OSW = 0.33 × S-11.0). We combine shell d18O and Mg/Ca with water column data to estimate calcification depths of several planktic foraminifera and establish regional Mg/Ca-temperature calibrations. Globigerinoides ruber, Globigerinoides elongatus, and Globigerinoides sacculifer reflect mixed layer conditions. Pulleniatina obliquiloculata and Neogloboquadrina dutertrei and Globorotalia tumida preserve upper and lower thermocline conditions, respectively. Our multispecies Mg/Ca-temperature calibration (Mg/Ca = 0.26exp0.097*T) matches published regressions. Assuming the same temperature sensitivity in all species, we propose species-specific calibrations that can be used to reconstruct upper water column temperatures. The Mg/Ca temperature dependencies of G. ruber, G. elongatus, and G. tumida are similar to published equations. However, our data imply that calcification temperatures of G. sacculifer, P. obliquiloculata, and N. dutertrei are exceptionally warm in the western tropical Pacific and thus underestimated by previously published calibrations. Regional Mg/Ca-temperature relations are best described by Mg/Ca = 0.24exp0.097*T for G. sacculifer and by Mg/Ca = 0.21exp0.097*T for P. obliquiloculata and N. dutertrei.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 20
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Crivellari, Stefano; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Kuhnert, Henning; Häggi, Christoph; Portilho-Ramos, Rodrigo Costa; Zeng, Jing-Ying; Zhang, Yancheng; Schefuß, Enno; Mollenhauer, Gesine; Hefter, Jens; Alexandre, Felipe; Mulitza, Stefan; Sampaio, Gilvan (2018): Increased Amazon freshwater discharge during late Heinrich Stadial 1. Quaternary Science Reviews, 181, 144-155, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.12.005
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The temporal succession of changes in Amazonian hydroclimate during Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1) (ca. 18-14.7 cal ka BP) is currently poorly resolved. Here we present HS1 records based on isotope, inorganic and organic geochemistry from a marine sediment core influenced by the Amazon River discharge. Our records offer a detailed reconstruction of the changes in Amazonian hydroclimate during HS1, integrated over the basin. We reconstructed surface water hydrography using stable oxygen isotopes (d18O) and Mg/Ca-derived paleotemperatures from the planktonic foraminifera Globigerinoides ruber, as well as salinity changes based on stable hydrogen isotope (dD) of palmitic acid. We also analyzed branched and isoprenoid tetraether concentrations, and compared them to existing bulk sediment ln(Fe/Ca) data and vegetation reconstruction based on stable carbon isotopes from n-alkanes, in order to understand the relationship between continental precipitation, vegetation and sediment production. Our results indicate a two-phased HS1 (HS1a and HS1b). During HS1a (18-16.9 cal ka BP), a first sudden increase of sea surface temperatures (SST) in the western equatorial Atlantic correlated with the slowdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and the associated southern hemisphere warming phase of the bipolar seesaw. This phase was also characterized by an increased delivery of terrestrial material. During HS1b (16.9-14.8 cal ka BP), a decrease in terrestrial input was, however, associated with a marked decline of seawater d18O and palmitic acid dD. Both isotopic proxies independently indicate a drop in sea surface salinity (SSS). A number of records under the influence of the North Brazil Current, in contrast, indicate increases in SST and SSS resulting from a weakened AMOC during HS1. Our records thus suggest that the expected increase in SSS due to the AMOC slowdown was overridden by a two-phased positive precipitation anomaly in Amazonian hydroclimate.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 21
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    In:  Supplement to: Bartels, Martin; Titschack, Jürgen; Fahl, Kirsten; Stein, Ruediger; Hebbeln, Dierk (2018): Wahlenbergfjord, eastern Svalbard: a glacier-surrounded fjord reflecting regional hydrographic variability during the Holocene? Boreas, 47(4), 1003-1021, https://doi.org/10.1111/bor.12325
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Exceptionally high sedimentation rates in Arctic fjords provide the possibility to reconstruct environmental conditions in high temporal resolution during the (pre-)Holocene. The unique geographical location of Svalbard at the intersection of Arctic and Atlantic waters offers the opportunity to estimate local (mainly glacier-related) vs. regional (hydrographic) variabilities. Sedimentological, micropalaeontological and geochemical data from the very remote, glacier-surrounded Wahlenbergfjord in eastern Svalbard provides information on glacier dynamics, palaeoceanographic and sea ice conditions during the Holocene. The present study illustrates a high meltwater discharge during the summer insolation maximum (~11.3-7.7 ka) when the intrusion of upwelled relatively warm Atlantic-derived waters led to an almost open fjord situation with reduced sea ice in summer. Around 7.7 ka, a rapid hydrographic shift occurred: The dominance of inflowing Atlantic-derived waters was replaced by a stronger influence of Arctic Water reflecting regional palaeoceanographic conditions evident in the benthic foraminiferal fauna also at Svalbard's margins. Neoglacial conditions characterised the late Holocene (~3.1-0.2 ka), when glaciers likely advanced as cold atmospheric temperatures were decoupled from the advection of relatively warm intermediate waters probably caused by an extending sea ice coverage. Accordingly, our data show that even a remote, glacier-proximal study site reflects rapid as well as longer-term regional changes.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 22
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    In:  Supplement to: Zhuang, Guang-Chao; Lin, Yu-Shih; Bowles, Marshall W; Heuer, Verena B; Lever, Mark A; Elvert, Marcus; Hinrichs, Kai-Uwe (2017): Distribution and isotopic composition of trimethylamine, dimethylsulfide and dimethylsulfoniopropionate in marine sediments. Marine Chemistry, 196, 35-46, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2017.07.007
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Methylated amines and sulfides are ubiquitous organic nitrogen and sulfur compounds in the marine environment and could serve as important energy substrates to methanogens inhabiting anoxic sediments. However, their abundance and isotopic values remain largely unconstrained in marine sediments. In this study, we investigated the distribution of trimethylamine (TMA), dimethylsulfide (DMS) and dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) in Aarhus Bay, Denmark and provided the first report for their stable carbon isotopic composition. Simultaneous measurement of those two compounds in small volumes of pore waters and sediments was accomplished with gas chromatography in combination with either a purge and trap system for quantification or a headspace method for carbon isotopic analysis. TMA in the solid phase (exchangeable pool, 0.3-6.6 µmol/kg wet sediment; base-extractable pool, 2-18 µmol/kg) was much more abundant than the dissolved pool (〈 20 nM), indicating strong adsorption of TMA to sediments. Likewise, total base-hydrolyzable DMS(P)t (including DMS and base-released DMS from DMSP) in sediment was at least three orders of magnitude higher (11-65 µmol/kg) than the dissolved pool of DMS(P)d in the pore water (including DMS and dissolved DMSP; 1-12 nM). TMA and DMS(P) contents in the solid phase peaked in the surface sediment, consistent with their phytodetrital origin. TMA was more 13C-depleted than DMS(P) (TMA: -36.4 per mil to -39.2 per mil; DMS: -18.6 per mil to -23.4 per mil), presumably due to different biological or biosynthetic origins of the respective methyl groups. Both compounds showed a downcore decrease in their solid-phase concentration, a feature that was attributed to microbial degradation, but progressive enrichment in 13C (up to 4 per mil) with depth was observed only for DMS(P). The considerable pool size of TMA and DMS(P) outlined in this study and geochemical evidence of their degradability suggested these two compounds could be potentially important substrates for methane production in sulfate-reducing environments.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 23
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    In:  MARUM - Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University Bremen
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The half sections for archive were used for core imaging and description on ship board (GeoB 17701-1, GeoB 17703-1, GeoB 17705-1, GeoB 17708-1, GeoB 17711-1, GeoB 17715-1) and onshore (all others). The images were made using a handheld Canon EOS 450D reflex camera under fluorescent light conditions. A true color chart was used for color control. The core description provides information about core section length and position, core section number, core image, color, graphic lithology, sedimentary structures, coring disturbance, grain size and description text. Sediment color was determined qualitatively for core intervals using Munsell soil color charts. Grain size of the sand fraction was determined using a sand ruler, ranging from 63-90 µm for very fine sand, 90-250 µm for fine sand, 250-710 µm for medium sand, and 710-2000 µm for coarse sand.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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    Format: application/zip, 19 datasets
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  • 24
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    In:  Supplement to: Höppner, Natalie; Lucassen, Friedrich; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Sawakuchi, André Oliveira; Kasemann, Simone A (2018): Holocene provenance shift of suspended particulate matter in the Amazon River basin. Quaternary Science Reviews, 190, 66-80, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.04.021
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The strontium (Sr), neodymium (Nd) and lead (Pb) isotope signatures of suspended particulate matter (SPM) in rivers reflect the radiogenic isotope signatures of the rivers' drainage basin. These signatures are not significantly affected by weathering, transport or depositional cycles, but document the sedimentary contributions of the respective sources. We report new Sr, Nd and Pb isotope ratios and element concentrations of modern SPM from the Brazilian Amazon River basin and document the past evolution of the basin by analyzing radiogenic isotopes of a marine sediment core from the slope off French Guiana archiving the last 40 kyr of Amazon River SPM, and the Holocene section of sediment cores raised between the Amazon River mouth and the slope off French Guiana. The composition of modern SPM confirms two main source areas, the Andes and the cratonic Shield. In the marine sediment core notable changes occurred during the second phase of Heinrich Stadial 1 (i.e. increased proportion of Shield rivers SPM) and during the last deglaciation (i.e. increased proportion of Madeira River SPM) together with elsewhere constant source contributions. Furthermore, we report a prominent offset in Sr and Nd isotopic composition between the average core value (εNd: −11.7 ± 0.9 (2SD), 87Sr/86Sr: 0.7229 ± 0.0016 (2SD)) and the average modern Amazon River SPM signal (εNd: −10.5 ± 0.5 (2SD), 87Sr/86Sr: 0.7213 ± 0.0036 (2SD)). We suggest that a permanent change in the Amazon River basin sediment supply during the late Holocene to a more Andean dominated SPM was responsible for the offset.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 25
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    In:  Supplement to: Gu, Fang; Zonneveld, Karin A F; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Arz, Helge Wolfgang; Pätzold, Jürgen; Behling, Hermann (2017): Long-term vegetation, climate and ocean dynamics inferred from a 73,500 years old marine sediment core (GeoB2107-3) off southern Brazil. Quaternary Science Reviews, 172, 55-71, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.06.028
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Long-term changes in vegetation and climate of southern Brazil, as well as ocean dynamics of the adjacent South Atlantic, were studied by analyses of pollen, spores and organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts (dinocysts) in marine sediment core GeoB2107-3 collected offshore southern Brazil covering the last 73.5 cal kyr BP. The pollen record indicates that grasslands were much more frequent in the landscapes of southern Brazil during the last glacial period if compared to the late Holocene, reflecting relatively colder and/or less humid climatic conditions. Patches of forest occurred in the lowlands and probably also on the exposed continental shelf that was mainly covered by salt marshes. Interestingly, drought-susceptible Araucaria trees were frequent in the highlands (with a similar abundance as during the late Holocene) until 65 cal kyr BP, but were rare during the following glacial period. Atlantic rainforest was present in the northern lowlands of southern Brazil during the recorded last glacial period, but was strongly reduced from 38.5 until 13.0 cal kyr BP. The reduction was probably controlled by colder and/or less humid climatic conditions. Atlantic rainforest expanded to the south since the Lateglacial period, while Araucaria forests advanced in the highlands only during the late Holocene. Dinocysts data indicate that the Brazil Current (BC) with its warm, salty and nutrient-poor waters influenced the study area throughout the investigated period. However, variations in the proportion of dinocyst taxa indicating an eutrophic environment reflect the input of nutrients transported mainly by the Brazilian Coastal Current (BCC) and partly discharged by the Rio Itajaí (the major river closest to the core site). This was strongly related to changes in sea level. A stronger influence of the BCC with nutrient rich waters occurred during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 4 and in particular during the late MIS 3 and MIS 2 under low sea level. Evidence of Nothofagus pollen grains from the southern Andes during late MIS 3 and MIS 2 suggests an efficient transport by the southern westerlies and Argentinean rivers, then by the Malvinas Current and finally by the BCC to the study site. Major changes in the pollen/spore and dinocyst assemblages occur with similar pacing, indicating strongly interlinked continental and marine environmental changes. Proxy comparisons suggest that the changes were driven by similar overarching factors, of which the most important was orbital obliquity.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 26
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    In:  Supplement to: Rubin-Blum, Maxim; Antony, Chakkiath Paul; Borowski, Christian; Sayavedra, Lizbeth; Pape, Thomas; Sahling, Heiko; Bohrmann, Gerhard; Kleiner, Manuel; Redmond, Molly C; Valentine, D L; Dubilier, Nicole (2017): Short-chain alkanes fuel mussel and sponge Cycloclasticus symbionts from deep-sea gas and oil seeps. Nature Microbiology, 2, 17093, https://doi.org/10.1038/nmicrobiol.2017.93
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Cycloclasticus bacteria are ubiquitous in oil-rich regions of the ocean and are known for their ability to degrade polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). In this study, we describe Cycloclasticus that have established a symbiosis with Bathymodiolus heckerae mussels and poecilosclerid sponges from asphalt-rich, deep-sea oil seeps at Campeche Knolls in the southern Gulf of Mexico. Genomic and transcriptomic analyses revealed that, in contrast to all previously known Cycloclasticus, the symbiotic Cycloclasticus appears to lack the genes needed for PAH degradation. Instead, these symbionts use propane and other short-chain alkanes such as ethane and butane as carbon and energy sources, thus expanding the limited range of substrates known to power chemosynthetic symbioses. Analyses of short-chain alkanes in the environment of the Campeche Knolls symbioses revealed that these are present at high concentrations (in the μM to mM range). Comparative genomic analyses revealed high similarities between the genes used by the symbiotic Cycloclasticus to degrade short-chain alkanes and those of free-living Cycloclasticus that bloomed during the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Our results indicate that the metabolic versatility of bacteria within the Cycloclasticus clade is higher than previously assumed, and highlight the expanded role of these keystone species in the degradation of marine hydrocarbons.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 27
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    In:  Supplement to: Portilho-Ramos, Rodrigo Costa; Cruz, Anna Paula Soares; Barbosa, Catia F; Rathburn, Anthony E; Mulitza, Stefan; Venancio, Igor Martins; Schwenk, Tilmann; Rühlemann, Carsten; Vidal, Laurence; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Silveira, C S (2018): Methane release from the southern Brazilian margin during the last glacial. Scientific Reports, 8(1), https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24420-0
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Seafloor methane release can significantly affect the global carbon cycle and climate. Appreciable quantities of methane are stored in continental margin sediments as shallow gas and hydrate deposits, and changes in pressure, temperature and/or bottom-currents can liberate significant amounts of this greenhouse gas. Understanding the spatial and temporal dynamics of marine methane deposits and their relationships to environmental change are critical for assessing past and future carbon cycle and climate change. Here we present foraminiferal stable carbon isotope and sediment mineralogy records suggesting for the first time that seafloor methane release occurred along the southern Brazilian margin during the last glacial period (40–20 cal ka BP). Our results show that shallow gas deposits on the southern Brazilian margin responded to glacial−interglacial paleoceanographic changes releasing methane due to the synergy of sea level lowstand, warmer bottom waters and vigorous bottom currents during the last glacial period. High sea level during the Holocene resulted in an upslope shift of the Brazil Current, cooling the bottom waters and reducing bottom current strength, reducing methane emissions from the southern Brazilian margin.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 28
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    In:  Supplement to: Felis, Thomas; Ionita, Monica; Rimbu, Norel; Lohmann, Gerrit; Kölling, Martin (2018): Mild and Arid Climate in the Eastern Sahara-Arabian Desert During the Late Little Ice Age. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(14), 7112-7119, https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL078617
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The climate of the Sahara and Arabian deserts during the Little Ice Age is not well known, due to a lack of annually resolved natural and documentary archives. We present an annual reconstruction of temperature and aridity derived from Sr/Ca and oxygen isotopes in a coral of the desert-surrounded northern Red Sea. Our data indicate that the eastern Sahara and Arabian Desert did not experience pronounced cooling during the late Little Ice Age (~1750-1850), but suggest an even more arid mean climate than in the following ~150 years. The mild temperatures are broadly in line with predominantly negative phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation during the Little Ice Age. The more arid climate is best explained by meridional advection of dry continental air from Eurasia. We find evidence for an abrupt termination of the more arid climate after 1850, coincident with a reorganization of the atmospheric circulation over Europe.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 29
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    In:  Supplement to: Blumenberg, Martin; Pape, Thomas; Seifert, Richard; Bohrmann, Gerhard; Schlömer, Stefan (2018): Can hydrocarbons entrapped in seep carbonates serve as gas geochemistry recorder? Geo-Marine Letters, 38(2), 121-129, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00367-017-0522-6
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The geochemistry of seep gases is useful for an understanding of the local petroleum system. Here it was tested whether individual light hydrocarbons in seep gases are representatively entrapped in authigenic carbonates that formed near active seep sites. If applicable, it would be possible to extract geochemical information not only on the origin but also on the thermal maturity of the hydrocarbon source rocks from the gases entrapped in carbonates in the past. Respective data could be used for a better understanding of paleoenvironments and might directly serve as calibration point for, amongst others, petroleum system modeling. For this approach, (sub)-recent seep carbonates from the Black Sea (Paleodnjepr region and Batumi seep area), two sites of the Campeche Knoll region in the Gulf of Mexico, and the Venere mud volcano (Mediterranean Sea) were selected. These seep carbonates derive from sites for which geochemical data on the currently seeping gases exist. During treatment with phosphoric acid, methane and higher hydrocarbons were released from all carbonates, but in low concentrations. Compositional studies demonstrate that the ratio of methane to the sum of higher hydrocarbons (C1/(C2+C3)) is (partly strongly) positively biased in the entrapped gas fraction. δ13C values of C1 were determined for all samples and, for the samples from the Gulf of Mexico and the Mediterranean Sea, also of C2 and C3. The present dataset from six seep sites indicates that information on the seeped methane can be—although with a scatter of several permil—recorded in seep carbonate matrices, but other valuable information like the composition and δ13C of ethane and propane appears to be modified or lost during, for example, enclosure or at an early stage of diagenesis.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The Maritime Continent, home to widespread tropical rainforest and millions of people, is the primary region of deep atmospheric convection on the Earth. However, debate exists whether the isotopologues of water reflect rainfall amount during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), resulting in different interpretations of the LGM climate of the Maritime Continent. Here we present paired leaf wax δ13C and δD records together with pollen data from a sediment core retrieved off East Java dating back to 22,000 years before present. We use three n-alkane homologues (n-C29, n-C31 and n-C33) in order to reconstruct past changes in vegetation types and seasonal rainfall. Our results suggest that in East Java, evergreen rainforest remained the dominant vegetation type in montane regions since the seasonality there remained relatively unaltered over the entire period. In contrast, the East Javanese lowlands were characterised by C4 grass expansion and an extended dry season but a wetter rainy season, thus stronger seasonality, during the LGM.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 31
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    In:  Supplement to: Hansen, Christian T; Meixner, Anette; Kasemann, Simone A; Bach, Wolfgang (2017): New insight on Li and B isotope fractionation during serpentinization derived from batch reaction investigations. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 217, 51-79, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2017.08.014
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Multiple batch experiments (100 °C, 200 °C; 40 MPa) were conducted, using Dickson-type reactors, to investigate Li and B partitioning and isotope fractionation between rock and water during serpentinization. We reacted fresh olivine (5 g; Fo90; [B] = 〈0.02 µg/g; d11BOlivine -14 per mil; [Li] = 1.7 µg/g; d7LiOlivine = +5.3 per mil) with seawater-like fluids (75 ml, 3.2 wt.% NaCl) adjusted with respect to their Li (0.2, 0.5 µg/ml; and d7LiFluid +55 per mil) and B (~10 µg/ml and d11BFluid -0.3 per mil) characteristics. At 200 °C a reaction turnover of about 70% and a serpentinization mineral assemblage matching equilibrium thermodynamic computational results (EQ3/6) developed after 224 days runtime. Characterization of concomitant fluid samples indicated a distinct B incorporation into solid phases ([B]final_200 °C = 55.61 µg/g; DS/FB200 °C = 13.42) and a preferential uptake of the lighter 10B isotope (Delta11BS-F = -3.46 per mil). Despite a low reaction turnover at 100 °C (〈12%), considerable amounts of B were again incorporated into solid phases ([B]final_100 °C = 25.33 µg/g; DS/FB100 °C = 24.2) with even a larger isotope fractionation factor (Delta11BS-F = -9.97? per mil. While magnitude of isotope fraction appears anti-correlated with temperature, we argue for an overall attenuation of the isotopic effect through changes in B speciation in saline solutions (NaB(OH)4(aq) and B(OH)3Cl-) as well as variable B fixation and fractionation for different serpentinization product minerals (brucite, chrysotile). Breakdown of the Li-rich olivine and limited Li incorporation into product mineral phases resulted in an overall lower Li content of the final solid phase assemblage at 200 °C ([Li]final_200 °C = 0.77 µg/g; DS/FLi200 °C = 1.58). First order changes in Li isotopic compositions were defined by mixing of two isotopically distinct sources i.e. the fresh olivine and the fluid rather than by equilibrium isotope fraction. At 200 °C primary olivine is dissolved, releasing its Li budget into the fluid which shifts towards a lower d7LiF of +38.62 per mil. Newly formed serpentine minerals (d7LiS = +30.58 per mil) incorporate fluid derived Li with a minor preference of the 6Li isotope. At 100 °C Li enrichment of secondary phases exceeded Li release by olivine breakdown ([Li]final_100 °C = 2.10 µg/g; DS/FLi100 °C = 11.3) and it was accompanied by preferential incorporation of heavier 7Li isotope that might be due to incorporation of a 7Li enriched fluid fraction into chrysotile nanotubes.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
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  • 32
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    In:  Supplement to: Riedel, Michael; Wallmann, Klaus; Berndt, Christian; Pape, Thomas; Freudenthal, Tim; Bergenthal, Markus; Bünz, Stefan; Bohrmann, Gerhard (2018): In situ temperature measurements at the Svalbard continental margin: Implications for gas hydrate dynamics. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 19(4), 1165-1177, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GC007288
    Publication Date: 2023-04-27
    Description: During expedition MARIA S. MERIAN MSM57/2 to the Svalbard margin offshore Prins Karls Forland, the seafloor drill rig MARUM‐MeBo70 was used to assess the landward termination of the gas hydrate system in water depths between 340 and 446 m. The study region shows abundant seafloor gas vents, clustered at a water depth of ∼400 m. The sedimentary environment within the upper 100 m below seafloor (mbsf) is dominated by ice‐berg scours and glacial unconformities. Sediments cored included glacial diamictons and sheet‐sands interbedded with mud. Seismic data show a bottom simulating reflector terminating ∼30 km seaward in ∼760 m water depth before it reaches the theoretical limit of the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) at the drilling transect. We present results of the first in situ temperature measurements conducted with MeBo70 down to 28 mbsf. The data yield temperature gradients between ∼38°C km−1 at the deepest site (446 m) and ∼41°C km−1 at a shallower drill site (390 m). These data constrain combined with in situ pore‐fluid data, sediment porosities, and thermal conductivities the dynamic evolution of the GHSZ during the past 70 years for which bottom water temperature records exist. Gas hydrate is not stable in the sediments at sites shallower than 390 m water depth at the time of acquisition (August 2016). Only at the drill site in 446 m water depth, favorable gas hydrate stability conditions are met (maximum vertical extent of ∼60 mbsf); however, coring did not encounter any gas hydrates.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 33
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    In:  Supplement to: Wallmann, Klaus; Riedel, Michael; Hong, W L; Patton, H; Hubbard, Alun L; Pape, Thomas; Hsu, Chieh-Wei; Schmidt, Christiane; Johnson, J E; Torres, Marta E; Andreassen, Karin; Berndt, Christian; Bohrmann, Gerhard (2018): Gas hydrate dissociation off Svalbard induced by isostatic rebound rather than global warming. Nature Communications, 9(1), https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02550-9
    Publication Date: 2023-04-27
    Description: Methane seepage from the upper continental slopes of Western Svalbard has previously been attributed to gas hydrate dissociation induced by anthropogenic warming of ambient bottom waters. Here we show that sediment cores drilled off Prins Karls Foreland contain freshwater from dissociating hydrates. However, our modeling indicates that the observed pore water freshening began around 8 ka BP when the rate of isostatic uplift outpaced eustatic sea-level rise. The resultant local shallowing and lowering of hydrostatic pressure forced gas hydrate dissociation and dissolved chloride depletions consistent with our geochemical analysis. Hence, we propose that hydrate dissociation was triggered by postglacial isostatic rebound rather than anthropogenic warming. Furthermore, we show that methane fluxes from dissociating hydrates were considerably smaller than present methane seepage rates implying that gas hydrates were not a major source of methane to the oceans, but rather acted as a dynamic seal, regulating methane release from deep geological reservoirs.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 34
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    In:  Supplement to: Amirshahi, Seyed Mohammad; Kwoll, Eva; Winter, Christian (2018): Near bed suspended sediment flux by single turbulent events. Continental Shelf Research, 152, 76-86, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.11.005
    Publication Date: 2023-04-20
    Description: The role of small scale single turbulent events in the vertical mixing of near bed suspended sediments was explored in a shallow shelf sea environment. High frequency velocity and suspended sediment concentration (SSC; calibrated from the backscatter intensity) were collected using an Acoustic Doppler Velocimeter (ADV). Using quadrant analysis, the despiked velocity time series was divided into turbulent events and small background fluctuations. Reynolds stress and Turbulent Kinetic Energy (TKE) calculated from all velocity samples, were compared to the same turbulent statistics calculated only from velocity samples classified as turbulent events (Re_events and TKE_events). The comparison showed that Re_events and TKE_events was increased 3 and 1.6 times, respectively, when small background fluctuations were removed and that the correlation with SSC for TKE could be improved through removal of the latter. The correlation between instantaneous vertical turbulent flux (w') and SSC fluctuations (SSC') exhibits a tidal pattern with the maximum correlation at peak ebb and flood currents, when strong turbulent events appear. Individual turbulent events were characterized by type, strength, duration and length. Cumulative vertical turbulent sediment fluxes and average SSC associated with individual turbulent events were calculated. Over the tidal cycle, ejections and sweeps were the most dominant events, transporting 50% and 36% of the cumulative vertical turbulent event sediment flux, respectively. Although the contribution of outward interactions to the vertical turbulent event sediment flux was low (11%), single outward interaction events were capable of inducing similar SSC' as sweep events. The results suggest that on time scales of tens of minutes to hours, TKE may be appropriate to quantify turbulence in sediment transport studies, but that event characteristics, particular the upward turbulent flux need to be accounted for when considering sediment transport on process time scales.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 35
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    In:  Supplement to: Becker, Marius; Maushake, Christian; Winter, Christian (2018): Observations of mud-induced periodic stratification in a hyperturbid estuary. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(11), 5461-5469, https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL077966
    Publication Date: 2023-04-20
    Description: Stationary ship-based data were collected during a period of 19 h, beginning 2014-19-11 16:20:00 CET (UTC +1), in the tidal river part of the Ems estuary, Germany. The ship was moored next to the navigation channel at Jemgum (N53.271114° E07.397424°). Current velocity data was obtained by an ADCP (acoustic Doppler current profiler, RDI 600 kHz, ping rate 0.5 Hz, cell size 0.2 m, 8 pings per ensemble, mode 1), deployed on a floating platform next to the ship. Parts of each current velocity profile were located in a near-bed layer of very high suspended sediment concentration (SSC). These parts were, at times, biased by spikes. Respective parts were marked invalid. The time series of current velocity profiles was first averaged in time, averaging data in corresponding ADCP depth cells, collected during periods of 10 s. The resulting time series of profiles were then smoothed by an 8 min moving average filter. Averages were performed on individual current velocity components (east, north, up) in earth coordinates. Magnitude was subsequently determined from the smoothed components and flagged according to the tidal phase, flood negative. Vertical profiles of salinity and SSC were collected every 30 min by CTD (48M, Sea & Sun) and OBS (optical backscatter sensor, ViSolid 700, WTW, matrix type 2), both deployed on a crane. Optical backscatter was calibrated with respect to SSC by SSC measurements obtained from filtered water samples. Salinity and SSC profiles contain down-cast data only. An average time was assigned to each profile. Current velocity, SSC and salinity data data is referenced vertically to height above the river bed, and interpolated vertically in steps of 0.1 m.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 36
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    In:  Supplement to: Evans, Thomas W; Könneke, Martin; Lipp, Julius S; Adhikari, Rishi Ram; Taubner, Heidi; Elvert, Marcus; Hinrichs, Kai-Uwe (2018): Lipid biosynthesis of Nitrosopumilus maritimus dissected by lipid specific radioisotope probing (lipid-RIP) under contrasting ammonium supply. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 242, 51-63, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2018.09.001
    Publication Date: 2023-06-03
    Description: Ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) are among the most abundant microbes in the oceans and are one of the major sources of glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs) in the water column and underlying sediments. However, little is known about the mechanistic steps during biosynthesis of GDGTs that form the basis of the TEX86 paleothermometer. Recent results showed that, apart from temperature, physiological factors such as growth stage and variations of the ammonium oxidation rate may affect the TEX86 temperature proxy. We performed a short term incubation experiment with radiolabeled 14C-bicarbonate to accurately trace the effect of high and low ammonium (NH4+) supply, on the production of individual membrane lipids by the AOA model organism Nitrosopumilus maritimus. The 14C incorporation during growth was monitored at five time intervals by liquid chromatography coupled to flow-through scintillation counting of the hydrolyzed membrane lipid extract, allowing a straight forward and sensitive on-line detection of 14C incorporation into archaeal lipids on time-scales lower than a single cell cycle. The experiments showed that low NH4+ supply results in higher cyclization of GDGTs with a preferential synthesis of crenarchaeol, whereas excess NH4+ led to predominant production of GDGT-0. Consequently, the cultures with a high NH4+ supply resulted in up to 10 °C lower estimated incubation temperatures than the cultures with low quantities of available NH4+ using the TEX86L calibration. Interestingly, a high relative production of archaeol was observed at the beginning of all experiments (up to 27%), independent of the NH4+ supply; likewise the degree of cyclization was initially lowest indicating delayed production of cycloalkylated derivatives. This pattern is consistent with N. maritimus synthesizing GDGTs by head-to-head condensation of two archaeol molecules and subsequent cyclization of the resulting acyclic tetraether. This study provides robust information on the biosynthesis of GDGTs in N. maritimus and advances our understanding of the influence of NH4+ supply on the TEX86 proxy.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 37
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    In:  Supplement to: Völpel, Rike; Mulitza, Stefan; Paul, A; Lynch-Stieglitz, Jean; Schulz, Michael (2019): Water Mass Versus Sea Level Effects on Benthic Foraminiferal Oxygen Isotope Ratios in the Atlantic Ocean During the LGM. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 34(1), 98-121, https://doi.org/10.1029/2018PA003359
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Depth transects of benthic foraminiferal oxygen isotopes from the Atlantic Ocean show that glacial‐interglacial changes are larger at deep (〉 ~2000 m) than at intermediate water levels. Our model results suggest that the smaller changes in the upper 1000 m of the water column are a result of the glacial sea‐level lowering of about 120 m, leading to warmer temperatures of around 1 °C and hence a smaller glacial‐interglacial stable oxygen isotope difference. In contrast, a shoaling of the water‐mass boundary to ~2000 m water depth between the northern source and southern source water is accompanied by the expansion of a cold (close to the freezing point) southern source water in the abyssal ocean, increasing the oxygen isotope values of benthic foraminifera from the LGM in the deep Atlantic. These two effects explain the different amplitudes of glacial‐interglacial stable oxygen isotope differences in the upper and deeper water column of the Atlantic Ocean.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 38
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    In:  Supplement to: Huang, Enqing; Chen, Y; Schefuß, Enno; Steinke, Stephan; Liu, JingJing; Tian, Jun; Martínez Méndez, Gema; Mohtadi, Mahyar (2018): Precession and glacial-cycle controls of monsoon precipitation isotope changes over East Asia during the Pleistocene. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 494, 1-11, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2018.04.046
    Publication Date: 2023-12-18
    Description: Precipitation isotope reconstructions derived from speleothems and plant waxes are important archives for understanding hydroclimate dynamics. Their climatic significance in East Asia, however, remains controversial. Here we present terrestrial plant-wax stable hydrogen isotope (δDwax) records over periods covering the last four interglacials and glacial terminations from sediment cores recovered from the northern South China Sea (SCS) as an archive of regionally-integrated precipitation isotope changes in Southeast China. Combined with previous precipitation isotope reconstructions from China, we find that the SCS δDwax and Southwest-Central China stalagmite O records show relatively enriched and depleted isotopic values, respectively, during interglacial peaks; but relatively similar isotopic variations during most sub-interglacials and glacial periods over the past 430 thousand years. During interglacial peaks, strong summer insolation should have intensified the convection intensity, the isotopic fractionation along moisture trajectories and the seasonality, which are all in favor of causing isotopically-depleted rainfall over the East Asian monsoon regime. These effects in combination with a relatively high proportion of Indian Ocean- versus Pacific-sourced moisture influx should have resulted in strongly depleted precipitation isotopes (stalagmite O) over most parts of China. However, Southeast China should have been affected by a relatively low ratio of Indian Ocean- versus Pacific-sourced moisture influx, which dominated over effects yielding depleted precipitation isotopes and led to enriched precipitation isotopes (δDwax). It is thus concluded that glacial boundary conditions and insolation forcing are the two most important factors for causing regional differences in precipitation isotope compositions over subtropical East Asia on orbital timescales.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2024-02-15
    Description: Research expedition M140 took place from August 11th, 2017 (Mindelo, Cabo Verde) to September 5th, 2017 (Las Palmas, Spain). CTD data for 16 stations with a total of 37 individual casts along the cruise track were recorded using a Sea & Sun Technology CTD90M (SN 979) down to depths of 700m. The CTD was equipped with the following sensors: Temperature sensor Pt100 model 1509 (Thermal Developments International), Conductivity sensor 7-pole platinum coated electrode cell in quartz glass (Sea & Sun Technology), Seapoint Chlorophyll Fluorometer (Seapoint) and dissolved oxygen sensor (DO522M18, Clark type, OxyGuard). Additionally data for two stations were also recorded with Seabird Electronics (SBE) 9 plus CTD (SN 979) mounted in a SBE water sampler rosette. The data files contain the data for temperature, salinity, density, chlorophyll a concentration and dissolved oxygen concentration; as raw data and processed and flagged according to the recommendations for real-time data processing of EuroGOOS and GTSPP, as well as the outlier detection method CoTeDe (https://github.com/castelao/CoTeDe). Biogeographic regions are determined according to Spalding et al. (2012). TEOS-10 unit conversions have been performed with the GSW Oceanographic Toolbox (McDougall and Barker, 2011).
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 40
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    In:  Supplement to: Obert, J Christina; Scholz, Denis; Felis, Thomas; Lippold, Jörg; Jochum, Klaus Peter; Andreae, Meinrat O (2019): Improved constraints on open-system processes in fossil reef corals by combined Th/U, Pa/U and Ra/Th dating: A case study from Aqaba, Jordan. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 245, 459-478, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2018.11.024
    Publication Date: 2024-06-01
    Description: Here we present 230Th/U, 231Pa/U as well as 226Ra/230Th isotope ratios from five fossil reef corals of Last Interglacial origin from the Gulf of Aqaba, Northern Red Sea. The results show clear evidence for open-system behaviour with strongly elevated δ234U values and U concentrations indicating post-depositional U addition. The combined application of all isotope systems enables us to better constrain the nature and timing of the open-system processes than only based on the 230Th/U data. Quantitative modelling of the diagenetic processes allowed us to reproduce the trends in the isotope ratios. Two of the five corals were probably affected by two separate phases of U addition with different δ234U values. The trends observed for two other corals can be explained by U addition followed by U loss. The fifth coral shows signs of both U gain and loss at the same time in the more recent past. The timing of the diagenetic processes is remarkably similar for the five corals and can be constrained to approx. 1 and 6 thousand years (ka) and 100 and 102 ka after coral growth, respectively. Based on the modelling results, we suggest that conventional 231Pa/230Th ages provide the best estimate for the true age of four of the five corals, which range from 109.1 to 114.1 ka. This implies a late Last Interglacial time of deposition. For the fifth coral, the most reliable age estimate is the conventional 230Th/U age of one of the subsamples (117.3 ka), based on a concordia diagram for all subsamples. The timing of the modelled open-system processes suggests that the early event of U addition was associated with interaction of the corals with 234U-enriched seawater or saline groundwater. The later open-system event can be described as U redistribution within the coral reef, since some corals apparently lost U while others gained U. The timing of the second event is broadly consistent with the Bølling-Allerød interstadial, which was probably characterised by enhanced wetness in this typically hyper-arid region.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
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  • 41
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    In:  Supplement to: Zhao, Xueqin; Dupont, Lydie M; Cheddadi, Rachid; Kölling, Martin; Reddad, Hanane; Groeneveld, Jeroen; Ain-Lhout, Fatima Zohra; Bouimetarhan, Ilham (2019): Recent climatic and anthropogenic impacts on endemic species in southwestern Morocco. Quaternary Science Reviews, 221, 105889, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.105889
    Publication Date: 2024-05-27
    Description: Morocco is an area subject to recurrent severe droughts, desertification and an increasing land degradation. It is within a Mediterranean hotspot of biodiversity as it harbors many threatened endemic species such as the argan tree (Argania spinosa). In this context, past climate records are needed to analyze the impact of climate variability on the occurrence and future persistence of these endemic species. In order to evaluate the impact of past climate changes on the endemic Argan tree in southern Morocco, we reconstructed its modern range using an extensive pollen dataset. The modern pollen distribution off southwestern Morocco was then utilized to interpret the high-resolution pollen record with complementary micro-charcoal and XRF element records from a marine sediment core GeoB8601-3 off Cape Ghir in southwestern Morocco covering the last three millennia. This multi-proxy study has shown clear evidence of wetter conditions resulting in higher fluvial input which could be correlated with a negative mode of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), in contrast to the published pollen and XRF element records from another nearby core that showed limited effect of climate changes. On the other hand, clear opposite trend between the pollen occurrences of Argania spinosa and the fire frequency was observed throughout our fossil record. The increase of Argania spinosa pollen occurrences, along with herbaceous taxa, and lower fire frequency might suggest an increase in human impact on the landscape leading to a sparse vegetation cover and subsequently increased erosion. The reconstructed pollen-based vegetation, micro-charcoal-based fire activities and geochemical changes in our marine record suggest interplay of climate and anthropogenic effects on the landscape.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 42
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    In:  Supplement to: Kluger, Max Oke; Moon, Vicki G; Kreiter, Stefan; Lowe, David J; Churchman, G J; Hepp, Daniel A; Seibel, David; Jorat, Ehsan M; Mörz, Tobias (2017): A new attraction-detachment model for explaining flow sliding in clay-rich tephras. Geology, 45(2), 131-134, https://doi.org/10.1130/G38560.1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Altered pyroclastic (tephra) deposits are highly susceptible to landsliding, leading to fatalities and property damage every year. Halloysite, a low-activity clay mineral, is commonly associated with landslide-prone layers within altered tephra successions, especially in deposits with high sensitivity, which describes the post-failure strength loss. However, the precise role of halloysite in the development of sensitivity, and thus in sudden and unpredictable landsliding, is unknown. Here we show that an abundance of mushroom cap?shaped (MCS) spheroidal halloysite governs the development of sensitivity, and hence proneness to landsliding, in altered rhyolitic tephras, North Island, New Zealand. We found that a highly sensitive layer, which was involved in a flow slide, has a remarkably high content of aggregated MCS spheroids with substantial openings on one side. We suggest that short-range electrostatic and van der Waals interactions enabled the MCS spheroids to form interconnected aggregates by attraction between the edges of numerous paired silanol and aluminol sheets that are exposed in the openings and the convex silanol faces on the exterior surfaces of adjacent MCS spheroids. If these weak attractions are overcome during slope failure, multiple, weakly attracted MCS spheroids can be separated from one another, and the prevailing repulsion between exterior MCS surfaces results in a low remolded shear strength, a high sensitivity, and a high propensity for flow sliding. The evidence indicates that the attraction-detachment model explains the high sensitivity and contributes to an improved understanding of the mechanisms of flow sliding in sensitive, altered tephras rich in spheroidal halloysite.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 43
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    In:  Supplement to: Kuhlmann, Jannis; Asioli, Alessandra; Trincardi, Fabio; Klügel, Andreas; Huhn, Katrin (2017): Landslide Frequency and Failure Mechanisms at NE Gela Basin (Strait of Sicily). Journal of Geophysical Research-Earth Surface, 122(11), 2223-2243, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JF004251
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: This study uses an integrated chronological framework from two MeBo boreholes and complementary ultra-high-resolution acoustic profiling in order to assess (1) the frequency of submarine landsliding at the continental margin of NE Gela Basin and (2) the associated mechanisms of failure. Accurate age control was achieved through absolute radiocarbon dating and indirect dating relying on isotope stratigraphic and micropaleontological reconstructions. A total of nine major slope failure events have been recognized that occurred within the last 87 kyr (~10 kyr return frequency), though there is evidence for additional syn-depositional, small-scaled transport processes of lower volume. The majority of recognized events occurred during conditions of sea level fall and lowstand. Preferential failure involves translational movement of mudflows along sub-horizontal key surfaces that are induced by sedimentological changes relating to pre-failure stratal architecture. Along with sequence-stratigraphic boundaries reflecting paleoenvironmental fluctuations, intercalated volcanoclastic layers are shown to be key to the basal confinement and lateral movement of these events. Another major predisposing factor in this area is given by rapid loading of fine-grained homogenous strata and successive generation of excess pore pressure, as expressed by several fluid escape structures. Recurrent failure, however, requires repeated generation of favorable conditions and seismic activity, though low in this area if compared to many other Mediterranean settings, is shown to represent a legitimate trigger mechanism.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 44
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    In:  Supplement to: Kucera, Michal; Silye, Lóránd; Weiner, Agnes K M; Darling, Kate F; Lübben, Birgit; Holzmann, Maria; Pawlowski, Jan; Schönfeld, Joachim; Morard, Raphael (2017): Caught in the act: Anatomy of an ongoing benthic-planktonic transition in a marine protist. Journal of Plankton Research, 39 (3), 436-449, https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/fbx018
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The transition from benthos to plankton requires multiple adaptations, yet so far it remains unclear how these are acquired in the course of the transition. To investigate this process, we analyzed the genetic diversity and distribution patterns of a group of foraminifera of the genus Bolivina with a tychopelagic mode of life (same species occurring both in benthos and plankton). We assembled a global sequence dataset for this group from single-cell DNA extractions and occurrences in metabarcodes from pelagic environmental samples. The pelagic sequences all cluster within a single monophyletic clade within Bolivina. This clade harbors three distinct genetic lineages, which are associated with incipient morphological differentiation. All lineages occur in plankton and benthos, but only one lineage shows no limit to offshore dispersal and has been shown to grow in the plankton. These observations indicate that the emergence of buoyancy regulation within the clade preceded the evolution of pelagic feeding and that the evolution of both traits was not channeled into a full transition into the plankton. We infer that in foraminifera, colonization of the planktonic niche may occur by sequential cooptation of independently acquired traits, with holoplanktonic species being recruited from tychopelagic ancestors.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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  • 45
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    In:  Supplement to: Liu, Xi-Ting; Rendle-Bühring, Rebecca; Kuhlmann, Holger; Li, Anchun (2017): Two phases of the Holocene East African Humid Period: Inferred from a high-resolution geochemical record off Tanzania. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 460, 123-134, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2016.12.016
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: During the Holocene, the most notably climatic change across the African continent is the African Humid Period (AHP), however the pace and primary forcing for this pluvial condition is still ambiguous, particularly in East Africa. We present a high-resolution marine sediment record off Tanzania to provide insights into the climatic conditions of inland East Africa during the Holocene. Major element ratios (i.e., log-ratios of Fe/Ca and Ti/Ca), derived from X-Ray Fluorescence scanning, have been employed to document variations in humidity in East Africa. Our results show that the AHP is represented by two humid phases: an intense humid period from the beginning of the Holocene to 8 ka (AHP I); and a moderate humid period spanning from 8 to 5.5 ka (AHP II). On the basis of our geochemical record and regime detection, the termination of the AHP initiated at 5.5 ka and ceased around 3.5 ka. Combined with other paleoclimatic records around East Africa, we suggest that the humid conditions in this region responded to Northern Hemisphere (NH) summer insolation. The AHP I and II might have been related to an eastward shift of the Congo Air Boundary and warmer conditions in the western Indian Ocean, which resulted in additional moisture being delivered from the Atlantic and Indian Oceans during the NH summer and autumn, respectively. We further note a drought event throughout East Africa north of 10°S around 8.2 ka, which may have been related to the southward migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone in response to the NH cooling event.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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  • 46
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    In:  Supplement to: Wenau, Stefan; Spieß, Volkhard; Pape, Thomas; Fekete, Noemi (2017): Controlling mechanisms of giant deep water pockmarks in the Lower Congo Basin. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 83, 140-157, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2017.02.030
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Effective seal breaching is a major contributor to methane seepage from deep sea sediments as it ensures the migration of gas and liquid hydrocarbons from buried reservoirs to the seafloor. This study shows two giant pockmarks on the lower slope of the Lower Congo Basin associated with salt-tectonic faulting and the buried Pliocene Congo deep sea fan. The progressive burial of Pliocene fan deposits results in mobilization of methane from gas hydrates at the Base of the Gas Hydrate Stability Zone which migrates through the hemipelagic seal towards the seafloor along salt-induced faults. Seal-breaching in this part of the Lower Congo Basin relies solely on salt-tectonic faulting contrasting with upslope seafloor seepage settings where polygonal faulting within the hemipelagic seal occurs. Dedicated 2D and 3D seismic and acoustic surveying allows the detailed reconstruction of the evolution of pockmarks which appear to have been active for the last 640 kyr. We also show indications that the modern seafloor depression formed due to reduced sedimentation in the vicinity of active seepage. The presented seafloor seepage features illustrate the mode of gas release from the Pliocene fan in the Lower Congo Basin, which contrasts with previously investigated seepage environments further upslope.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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  • 47
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    In:  Supplement to: Warratz, Grit; Henrich, Rüdiger; Voigt, Ines; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Kuhn, Gerhard; Lantzsch, Hendrik (2017): Deglacial changes in the strength of deep southern component water and sediment supply at the Argentine continental margin. Paleoceanography, 32(8), 796-812, https://doi.org/10.1002/2016PA003079
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The deep southern component water (SCW), comprising Lower Circumpolar Deep Water (LCDW) and Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW), is a major component of the global oceanic circulation. It has been suggested that the deep Atlantic water mass structure changed significantly during the last glacial/interglacial cycle. However, deep SCW source-proximal records remain sparse. Here we present three coherent deep SCW paleo-current records from the deep Argentine continental margin shedding light on deep-water circulation and SCW flow strength in the Southwest Atlantic since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Based on coherently increased sortable silt values, we propose enhanced deep SCW flow strength from 14 to 10 cal ka BP relative to the early deglacial/LGM and the Holocene. We propose a direct influence of deep northern component water (NCW) on deep SCW flow strength due to vertical narrowing of deep SCW spreading concurrent with a migration of the high-energetic LCDW/AABW interface occupying our core sites. We suggest a shoaled NCW until 13 cal ka BP, thereby providing space for deep SCW spreading that resulted in reduced carbonate preservation at our core sites. Only from 13 cal ka BP on, increased carbonate content indicates that NCW expanded vertically leading to a deeper NCW-SCW interface. This NCW expansion changed deep-water properties in the deep Southwest Atlantic causing enhanced carbonate preservation at our core sites. We further show that southern-sourced terrigenous sediment-supply to our core sites was uninterrupted since the LGM due to a persistent deep SCW flow leading to contourite drifts at the Argentine continental margin.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
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  • 48
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    In:  Supplement to: Tangunan, Deborah N; Baumann, Karl-Heinz; Pätzold, Jürgen; Henrich, Rüdiger; Kucera, Michal; De Pol-Holz, Ricardo; Groeneveld, Jeroen (2017): Insolation forcing of coccolithophore productivity in the western tropical Indian Ocean over the last two glacial-interglacial cycles. Paleoceanography, 32(7), 692-709, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017PA003102
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: We present a new coccolithophore productivity reconstruction spanning the last 300 ka in core GeoB12613-1 retrieved from the western tropical Indian Ocean (IO), an area that mainly derives its warm and oligotrophic surface waters from the eastern IO. Application of a calibrated assemblage-based productivity index indicates a reduction in estimated primary productivity (EPP) from 300 ka to the present, with reconstructed EPP values ranging from 91 to 246 g C/m2/yr. Coccolithophore assemblages and coccolith fraction Sr/Ca indicate three main phases of productivity change, with major changes at 160 and 46 ka. The productivity and water-column stratification records show both dominant precession and obliquity periodicities, which appear to control the paleoproductivity in the study area over the last two glacial-interglacial cycles. Shallowing of the thermocline due to strengthening of the trade winds in response to insolation maxima resulted to peaks in EPP. Comparison with the eastern IO productivity and stratification coccolithophore data reveals good correspondence with our records, indicating a strong tropical Pacific influence in our study area. Both of these records show high productivity from 300 ka to 160 ka, interpreted to be due to stronger Walker Circulation while the declining productivity from 160 ka to the present day is a consequence of its weakening intensity.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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  • 49
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    In:  Supplement to: Liu, Xi-Ting; Rendle-Bühring, Rebecca; Henrich, Rüdiger (2017): Geochemical composition of Tanzanian shelf sediments indicates Holocene climatic and sea-level changes. Quaternary Research, 87 (3), 442-454, https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2017.12
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: We present a high-resolution geochemical and grain-size record from a Holocene sediment core off the Pangani River mouth, Tanzania. Elemental ratios between biogenic elements and Al (i.e., Ca/Al, Mg/Al, and Sr/Al) are mainly influenced by terrigenous dilution on carbonate concentration and/or limitation of carbonate production as a result of variations in the supply of fine-grained terrigenous sediments of the Pangani River. Such elemental ratios increased significantly at the end of the mid-Holocene between 5 and 3.5 ka, demonstrating a gradual transition from the humid early and mid-Holocene to the arid late Holocene in East Africa. Among the elemental ratios between terrigenous elements and Al, Si/Al and K/Al ratios correlate to grain-size variation, indicating a change in sedimentation regime. Fe/Al and Ti/Al ratios show that the sediment source area has shifted from the terrestrial volcanic region of Tanzania (Fe, Ti rich) to the coastal and inner-shelf regions (Fe, Ti poor) around 7.5 ka, in response to arid climate and high sea level. Our geochemical results correspond with a sea-surface temperature record derived from the same sediment core, indicating that the end of the East African Humid Period could have been gradual and related to the cooling water in the western Indian Ocean.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 50
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    In:  Supplement to: Bernhardt, Anne; Schwanghart, Wolfgang; Hebbeln, Dierk; Stuut, Jan-Berend W; Strecker, Manfred R (2017): Immediate propagation of deglacial environmental change to deep-marine turbidite systems along the Chile convergent margin. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 473, 190-204, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2017.05.017
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Understanding how Earth-surface processes respond to past climatic perturbations is crucial for making informed predictions about future impacts of climate change on sediment fluxes. Sedimentary records provide the archives for inferring these processes, but their interpretation is compromised by our incomplete understanding of how sediment-routing systems respond to millennial-scale climate cycles. We analyzed seven sediment cores recovered from marine turbidite depositional sites along the Chile continental margin. The sites span a pronounced arid-to-humid gradient with variable relief and related sediment connectivity of terrestrial and marine environments. These sites allowed us to study event-related depositional processes in different climatic and geomorphic settings from the Last Glacial Maximum to the present day. The three sites reveal a steep decline of turbidite deposition during deglaciation. High rates of sea-level rise postdate the decline in turbidite deposition. Comparison with paleoclimate proxies documents that the spatio-temporal sedimentary pattern rather mirrors the deglacial humidity decrease and concomitant warming with no resolvable lag times. Our results let us infer that declining deglacial humidity decreased fluvial sediment supply. This signal propagated rapidly through the highly connected systems into the marine sink in north-central Chile. In contrast, in south-central Chile, connectivity between the Andean erosional zone and the fluvial transfer zone probably decreased abruptly by sediment trapping in piedmont lakes related to deglaciation, resulting in a sudden decrease of sediment supply to the ocean. Additionally, reduced moisture supply may have contributed to the rapid decline of turbidite deposition. These different causes result in similar depositional patterns in the marine sinks. We conclude that turbiditic strata may constitute reliable recorders of climate change across a wide range of climatic zones and geomorphic conditions. However, the underlying causes for similar signal manifestations in the sinks may differ, ranging from maintained high system connectivity to abrupt connectivity loss.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 51
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    In:  Supplement to: Dupont, Lydie M; Schefuß, Enno (2018): The roles of fire in Holocene ecosystem changes of West Africa. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 481, 255-263, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2017.10.049
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The climate changes associated with the Holocene wet phase in the Sahara, the African Humid Period (AHP), are subject to ongoing debate discussing interactions between climate and vegetation and possible feedbacks between vegetation, albedo, desertification, and dust. However, very little attention has been given to the role of fire in shaping the land cover, although in is known that fires are important in the formation and consolidation of the African savanna. To fill this gap, we investigated the interaction between precipitation changes, vegetation shifts, and fire occurrence in West Africa by combining stable isotope measurements on plant waxes with pollen and micro-charcoal counts of marine sediments retrieved offshore of Cape Blanc. Our study focusses on the roles of fire at the dry limit of savanna during the Holocene evolution of precipitation changes indicating that the impact of fire during a relative wet climate differs from that during aridification. During the humid early Holocene, increased savanna extension and diversification ran parallel to increased fire occurrence. In contrast, after aridification of northern Africa started at the end of the AHP, a maximum in fire occurrence correlated with a deterioration of the vegetation promoting desertification.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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  • 52
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    In:  Supplement to: Lantzsch, Hendrik; Hanebuth, Till J J; Horry, Jan; Grave, Marina; Rebesco, Michele; Schwenk, Tilmann (2017): Deglacial to Holocene history of ice-sheet retreat and bottom current strength on the western Barents Sea shelf. Quaternary Science Reviews, 173, 40-57, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.08.016
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: High-resolution sediment echosounder data combined with radiocarbon-dated sediment cores allowed us to reconstruct the Late Quaternary stratigraphic architecture of the Kveithola Trough and surrounding Spitsbergenbanken. The deposits display the successive deglacial retreat of the Svalbard-Barents Sea Ice Sheet. Basal subglacial till indicates that the grounded ice sheet covered both bank and trough during the Late Weichselian. A glaciomarine blanket inside the trough coinciding with laminated plumites on the bank formed during the initial ice-melting phase from at least 16.1 to 13.5 cal ka BP in close proximity to the ice margin. After the establishment of open-marine conditions at around 13.5 cal ka BP, a sediment drift developed in the confined setting of the Kveithola Trough, contemporary with crudely laminated mud, an overlying lag deposit, and modern bioclastic-rich sand on Spitsbergenbanken. The Kveithola Drift shows a remarkable grain-size coarsening from the moat towards the southern flank of the trough. This trend contradicts the concept of a separated drift (which would imply coarser grain sizes in proximity of the moat) and indicates that the southern bank is the main sediment source for the coarse material building up the Kveithola Drift. This depocenter represents, therefore, a yet undescribed combination of off-bank wedge and confined drift. Although the deposits inside Kveithola Trough and on Spitsbergenbanken display different depocenter geometries, time-equivalent grain-size changes imply a region-wide sediment-dynamic connection. We thus relate a phase of coarsest sediment supply (8.8-6.3 cal ka BP) to an increase in bottom current strength, which might be related to a stronger Atlantic Water inflow from the Southeast across the bank leading to winnowing and off-bank export of sandy sediments.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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  • 53
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    In:  Supplement to: Wenau, Stefan; Spieß, Volkhard (2018): Active Seafloor Seepage Along Hydraulic Fractures Connected to Lateral Stress From Salt-Related Rafting: Regab Pockmark, Congo Fan. Active seafloor seepage along hydraulic fractures connected to lateral stress from salt-related rafting - Regab Pockmark, Congo Fan, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 123(5), 3301-3319, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JB015006
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Seafloor seepage is a widespread phenomenon within salt‐influenced basins as the deformation provides pathways for hydrocarbons to reach the seafloor. However, only minor attention has been given to the distal parts of such systems where the impact of salt‐tectonic deformation is relatively unpronounced. The stress put on the sedimentary column by moving salt on a continental margin may influence fluid flow systems even outside of the salt province. This stress may lead to overpressure formation within reservoirs and determine the orientation of overpressure‐induced fractures. Seepage in the Congo Fan has been discovered in such a distal position at the Regab pockmark, about 35 km west of the salt front and its geology and biology have been studied extensively in recent years. We present high‐resolution multichannel seismic data from the Regab pockmark that reveal the underlying migration pathways from a buried channel flank 300 mbsf to the seafloor via hydraulic fractures in the sealing overburden. Local doming of the reservoir and the remobilization and uplift of sedimentary strata along the migration pathways are interpreted as the result of overpressure within the reservoir. The orientation of the hydraulic fractures is WSW‐ENE and the fracture outline corresponds to the area of most intense seepage activity within the seafloor pockmark. Along with a similar orientation of other fractures in the vicinity, we propose that this alignment is due to the stress imposed on the sedimentary column in the fan by the seaward moving salt and rafting sedimentary packages of the salt province further east.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 54
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    In:  Supplement to: De Vleeschouwer, David; Da Silva, Anne-Christine; Sinnesael, Matthias; Chen, Daizhao; Day, James E; Whalen, Michael T; Guo, Zenghui; Claeys, Philippe (2017): Timing and pacing of the Late Devonian mass extinction event regulated by eccentricity and obliquity. Nature Communications, 8, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02407-1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The Late Devonian envelops one of Earth's big five mass extinction events at the Frasnian-Famennian boundary (374 Ma). Environmental change across the extinction severely affected Devonian reef-builders, besides many other forms of marine life. Yet, cause-and-effect chains leading to the extinction remain poorly constrained as Late Devonian stratigraphy is poorly resolved, compared to younger cataclysmic intervals. In this study we present a global orbitally calibrated chronology across this momentous interval, applying cyclostratigraphic techniques. Our timescale stipulates that 600 kyr separate the lower and upper Kellwasser positive d13C excursions. The latter excursion is paced by obliquity and is therein similar to Mesozoic intervals of environmental upheaval, like the Cretaceous Ocean-Anoxic-Event-2 (OAE-2). This obliquity signature implies coincidence with a minimum of the 2.4 Myr eccentricity cycle, during which obliquity prevails over precession, and highlights the decisive role of astronomically forced "Milankovitch" climate change in timing and pacing the Late Devonian mass extinction.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 17 datasets
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  • 55
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    In:  Supplement to: Jackson, Rebecca; Carlson, Anders Eskil; Hillaire-Marcel, Claude; Wacker, Lukas; Vogt, Christoph; Kucera, Michal (2017): Asynchronous instability of the North American-Arctic and Greenland ice sheets during the last deglaciation. Quaternary Science Reviews, 164, 140-153, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.03.020
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The chronology of deglacial meltwater pulses from the Laurentide Ice Sheet is well documented. However, the deglacial history of the North American-Arctic (north-eastern Laurentide and Innuitian) and western Greenland ice sheets draining into the Labrador Sea via Baffin Bay is less well constrained. Here we present new high-resolution, radiocarbon-dated records from the central Baffin Bay spanning ~17 to 10 kyr BP and documenting the full deglacial history of Baffin Bay. Sedimentological and geochemical data confirm the presence of two periods of enhanced detrital carbonate delivery, termed Baffin Bay Detrital Carbonate Events (BBDCs). These events are dated to ~14.2-13.7 kyr BP and ~12.7-11 kyr BP. They are synchronous across Baffin Bay and their mineralogical signature indicates a common source of detrital carbonate from northern Baffin Bay. The first event, BBDC 1, postdates Heinrich Event 1 and the second event, BBDC 0, predates the recently revised timing of Heinrich Event 0. The onset of the BBDC events appears not to be systematically linked to Greenland temperature change as they occur during both interstadial and stadial periods. This indicates that deglaciation of North American-Arctic and western Greenland ice sheets with the associated iceberg and meltwater discharge were decoupled from the dominant North Atlantic climate mode, where iceberg discharge events from the Laurentide Ice Sheet occurred during stadial periods.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 56
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    In:  Supplement to: Pop Ristova, Petra; Pichler, Thomas; Friedrich, Michael W; Bühring, Solveig I (2017): Bacterial diversity and biogeochemistry of two marine shallow-water hydrothermal systems off Dominica (Lesser Antilles). Frontiers in Microbiology, 8, https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.02400
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Shallow-water hydrothermal systems represent extreme environments with unique biogeochemistry and high biological productivity, at which autotrophic microorganisms use both light and chemical energy for the production of biomass. Microbial communities of these ecosystems are metabolically diverse and possess the capacity to transform a large range of chemical compounds. Yet, little is known about their diversity or factors shaping their structure or how they compare to coastal sediments not impacted by hydrothermalism. To this end, we have used automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (ARISA) and high-throughput Illumina sequencing combined with porewater geochemical analysis to investigate microbial communities along geochemical gradients in two shallow-water hydrothermal systems off the island of Dominica (Lesser Antilles). At both sites, venting of hydrothermal fluids substantially altered the porewater geochemistry by enriching it with silica, iron and dissolved inorganic carbon, resulting in island-like habitats with distinct biogeochemistry. The magnitude of fluid flow and difference in sediment grain size, which impedes mixing of the fluids with seawater, were correlated with the observed differences in the porewater geochemistry between the two sites. Concomitantly, individual sites harbored microbial communities with a significantly different community structure. These differences could be statistically linked to variations in the porewater geochemistry and the hydrothermal fluids. The two shallow-water hydrothermal systems of Dominica harbored bacterial communities with high taxonomical and metabolic diversity, predominated by heterotrophic microorganisms associated with the Gammaproteobacterial genera Pseudomonas and Pseudoalteromonas, indicating the importance of heterotrophic processes. Overall, this study shows that shallow-water hydrothermal systems contribute substantially to the biogeochemical heterogeneity and bacterial diversity of coastal sediments.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 57
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    In:  Supplement to: Loher, Markus; Pape, Thomas; Marcon, Yann; Römer, Miriam; Wintersteller, Paul; Praeg, Daniel; Torres, Marta E; Sahling, Heiko; Bohrmann, Gerhard (2018): Mud extrusion and ring-fault gas seepage – upward branching fluid discharge at a deep-sea mud volcano. Scientific Reports, 8, 6275, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24689-1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Submarine mud volcanoes release sediments and gas-rich fluids at the seafloor via deeply-rooted plumbing systems that remain poorly understood. Here the functioning of Venere mud volcano, on the Calabrian accretionary prism in ~1,600 m water depth is investigated, based on multi-parameter hydroacoustic and visual seafloor data obtained using ship-borne methods, ROVs, and AUVs. Two seepage domains are recognized: mud breccia extrusion from a summit, and hydrocarbon venting from peripheral sites, hosting chemosynthetic ecosystems and authigenic carbonates indicative of long-term seepage. Pore fluids in freshly extruded mud breccia (up to 13 °C warmer than background sediments) contained methane concentrations exceeding saturation by 2.7 times and chloride concentrations up to five times lower than ambient seawater. Gas analyses indicate an underlying thermogenic hydrocarbon source with potential admixture of microbial methane during migration along ring faults to the peripheral sites. The gas and pore water analyses point to fluids sourced deep (〉3 km) below Venere mud volcano. An upward-branching plumbing system is proposed to account for co-existing mud breccia extrusion and gas seepage via multiple surface vents that influence the distribution of seafloor ecosystems. This model of mud volcanism implies that methane-rich fluids may be released during prolonged phases of moderate activity.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 26 datasets
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The southern Tuaheni Landslide Complex (TLC) at the Hikurangi subduction margin displays distinctive morphological features along its distribution over the Tuaheni slope offshore Gisborne, New Zealand. The datasets provide geophysical (MSCL) and geochemical (XRF) core logs from a gravity core transect that systematically samples surficial sediments from the source area to the toe of this landslide complex.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 59
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    In:  Supplement to: Grimmer, Friederike; Dupont, Lydie M; Lamy, Frank; Jung, Gerlinde; González, Catalina; Wefer, Gerold (2018): Early Pliocene vegetation and hydrology changes in western equatorial South America. Climate of the Past, 14(11), 1739-1754, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-14-1739-2018
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Vegetation and climate change in nortwestern South America were studied using pollen analysis in combination with XRF scanning on marine sediments of ODP Site 1239 from the East Equatorial Pacific comprising the interval between 4.7 and 4.2 Ma. The study site is sensitive to latitudinal shifts of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) shifts insofar as a southward (northward) shift would result in increased (decreased) precipitation over Ecuador. The presented pollen record (46 samples) comprises representatives from five ecological groups: lowland rainforest, lower montane forest, upper montane forest, páramo, and broad range taxa. A broad tropical rainforest coverage persisted in the study area throughout the early Pliocene, without significant open vegetation below the forest line. Between 4.7 and 4.42 Ma, humidity increases, reaching its peak around 4.42 Ma, and slightly decreasing again afterwards. The stable, permanently humid conditions are rather in agreement with paleoceanographic data indicating a southward shift of the ITCZ, possibly in response to closure of the Central American Seaway. The presence of páramo vegetation indicates that the Western Cordillera of the northern Andes had already reached considerable elevation by the early Pliocene. The trend in iron/potassium-ratios (Fe/K) is similar to the pattern of humidity inferred from the pollen spectrum, showing the highest values around 4.46 Ma, thus supporting the hydrological interpretation of the pollen record.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 60
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    In:  Supplement to: Badesab, Firoz Kadar; von Dobeneck, Tilo; Briggs, Roger M; Bryan, Karin R; Just, Janna; Müller, Hendrik (2017): Sediment dynamics of an artificially deepened mesotidal coastal lagoon: An environmental magnetic investigation of Tauranga Harbour, New Zealand. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 194, 240-251, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2017.06.017
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Tauranga Harbour, New Zealand's largest barrier-enclosed coastal lagoon, comprises two sub-basins with separate catchments, inlets and tidal channel systems. This study sets out to assess and investigate the sediment dispersal system of Tauranga Harbour using standard environmental magnetic and sedimentological methods. Compilations of rock magnetic and grain size data of surficial sediments collected from inflowing rivers, various estuarine environments (estuaries, tidal flats and tidal channels) and the adjacent nearshore mirror the net and differential sediment fluxes into and through the two sub-basins of this lagoon. For all studied depositional environments, the magnetogranulometric ratios SIRM/k and ARM/k are positively correlated with magnetic mineral content (SIRM, ARM, X) in the sense that larger magnetic particles are associated with higher magnetic enrichment. Grain-size analyses show that magnetic enrichment during particle transport and deposition can result from grain-size as well as from grain-density fractionation. The periodically changing accumulation/erosion conditions provide for a selective retention of specific grain sizes and an enhancement of the heavier magnetic mineral particles. Magnetic crystal size and clastic grain size correlate poorly over the whole study area, but group within similar depositional environments. Coarser magnetic and clastic grain sizes and higher magnetite enrichment in the southern sub-basin can be reconciled with episodic flood runoff of the Wairoa River and a much larger, artificially deepened southern tidal inlet which likely enables higher tidal current velocities. Our approach of combining magnetic and clastic grain-size could be successfully implemented to establish a conceptual model of sediment dynamics and gravitational sorting within Tauranga Harbour.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 140.7 kBytes
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  • 61
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    In:  Supplement to: Elvert, Marcus; Pohlman, John W; Becker, Kevin W; Gaglioti, Benjamin V; Hinrichs, Kai-Uwe; Wooller, Matthew J (2016): Methane turnover and environmental change from Holocene lipid biomarker records in a thermokarst lake in Arctic Alaska. The Holocene, 26(11), 1766-1777, https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683616645942
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: Arctic lakes and wetlands contribute a substantial amount of methane to the contemporary atmosphere, yet profound knowledge gaps remain regarding the intensity and climatic control of past methane emissions from this source. In this study, we reconstruct methane turnover and environmental conditions, including estimates of mean annual and summer temperature, from a thermokarst lake (Lake Qalluuraq) on the Arctic Coastal Plain of northern Alaska for the Holocene by using source-specific lipid biomarkers preserved in a radiocarbon-dated sediment core. Our results document a more prominent role for methane in the carbon cycle when the lake basin was an emergent fen habitat between ~12,300 and ~10,000 cal yr BP, a time period closely coinciding with the Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM) in North Alaska. Enhanced methane turnover was stimulated by relatively warm temperatures, increased moisture, nutrient supply, and primary productivity. After ~10,000 cal yr BP, a thermokarst lake with abundant submerged mosses evolved, and through the mid-Holocene temperatures were approximately 3°C cooler. Under these conditions, organic matter decomposition was attenuated, which facilitated the accumulation of submerged mosses within a shallower Lake Qalluuraq. Reduced methane assimilation into biomass during the mid-Holocene suggests that thermokarst lakes are carbon sinks during cold periods. In the late-Holocene from ~2700 cal yr BP to the most recent time, however, temperatures and carbon deposition rose and methane oxidation intensified, indicating that more rapid organic matter decomposition and enhanced methane production could amplify climate feedback via potential methane emissions in the future.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 62
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    In:  Supplement to: Portilho-Ramos, Rodrigo Costa; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Zhang, Yancheng; Mulitza, Stefan; Kucera, Michal; Siccha, Michael; Prange, Matthias; Paul, André (2017): Coupling of equatorial Atlantic surface stratification to glacial shifts in the tropical rainbelt. Scientific Reports, 7(1), https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-01629-z
    Publication Date: 2023-06-15
    Description: The modern state of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation promotes a northerly maximum of tropical rainfall associated with the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). For continental regions, abrupt millennial-scale meridional shifts of this rainbelt are well documented, but the behavior of its oceanic counterpart is unclear due the lack of a robust proxy and high temporal resolution records. Here we show that the Atlantic ITCZ leaves a distinct signature in planktonic foraminifera assemblages. We applied this proxy to investigate the history of the Atlantic ITCZ for the last 30,000 years based on two high temporal resolution records from the western Atlantic Ocean. Our reconstruction indicates that the shallowest mixed layer associated with the Atlantic ITCZ unambiguously shifted meridionally in response to changes in the strength of the Atlantic meridional overturning with a southward displacement during Heinrich Stadials 2-1 and the Younger Dryas. We conclude that the Atlantic ITCZ was located at ca. 1°S (ca. 5° to the south of its modern annual mean position) during Heinrich Stadial 1. This supports a previous hypothesis, which postulates a southern hemisphere position of the oceanic ITCZ during climatic states with substantially reduced or absent cross-equatorial oceanic meridional heat transport.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 63
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    In:  Supplement to: Pittauer, Daniela; Roos, Per; Qiao, Jixin; Geibert, Walter; Elvert, Marcus; Fischer, Helmut W (2018): Pacific Proving Grounds radioisotope imprint in the Philippine Sea sediments. Journal of Environmental Radioactivity, 186, 131-141, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvrad.2017.06.021
    Publication Date: 2023-06-08
    Description: Radionuclide concentrations were studied in sediment cores taken at the continental slope of the Philippine Sea off Mindanao Island in the equatorial Western Pacific. High resolution deposition records of anthropogenic radionuclides were collected at this site. Excess 210Pb together with excess 228Th and anthropogenic radionuclides provided information about accumulation rates. Concentrations of Am and Pu isotopes were detected by gamma spectrometry, alpha spectrometry and ICP-MS. The Pu ratios indicate a high portion (minimum of 60%) of Pu from the Pacific Proving Grounds (PPG). This implies that the transport of PPG derived plutonium with the Mindanao Current southward is similarly effective as the previously known transport towards the north with the Kuroshio Current. The record is compared to other studies from northwest Pacific marginal seas and Lombok basin in the Indonesian Archipelago. The sediment core top at site GeoB17409 was found to contain a 6 cm thick layer dominated by terrestrial organic matter, which was interpreted as a result of the 2012 Typhoon Pablo-related fast deposition.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 64
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    In:  Supplement to: Mulitza, Stefan; Schefuß, Enno; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Lippold, Jörg; Wichmann, David; Antz, Benny; Mackensen, Andreas; Paul, André; Prange, Matthias; Rehfeld, Kira; Werner, Martin; Bickert, Torsten; Frank, Norbert; Kuhnert, Henning; Lynch-Stieglitz, Jean; Portilho-Ramos, Rodrigo Costa; Sawakuchi, André Oliveira; Schulz, Michael; Schwenk, Tilmann; Tiedemann, Ralf; Vahlenkamp, Maximilian; Zhang, Yancheng (2017): Synchronous and proportional deglacial changes in Atlantic meridional overturning and northeast Brazilian precipitation. Paleoceanography, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017PA003084
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Changes in heat transport associated with fluctuations in the strength of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) are widely considered to affect the position of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), but the temporal immediacy of this teleconnection has to date not been resolved. Based on a high-resolution marine sediment sequence over the last deglaciation, we provide evidence for a synchronous and near-linear link between changes in the Atlantic interhemispheric sea surface temperature difference and continental precipitation over northeast Brazil. The tight coupling between AMOC strength, sea surface temperature difference, and precipitation changes over northeast Brazil unambiguously points to a rapid and proportional adjustment of the ITCZ location to past changes in the Atlantic meridional heat transport.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 11 datasets
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  • 65
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    In:  Supplement to: Pittauer, Daniela; Tims, Stephen G; Froehlich, Michaela B; Fifield, L Keith; Wallner, Anton; McNeil, Steven D; Fischer, Helmut W (2017): Continuous transport of Pacific-derived anthropogenic radionuclides towards the Indian Ocean. Scientific Reports, 7, 44679, https://doi.org/10.1038/srep44679
    Publication Date: 2023-06-08
    Description: Unusually high concentrations of americium and plutonium have been observed in a sediment core collected from the eastern Lombok Basin between Sumba and Sumbawa Islands in the Indonesian Archipelago. Gamma spectrometry and accelerator mass spectrometry data together with radiometric dating of the core provide a high-resolution record of ongoing deposition of anthropogenic radionuclides. A plutonium signature characteristic of the Pacific Proving Grounds (PPG) dominates in the first two decades after the start of the high yield atmospheric tests in 1950's. Approximately 40?70% of plutonium at this site in the post 1970 period originates from the PPG. This sediment record of transuranic isotopes deposition over the last 55 years provides evidence for the continuous long-distance transport of particle-reactive radionuclides from the Pacific Ocean towards the Indian Ocean.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 66
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    In:  Supplement to: Voigt, Ines; Cruz, Anna Paula Soares; Mulitza, Stefan; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Mackensen, Andreas; Lippold, Jörg; Antz, Benny; Zabel, Matthias; Zhang, Yancheng; Barbosa, Catia F; Tisserand, Amandine (2017): Variability in mid-depth ventilation of the western Atlantic Ocean during the last deglaciation. Paleoceanography, 32(9), 948-965, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017PA003095
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Negative stable carbon isotopic excursions have been observed throughout most of the mid-depth (~1000-3000m) Atlantic Ocean during Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1) and the Younger Dryas (YD). Although there is agreement that these mid-depth excursions were in some way associated with a slowdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), there is still no consensus on the precise mechanism(s). Here, we present benthic stable carbon and oxygen isotopic (d13C and d18O) records from five cores from the western equatorial Atlantic (WEA). Together with published benthic isotopic records from nearby cores, we produced a WEA depth transect (~800-2500m). We compare HS1 and YD data from this transect with data from previously published North- and South Atlantic cores and demonstrate that the largest negative d13C excursions occurred in the WEA during these times. Moreover, our benthic d18O records require the presence of two water masses flowing from the Southern Ocean, bisected by a Northern Component Water (NCW). Given that d18O is a conservative water mass tracer, we suggest that d13C was decoupled from water mass composition and do not correspond to simple alternations between northern and southern sourced waters. Instead, d13C behaved non-conservatively during HS1 and the YD. Consistently with our new 231Pa/230Th record from the WEA transect, that allowed the reconstruction of AMOC strength, we hypothesize that the negative d13C excursions reflect an increase in the residence time of NCW in response to a weakened AMOC, allowing for a marked accumulation of 13C-depleted respired carbon at the mid-depth WEA.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 12 datasets
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  • 67
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    In:  Supplement to: Friese, Carmen A; van Hateren, Johannes Albert; Vogt, Christoph; Fischer, Gerhard; Stuut, Jan-Berend W (2017): Seasonal provenance changes in present-day Saharan dust collected in and off Mauritania. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 17(16), 10163-10193, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2017-131
    Publication Date: 2023-10-25
    Description: Saharan dust has a crucial influence on the earth climate system and its emission, transport and deposition are intimately related to, e.g., wind speed, precipitation, temperature and vegetation cover. The alteration in the physical and chemical properties of Saharan dust due to environmental changes is often used to reconstruct the climate of the past. However, to better interpret possible climate changes the dust source regions need to be known. By analysing the mineralogical composition of transported or deposited dust, potential dust source areas can be inferred. Summer dust transport off northwest Africa occurs in the Saharan air layer (SAL). In continental dust source areas, dust is also transported in the SAL; however, the predominant dust input occurs from nearby dust sources with the low-level trade winds. Hence, the source regions and related mineralogical tracers differ with season and sampling location. To test this, dust collected in traps onshore and in oceanic sediment traps off Mauritania during 2013 to 2015 was analysed. Meteorological data, particle-size distributions, back-trajectory and mineralogical analyses were compared to derive the dust provenance and dispersal. For the onshore dust samples, the source regions varied according to the seasonal changes in trade-wind direction. Gibbsite and dolomite indicated a Western Saharan and local source during summer, while chlorite, serpentine and rutile indicated a source in Mauritania and Mali during winter. In contrast, for the samples that were collected offshore, dust sources varied according to the seasonal change in the dust transporting air layer. In summer, dust was transported in the SAL from Mauritania, Mali and Libya as indicated by ferroglaucophane and zeolite. In winter, dust was transported with the trades from Western Sahara as indicated by, e.g., fluellite.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 13 datasets
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  • 68
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    In:  Supplement to: Gomez-Saez, Gonzalo V; Niggemann, Jutta; Dittmar, Thorsten; Pohlabeln, Anika M; Lang, Susan Q; Noowong, Ann; Pichler, Thomas; Wörmer, Lars; Bühring, Solveig I (2016): Molecular evidence for abiotic sulfurization of dissolved organic matter in marine shallow hydrothermal systems. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 190, 35-52, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2016.06.027
    Publication Date: 2023-08-10
    Description: Shallow submarine hydrothermal systems are extreme environments with strong redox gradients at the interface of hot, reduced fluids and cold, oxygenated seawater. Hydrothermal fluids are often depleted in sulfate when compared to surrounding seawater and can contain high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide (H2S). It is well known that sulfur in its various oxidation states plays an important role in processing and transformation of organic matter. However, the formation and the reactivity of dissolved organic sulfur (DOS) in the water column at hydrothermal systems are so far not well understood. We investigated DOS dynamics and its relation to the physicochemical environment by studying the molecular composition of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in three contrasting shallow hydrothermal systems off Milos (Eastern Mediterranean), Dominica (Caribbean Sea) and Iceland (North Atlantic). We used ultra-high resolution Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR-MS) to characterize the DOM on a molecular level. The molecular information was complemented with general geochemical data, quantitative dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and DOS analyses as well as isotopic measurements (d2H, d18O and F14C). In contrast to the predominantly meteoric fluids from Dominica and Iceland, hydrothermal fluids from Milos were mainly fed by recirculating seawater. The hydrothermal fluids from Milos were enriched in H2S and DOS, as indicated by high DOS/DOC ratios and by the fact that 〉90% of all assigned DOM formulas that were exclusively present in the fluids contained sulfur. In all three systems, DOS from hydrothermal fluids had on average lower O/C ratios (0.26?0.34) than surrounding surface seawater DOS (0.45?0.52), suggesting shallow hydrothermal systems as a source of reduced DOS, which will likely get oxidized upon contact with oxygenated seawater. Evaluation of hypothetical sulfurization reactions suggests DOM reduction and sulfurization during seawater recirculation in Milos seafloor. The four most effective potential sulfurization reactions were those exchanging an O atom by one S atom in the formula or the equivalent + H2S reaction, correspondingly exchanging H2O, H2 and/or O2 by a H2S molecule. Our study reveals novel insights into DOS dynamics in marine hydrothermal environments and provides a conceptual framework for molecular-scale mechanisms in organic sulfur geochemistry.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 69
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    In:  Supplement to: Wienberg, Claudia; Titschack, Jürgen; Freiwald, André; Frank, Norbert; Lundälv, Tomas; Taviani, Marco; Beuck, Lydia; Schröder-Ritzrau, Andrea; Krengel, Thomas; Hebbeln, Dierk (2018): The giant Mauritanian cold-water coral mound province: Oxygen control on coral mound formation. Quaternary Science Reviews, 185, 135-152, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.02.012
    Publication Date: 2023-09-21
    Description: The largest coherent cold-water coral (CWC) mound province in the Atlantic Ocean exists along the Mauritanian margin, where up to 100 m high mounds extend over a distance of ~400 km, arranged in two slope-parallel chains in 400-550 m water depth. Additionally, CWCs are present in the numerous submarine canyons with isolated coral mounds being developed on some canyon flanks. Seventy-seven Uranium-series coral ages were assessed to elucidate the timing of CWC colonisation and coral mound development along the Mauritanian margin for the last ~120,000 years. Our results show that CWCs were present on the mounds during the Last Interglacial, though in low numbers corresponding to coral mound aggradation rates of 16 cm kyr**-1. Most prolific periods for CWC growth are identified for the last glacial and deglaciation, resulting in enhanced mound aggradation (〉1000 cm kyr**-1), before mound formation stagnated along the entire margin with the onset of the Holocene. Until today, the Mauritanian mounds are in a dormant state with only scarce CWC growth. In the canyons, live CWCs are abundant since the Late Holocene at least. Thus, the canyons may serve as a refuge to CWCs potentially enabling the observed modest re-colonisation pulse on the mounds along the open slope. The timing and rate of the pre-Holocene coral mound aggradation, and the cessation of mound formation varied between the individual mounds, which was likely the consequence of vertical/lateral changes in water mass structure that placed the mounds near or out of oxygen-depleted waters, respectively.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
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    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 70
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 28 data points
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  • 71
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    In:  Supplement to: Nelson, Daniel B; Knohl, Alexander; Sachse, Dirk; Schefuß, Enno; Kahmen, Ansgar (2017): Sources and abundances of leaf waxes in aerosols in central Europe. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 198, 299-314, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2016.11.018
    Publication Date: 2024-02-17
    Description: Atmospheric transport is an understudied mechanism for leaf wax hydrogen isotope applications that contributes to mobilizing and depositing these compounds on the surface of the Earth. While previous efforts have identified the importance of atmospheric leaf wax deposition in remote marine locations, the processes are not well constrained on land in temperate latitudes where lakes are common and sedimentary leaf wax hydrogen isotope values are an attractive tool for understanding past precipitation changes. This work presents results from a field study that was conducted in 2010 and 2011 at Hainich National Park, Germany in order to evaluate the quantity and sources of leaf waxes in the atmosphere. Aerosols were sam- pled at approximately weekly intervals inside the forest canopy, and n-alkane distributions and hydrogen isotope values were compared with those from major tree species surrounding the sampling site. Despite sampling in what was expected to be a major production center, the distribution and hydrogen isotope values of atmospheric n-alkanes bore little resemblance to those of the local vegetation. Comparison with local meteorological data and to 10-day and 36-h back air mass trajectories indicated shifting effects of winds and temperature, and that mesoscale transport processes were more important than long- range mechanisms. Back trajectories also highlighted source effects, with easterly winds coinciding with relatively lower leaf wax hydrogen isotope values from more continental regions. These results suggest that leaf wax aerosols average over spatial scales that exceed typical surface catchment areas for small lake systems, even in forested areas, yet that the area over which these compounds are derived is still relatively regional. Depositional fluxes were also estimated in order to assess the potential importance of atmospheric transport to sedimentary archives. Although difficult to constrain, these estimates suggest that atmospheric deposition may be non-negligible for lake systems in cases where inputs from rivers or surface runoff are limited. Together, these observations provide new insights on how leaf waxes from different sources are integrated during aeolian transport and the spatial scales over which these processes occur.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 29 data points
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 31 data points
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 28 data points
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 27 data points
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
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    In:  Meteorologisches Observatorium Potsdam
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Keywords: Baseline Surface Radiation Network; Brewer Ozone Spectrophotometer, Sci-Tec; BSRN; DATE/TIME; Germany; LIN; Lindenberg; Monitoring station; MONS; Ozone total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 29 data points
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