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  • Other Sources  (54)
  • Kluwer  (27)
  • Pergamon Press  (22)
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
  • American Chemical Society (ACS)
  • 1990-1994  (54)
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  • 1
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Professional Paper, Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 54, no. 16, pp. 121-142, (ISBN 1-4020-1729-4)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Fault zone ; Geol. aspects ; Review article
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  • 2
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 54, no. 1, pp. 200-222, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Tectonics ; Stress ; Seismicity ; EUROPROBE (Geol. and Geophys. in eastern Europe) ; Review article
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  • 3
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 54, no. 16, pp. 251-263, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Tectonics ; Fault zone ; Review article
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  • 4
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 22, no. 16, pp. 1-27, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Rheology ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Tectonics ; Review article
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  • 5
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    Kluwer
    In:  Norwell, Kluwer, vol. 6, no. 3, pp. 2-203, (ISBN 0-7923-5692-6)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Statistical investigations ; Textbook of geophysics ; Textbook of geology ; Data analysis / ~ processing
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  • 6
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 37, pp. 53-100, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Stress ; Geol. aspects ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Fault zone ; Review article
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  • 7
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Professional Paper, Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 65, no. 16, pp. 101-120, (ISBN 1-4020-1729-4)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Stress ; Geol. aspects ; cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Review article
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  • 8
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Professional Paper, Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 4, no. 231, pp. 43-52, (ISBN 1-4020-1729-4)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Rock mechanics ; Fracture ; Review article
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  • 9
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Professional Paper, Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 24, no. 16, pp. 264-288, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Review article
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  • 10
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Continental Deformation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 65, no. 16, pp. 370-409, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1994
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Tectonics ; Stress ; Review article
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2017-01-03
    Description: The diadinoxanthin cycle (DD-cycle) in chromophyte algae involves the interconversion of two carotenoids, diadinoxanthin (DD) and diatoxanthin (DT). We investigated the kinetics of light-induced DD-cycling in the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum and its role in dissipating excess excitation energy in PS II. Within 15 min following an increase in irradiance, DT increased and was accompanied by a stoichiometric decrease in DD. This reaction was completely blocked by dithiothreitol (DTT). A second, time-dependent, increase in DT was detected ∼ 20 min after the light shift without a concomitant decrease in DD. DT accumulation from both processes was correlated with increases in non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. Stern-Volmer analyses suggests that changes in non-photochemical quenching resulted from changes in thermal dissipation in the PS II antenna and in the reaction center. The increase in non-photochemical quenching was correlated with a small decrease in the effective absorption cross section of PS II. Model calculations suggest however that the changes in cross section are not sufficiently large to significantly reduce multiple excitation of the reaction center within the turnover time of steady-state photosynthetic electron transport at light saturation. In DTT poisoned cells, the change in non-photochemical quenching appears to result from energy dissipation in the reaction center and was associated with decreased photochemical efficiency. D1 protein degradation was slightly higher in samples poisoned with DTT than in control samples. These results suggest that while DD-cycling may dynamically alter the photosynthesis-irradiance response curve, it offers limited protection against photodamage of PS II reaction centers at irradiance levels sufficient to saturate steady-state photosynthesis.
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2017-01-03
    Description: Iron supply has been suggested to influence phytoplankton biomass, growth rate and species composition, as well as primary productivity in both high and low NO3− surface waters. Recent investigations in the equatorial Pacific suggest that no single factor regulates primary productivity. Rather, an interplay of bottom-up (i.e., ecophysiological) and top-down (i.e., ecological) factors appear to control species composition and growth rates. One goal of biological oceanography is to isolate the effects of single factors from this multiplicity of interactions, and to identify the factors with a disproportionate impact. Unfortunately, our tools, with several notable exceptions, have been largely inadequate to the task. In particular, the standard technique of nutrient addition bioassays cannot be undertaken without introducing artifacts. These so-called ‘bottle effects’ include reducing turbulence, isolating the enclosed sample from nutrient resupply and grazing, trapping the isolated sample at a fixed position within the water column and thus removing it from vertical movement through a light gradient, and exposing the sample to potentially stimulatory or inhibitory substances on the enclosure walls. The problem faced by all users of enrichment experiments is to separate the effects of controlled nutrient additions from uncontrolled changes in other environmental and ecological factors. To overcome these limitations, oceanographers have sought physiological or molecular indices to diagnose nutrient limitation in natural samples. These indices are often based on reductions in the abundance of photosynthetic and other catalysts, or on changes in the efficiency of these catalysts. Reductions in photosynthetic efficiency often accompany nutrient limitation either because of accumulation of damage, or impairment of the ability to synthesize fully functional macromolecular assemblages. Many catalysts involved in electron transfer and reductive biosyntheses contain iron, and the abundances of most of these catalysts decline under iron-limited conditions. Reductions of ferredoxin or cytochrome f content, nitrate assimilation rates, and dinitrogen fixation rates are amongst the diagnostics that have been used to infer iron limitation in some marine systems. An alternative approach to diagnosing iron-limitation uses molecules whose abundance increases in response to iron-limitation. These include cell surface iron-transport proteins, and the electron transfer protein flavodoxin which replaces the Fe-S protein ferredoxin in many Fe-deficient algae and cyanobacteria.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 13
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 266 (5185). pp. 634-637.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: The cause of decadal climate variability over the North Pacific Ocean and North America is investigated by the analysis of data from a multidecadal integration with a state-of-the-art coupled ocean-atmosphere model and observations. About one-third of the low-frequency climate variability in the region of interest can be attributed to a cycle involving unstable air-sea interactions between the subtropical gyre circulation in the North Pacific and the Aleutian low-pressure system. The existence of this cycle provides a basis for long-range climate forecasting over the western United States at decadal time scales.
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  • 14
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Ocean processes in climate dynamics: Global and Mediterranean examples. , ed. by Rizzoli, P. and Robinson, A. Kluwer, Alphen aan den Rijn, Netherlands, pp. 203-225. ISBN 978-94-010-4376-2
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: Recent observations within deep convection regimes of the Gulf of Lions and Greenland Sea all confirm the existence of small-scale plumes of only a few 100 m horizontal scale during cooling periods, in agreement with scaling arguments and non-hydrostatic modelling results. The integral effect of the plumes is that of a mixing agent rather than carrying water downward in a mean motion. It depends on the intensity and duration of the cooling how complete the mixing within the depth range of the plumes is. In the Greenland Sea, the role of the ice through brine rejection was found to be important in the preconditioning period (November - February) rather than for the deep convection itself (March) which occurred when the water was ice-free. After the convection period water masses are exchanged with the environment through baroclinic instability, causing increased deep T,S variance on a larger scale that continues to exist well into the next summer, allowing identification of previous-winter convection activity
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 15
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    Kluwer
    In:  Geologie en Mijnbouw, Veldhoven, Kluwer, vol. 73, no. 2-4, pp. 605-620, pp. L05608, (ISSN: 1340-4202)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Seismicity ; western ; Europe ; Earthquake ; Tectonics ; Geol. aspects ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Aftershocks ; Modelling ; Stress ; Fault plane solution, focal mechanism ; Source parameters ; Fore-shocks ; Surface waves ; Seismic networks ; Intensity ; Earthquake risk ; losses ; Strong motions ; Seismology ; Earthquake hazard ; liquefaction ; Engineering geophys. ; Radon ; Earthquake precursor: chemical (Rn, water(-level,...)
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  • 16
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    Kluwer
    In:  Dordrecht, xvii+329 pp., Kluwer, vol. 271, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 329, (ISBN: 0-08-043649-8)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk ; Turkey ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Armenia ; Japan ; Vancouver ; Lisbon ; Patras ; Quito
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  • 17
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    Kluwer
    In:  Professional Paper, Issues in Urban Earthquake Risk, Dordrecht, xvii+329 pp., Kluwer, vol. 271, no. 16, pp. 125-166, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk ; Turkey ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Armenia ; Japan ; Vancouver ; Lisbon ; Patras ; Quito
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  • 18
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    Kluwer
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Issues in Urban Earthquake Risk, Dordrecht, xvii+329 pp., Kluwer, vol. 271, no. 16, pp. 221-233, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk ; Turkey ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Armenia ; Japan ; Vancouver ; Lisbon ; Patras ; Quito
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  • 19
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    Kluwer
    In:  Professional Paper, Issues in Urban Earthquake Risk, Dordrecht, xvii+329 pp., Kluwer, vol. 271, no. 231, pp. 125-166, (ISBN 1-4020-1729-4)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk ; Turkey ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Armenia ; Japan ; Vancouver ; Lisbon ; Patras ; Quito
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  • 20
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 40 (1-2). pp. 135-149.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The benthic response to the sedimentation of particulate organic matter (POM) was investigated during 1985–1990 at 47°N, 20°W (BIOTRANS station). The first noticeable annual sedimentation of phytodetritus, as indicated by chlorophyll a concentrations in the sediment, occurred as early as late April-early May. Maximum amounts were found in June–July. Two different sedimentation pulses to the sea bed are described that demonstrate interannual variation: the occurrence of salp faecal pellets early in the year 1988 and the massive fall out of a plankton bloom in summer 1986, which deposited approximately 15 mmol C m−2. The benthic reaction to POM pulses was quite diverse. The mega-, macro- and meiobenthos showed no change in biomass, whereas bacterial biomass doubled between March and July. This corresponds to a seasonal maximum of total adenylate biomass. The relative abundance of Foraminifera among the meiobenthos increased during the summer. Benthic activity (ATP, ratio ATP/ETSA), as well as in situ sediment community oxygen consumption rates (SCOC), showed distinct seasonal maxima in July–August of 0.75 mmol C m−2 day−1. Based on SCOC and the carbon demand for growth, a benthic carbon consumption of 0.94 mmol C m−2 day−1 was estimated. This represents about 1.1% of spring bloom primary production and 9.6% of the export flux beneath the 150 m layer, measured during the North Atlantic Bloom Experiment. Bacteria and protozoans colonizing the epibenthic phytodetrital layer were responsible for 60–80% of the seasonal increase in SCOC. The strong reaction of the smaller benthic size groups (bacteria, protozoans) to POM pulses stresses their particular importance for sediment-water interface flux rates.
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2016-03-08
    Description: Five Barrow Group (Berriasian to Valanginian) siliciclastic sequences are described from the North-West Shelf, Australia, and calibrated against global third-order (?eustatically-mediated) cycles. Particular emphasis is placed on the sedimentological (core, wireline log) and palaeontological (micropalaeontological, palynological) characterization of constituent systems tracts.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2020-08-12
    Description: Zooplankton sampling took place during cruise 5 Leg 3 of the R.V. Meteor (March-June 1987) in three hydrographically and ecologically different areas of the Arabian Sea (Indian Ocean): an upwelling area at the coast of Oman; an oligotroph area in the central Arabian Sea; and a shelf area off the coast of Pakistan. All three areas were expected to hace similar ichthyoplankton and cephalopod components and similar light conditions. These are important prerequisites for the present comparative study, which is concerned with the importance of the structure of the water column (physical stability and prey availability), compared with the influence of the light intensity (day/night) on the vertical distribution of species and size classes of fish larvae and cephalopod paralarvae in the subtropical pelagial. First results show that the vertical structure of the water column, especially the occurrence of a pynocline and the varying mixed-layer width, either directly or indirectly had important impact on the vertical distribution patterns of both fish larvae and cephalopod paralarvae. In addition, cephalopods were influenced more consistently by the diurnal change of light intensity than fish larvae. Both taxa occurred mainly below the mixed surface layer. However, cephalopod paralarvae preferred shallower depths than fish larvae in all three areas and were closer related to the pycnocline than fish larvae in most cases. In the absence of a significant pycnocline, larvae appeared close to the surface.
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  • 23
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 40 (1-2). pp. 537-557.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: During leg 1 of Meteor cruise 10 in March/April 1989 at 18 circ N, 30 circ W, the high spatial and temporal resolution of hydrographic CTD-stations indicated that the study site was in a hydrographically complex region in the transition zone between the Canary Current and the North Equatorial Current at the southern boundary of the subtropical gyre. Strong variability was found within the upper 120 m due to interleavings of warmer and saltier subtropical salinity maximum water with colder and less saline upper thermocline water. The interleavings caused unexpected nose-like temperature, salinity, nitrate and oxygen profiles yet not described in the literature. A second variability source was found in the Central Water area, because the study area was situated in the vicinity of the Central Water Boundary dividing North and South Atlantic Central Water. Hydrographic analysis of the study shows that interpretations of biological and chemical data can only be done in conjunction with high resolution CTD-profiling
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  • 24
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    Kluwer
    In:  , ed. by Padisak, J., Reynolds, C. S. and Sommer, U. Kluwer, Dordrecht, 199 pp. ISBN 0-7923-2097-2
    Publication Date: 2012-02-28
    Type: Book , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 25
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 261 (5124). pp. 1026-1029.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: Long-range global climate forecasts were made by use of a model for predicting a tropical Pacific sea-surface temperature (SST) in tandem with an atmospheric general circulation model. The SST is predicted first at long lead times into the future. These ocean forecasts are then used to force the atmospheric model and so produce climate forecasts at lead times of the SST forecasts. Prediction of seven large climatic events of the 1970s to 1990s by this technique are in good agreement with observations over many regions of the globe.
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  • 26
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  New York, 264 pages, Pergamon Press, vol. 11, no. 16, pp. 220, (ISBN: 0-08-037951-6)
    Publication Date: 1992
    Keywords: Textbook of informatics ; Textbook of geology ; data ; base ; DBMS
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  • 27
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, 102 (3). pp. 487-490.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-15
    Description: Abstract l. In Antarctica, two Adélie penguins were implanted with heart rate (HR) transmitters and released in their breeding colony where they resumed incubation. 2. HR while at rest and lying in the colony were 67 and 77 beats per min (bpm), respectively. 3. For diving experiments, the birds were introduced into a still-water canal, 21 m long, with one respiration chamber at each end. 4. The birds swam underwater for 49 and 76% of the time at speeds of 1.5 and 2.5 m/sec, respectively. 5. When floating quietly at the surface, HR in the first penguin was 89 bpm. 6. Pre-dive HR varied with duration of the inter-dive interval, being highest (250 bpm) when the bird dived in rapid succession (surface times 〈 5 see) and close to diving HR when surface time was 50 sec. 7. Mean HR while diving was constant (107 bpm) and did not vary either with surface time, or with time submerged (0–15 sec). 8. Pre-dive HR and diving HR were not correlated, 9. The extent of bradycardia upon immersion was dependent upon surface time. 10. There was a good correlation between HR and oxygen consumption in both birds, suggesting that HR might be used to determine energy expenditure.
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  • 28
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers, 39 (7-8). pp. 1085-1102.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-30
    Description: Since large, rapidly-sinking particles account for most of the vertical flux in the ocean, mechanisms responsible for particle aggregation largely control the transport of carbon to depth. The particle flux resulting from a variety of different phytoplankton bloom conditions was simulated with a numerical model in which phytoplankton growth dynamics were combined with physical aggregation, particle size-dependent sedimentation and degradation. Model results demonstrated that particle flux to the deep ocean be generated by solely invoking physical aggregation during phytoplankton blooms. Sensitivity of the model in response to variations of both physico-chemical and biological paramters was tested. The model outcome, described as the fraction of export production leaving the upper ocean carbon pool, proved to be most sensitive to biological variables such as phytoplankton cell size, stickness, and growth characteristics (i.e. solitary vs chain-forming). Changes in these factors strongly affect the efficiency of the “biological pump” and could be explain interannual and geographic variance in deep-ocean flux.
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  • 29
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 39 (2). pp. 539-565.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: Sediment cores from the Norwegian and Greenland Seas and the Nansen Basin were studied to determine the origin of sediment pellets, centimetre-sized aggregations of clay to sandsized sediment occurring in the cores. By comparing the grain size, grain shape and composition of the pellet sediments to sediments collected directly from the surfaces of sea ice in the Nansen Basin and from icebergs in the Barents Sea, the pelleted sediment was found to be more similar to that in the icebergs than that on the sea ice. The pellets may be formed on, in or under a glacier or during transport on/in an iceberg. When icebergs overturn or melt, the pellets fall out and are consolidated enough to survive a drop of up to 4 km to the ocean bottom and to retain their integrity even after burial on the seafloor.
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  • 30
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers, 39 (2). S525-S538.
    Publication Date: 2015-07-21
    Description: During R.V. Polarstern expeditions ARK IV/3 and ARK VI/1, well preserved diatom assemblages were recovered from particle-laden sea ice collected from the western Barents Shelf and the Arctic Ocean between Svalbard (81°N) and the Nansen-Gakkel Ridge (86°N). Distinct variations in the abundance pattern and species composition of diatoms were found north and south of ca 83°N. Highest diatom concentrations were encountered in multi-year sea ice in the core of the Transpolar Drift Stream between 83 and 86°N. In this area diatom assemblages are dominated by marine-?brackish benthic species. Apparently, these assemblages originate in shelf waters north and east of Siberia, where they are incorporated into the sea ice as a bottom ice assemblage. During the transport of the ice floes across the Eurasian Basin within the Transpolar Drift Stream, seasonal basal freezing and surface melting processes may have led to an accumulation of diatoms at the sea ice surface. South of ca 83°N the sea ice samples contained significantly lower numbers of diatoms, dominated by freshwater taxa. Between 83 and 81°N these assemblages are dominated by planktonic freshwater taxa, but on the Barents Sea Shelf east of Svalbard significant numbers of benthic freshwater taxa and benthic marine-?brackish species also are found. This ice may originate in the Barents Sea and/or the Kara Sea, which receive a large influx of freshwater from Siberian rivers.
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  • 31
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 257 (5070). pp. 644-647.
    Publication Date: 2019-03-13
    Description: Seasonal records of tropical sea-surface temperature (SST) over the past 10(5) years can be recovered from high-precision measurements of coral strontium/calcium ratios with the use of thermal ionization mass spectrometry. The temperature dependence of these ratios was calibrated with corals collected at SST recording stations and by (18)O/(16)O thermometry. The results suggest that mean monthly SST may be determined with an apparent accuracy of better than 0.5 degrees C. Measurements on a fossil coral indicate that 10,200 years ago mean annual SSTs near Vanuatu in the southwestern Pacific Ocean were about 5 degrees C colder than today and that seasonal variations in SST were larger. These data suggest that tropical climate zones were compressed toward the equator during deglaciation.
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  • 32
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    Kluwer
    In:  Dordrecht, Kluwer, vol. 15, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 23-40, (ISBN 1-4020-3326-5, VIII + 343 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1991
    Keywords: Handbook of geophysics ; FractureT ; Scaling ; Non-linear effects
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  • 33
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    Kluwer
    In:  Boston, Kluwer, vol. A 744, pp. 6322, (Hardbound, ISBN: 0-12-065604-3, 320 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1991
    Keywords: Anisotropy ; Seismology ; Textbook of geophysics ; Babuska
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  • 34
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 38 (S1). S505-S530.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: The term Cape Verde Frontal Zone is introduced to characterize the southeastern corner of the subtropical gyre circulation in the North Atlantic Ocean far west of the upwelling area off the Mauretanean shelf. Two water mass fronts, one overlying the other, are identified with a quasi-synoptic set of CTD-OZ and nutrient data from November 1986. In the warm water sphere we encounter North and South Atlantic Central Water (NACWISACW) superimposed on extensions of Mediterranean outflow and Antarctic Intermediate Water. The Central Water Boundary, as the separator of NACW from SACW, represents the southeastern side of the Canary/North Equatorial Current system. It acts as a barrier between the well-ventilated, nutrient-poor inner part of the basin-wide circulation of the North Atlantic and the shadow zone with its lowly oxygenated and nutrified cross-equatorial influx. Year-long current meter records, having fluctuations over typical time scales of 5(1`90 days, attest to the highly variable nature of the Cape Verde Frontal Zone. Incidentally, we observe in the data an intrathermocline eddy, called Meddy BIRGIT, which has a double maximum in the vertical salinity structure. Simultaneous Lagrangian observations by RiCHAttDSON et al. (1989, Journal of Physical Oceanography, 19, 371-383) confirm the expected anticyclonic motion of this salt lens, which must have travelled without significant mixing for at least 2500 km from its likely generation region in the Gulf of Cadiz.
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  • 35
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    Kluwer
    In:  GeoJournal, 25 (4). pp. 305-358.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: The Earth's stress field is composed of 4 sub-fields that are induced by 1. the gravitational force (impacts, etc; geodynamic theories on the expansion or contraction of the globe); 2. the centrifugal force of the spinning Earth (models on continental drift explaining the equatorial Alpine-Himalayan collisional mountain belt and longitudinally orientated rifts or oceans); 3. thermal convection (plate tectonic model); 4. tidal forces (extended plate tectonic model). A standard global stress field results from a combination of these four sub-stress-fields. From the existence of six otherwise inexplicable geodynamic phenomena, it has to be concluded that the standard global stress field of the present can only be an instantaneous (still) photograph of a field that constantly migrates eastwards relative to the Earth's continents. This disclosure can be explained with an extended plate tectonic model, in which the Earth's surface is subdivided by the circum-Pacific ring of subduction zones, into a Pacific area and a continental or Pangaea area with intra-Pangaea oceans (Atlantic, Indian Ocean, etc.). The Pangaea area in turn is subdivided into a North Pangaea area and a South Pangaea area. Due to the off-centre rotation of the spinning Earth around the gravitational centre of the Earth-Moon (-Sun) system (tidal forces), the lower mantle, the Pacific basin, area or state (Pacific crust = lower mantle?), the remaining states that together with the Pacific state compose the Wilson Cycle of ocean opening and closing (Rift/Red Sea state, Atlantic state, Pacific state, Collision/Himalayas state), the ocean sequence of which is permanently arranged from E to W through 360° around the globe, and the standard global stress field as an expression of the Wilson Cycle, are constantly displaced eastwards relative to the upper mantle, the continents or the North and South Pangaea areas with Intra-Pangaea oceans, completing one full turn around the globe in 200 to 250 my (principle of hypocycloid gearing). The continents migrate westwards around the globe and around the Pacific basin in the N and S hemispheres, through sequences of plate tectonic settings of the Oceanic or Wilson Cycle that possess distinct regional stress fields as parts of the standars global stress field, or else the continents are subjected to eastward migrating sequences of settings with distinct regional stress fields as parts of the Wilson Cycle/standard global stress field. By rotations and N-S migrations of the individual continents dissected in all directions by groups of parallel structural planes (fracture systems) through the standard global stress field, the orientation of which is aligned with the spinning Earth's axis and equator and that constantly migrates eastwards relative to the continents, the amount and nature of stress (compression, tension, shearing) a given fracture system is subjected to is constantly altered and the tectonic activity may gradually be transferred from the system under consideration to another fracture system, with slightly different strike directions. Every 400 to 500 my or each Pangaea Cycle (two complete W-E/E-W displacements around the globe between the continents/Pangaea areas with Intra-Pangaea Oceans/upper mantle on the one side and the lower mantle/Pacific basin/ sequence of ocean states and local stress fields of the Wilson Cycle and the standard global stress field on the other) the inhomogeneous standard global stress field is reversed in the N-S direction. Any model proposing the long-time existence of extended lineaments or fracture systems that do not end at the margin of the respective continent or at an orogen/suture zone/former continental margin, in the event of being older than the respective orogenesis, but which cross the surrounding ocean or the younger orogen and continue in the neighbouring continents or former independent continents or even encompass the whole globe, and which puts foreward simultaneous tectonic activity along the whole length of such lineament or fracture system and proposes their longevity or permanent existence, contradicts the physical laws that are the foundation of plate tectonics and mobilism.
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  • 36
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Cellular and molecular biology, 37 (1). pp. 29-39.
    Publication Date: 2019-06-04
    Description: After acclimation to 100, 75 and 50 % of sea water (SW) external salinities, a significant reduction in MET (Mean Epithelial Thickness) and MDR (Mean Diverticular Radius) indicates a decrease in the digestive cell volume dependant on the lowering of environmental salinity. The interstitial connective tissue seems to be unable to osmoregulate and hence stand severe changes in cell size depending on external salinity. 50 % SW acclimated periwinkles show a general pattern of general stress response (decreasing MET and MDR, and increasing ND ~Numerical Density of lysosomes- and lysosomal size). A reduction in number and size of digestive lysosomes in winkles acclimated to 75 % of Sea Water evidences the functioning of reglatory mechanisms of digestive cell volume.
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  • 37
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Oxford, Pergamon Press, vol. 7, no. XVI:, pp. 227-235, (ISBN 3-342-00685-4)
    Publication Date: 1990
    Keywords: Seismology ; NOISE ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Applied geophysics
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  • 38
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    Kluwer
    In:  Dordrecht, Kluwer, vol. 20, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 81-89, (ISBN 8189304143)
    Publication Date: 1990
    Keywords: Handbook of geophysics ; Deep seismic sounding (espec. cont. crust) ; Geol. aspects
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  • 39
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    Kluwer
    In:  Dordrecht, Kluwer, vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 662-664, (ISBN 1-58488-320-0)
    Publication Date: 1990
    Keywords: Data analysis / ~ processing ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Reflection seismics ; Handbook of geophysics
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  • 40
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    Kluwer
    In:  Boston, Kluwer, vol. 10, no. Subvol. b, pp. 220, (ISBN: 0-08-037951-6)
    Publication Date: 1990
    Keywords: Rock mechanics ; Fracture ; Modelling ; Textbook of geophysics ; Textbook of engineering ; Coulomb ; Griffith ; Gmax ; strain ; energy ; release ; Stress ; theory
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  • 41
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 247 (4939). pp. 198-201.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-04
    Description: A mechanism exists whereby global greenhouse warning could, by intensifying the alongshore wind stress on the ocean surface, lead to acceleration of coastal upwelling. Evidence from several different regions suggests that the major coastal upwelling systems of the world have been growing in upwelling intensity as greenhouse gases have accumulated in the earth's atmosphere. Thus the cool foggy summer conditions that typify the coastlands of northern California and other similar upwelling regions might, under global warming, become even more pronounced. Effects of enhanced upwelling on the marine ecosystem are uncertain but potentially dramatic.
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  • 42
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 248 . pp. 898-899.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-15
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  • 43
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 37 (12). pp. 1875-1886.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: Geostrophic volume transports in the upper 500 m are computed from historical hydrographic data for the area off the Brazilian coast west of 30°W and between 7° and 20°S. On the basis of water mass distributions, potential density surfaces of σθ = 27.05 kg m−3 (360–670 m) and σθ = 27.6 kg m−3 (∼1200 m) are used for referencing the meridional and zonal components of the geostrophic shears, respectively. Near 15°S a northwestward flow of 8 Sv crosses 30°W. This current reaches the shelf near 10°S in February and March, the only two months for which observations are available near that latitude along the coast; of the 8 Sv, about 4 Sv continue towards the northwest into the North Brazil Current while another branch also carrying 4 Sv turns southward as the beginning of the Brazil Current. Between 10° and 20°S the Brazil Current does not appear to strengthen appreciably, but because of the likely existence of flow on the shelf these transport values represent lower limits to the actual ones. At 30°W, another westward flow of approximately 8–10 Sv enters the area near 10°S and serves to strengthen the North Brazil Current. The total transfer of 12 Sv or more from the South Equatorial Current into the North Brazil Current and later to other currents and the northern hemisphere may be an important factor contributing to the well-known weakness of the Brazil Current in its more northerly latitudes.
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2015-03-10
    Type: Book , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 45
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Paleoecology, Biostratigraphy, Paleoceanography and Taxonomy of Agglutinated Foraminifera. , ed. by Hemleben, C. NATO ASI Series, 327 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 661-694.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: Distribution of recent, benthic foraminifera in the silled, partly anoxic Drammensfjord, reflects the prevailing hydrographic conditions, and reveals different intra basin responses to depleted oxygen conditions. The redox cline dips from about 35 m in the northern to about 60 m in the southern part of the fjord. Sediment surface samples are strongly dominated by agglutinated taxa except in the most oxygen depleted areas (O2 〈2 ml/1) in middle and southern parts. The water masses are subdivided into three units: 1) Brackish surface layer dominated by Miliammina fusca; 2) Transitional water masses with Astrammina sphaerica, Eggerelloides scabrus, Spiroplectammina biformis, and Ammodiscus? gullmarensis as frequently occurring species; and 3) Oxygen depleted water masses (salinity max. 31.2 ‰) dominated by Stainforthia fusiformis. The thin-shelled S. fusiformis shows adaption to low oxygen (〈2 ml/1) conditions and muddy, organic rich substrate as long as salinity exceeds about 30 ‰. Species diversity decreases towards the redox cline, and no foraminifera are found in oxygen depleted areas with salinities less than about 30 ‰
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  • 46
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 455-473.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-27
    Description: Six sediment cores from the Eurasian Basin were studied to determine and understand climatically driven changes of Arctic Ocean basins. Detailed time control of sediments for the last 45 kyr is based on accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) C14-dating of biogenic carbonate (N. pachyderma, left coiling). The most important results from our study are summarized as follows. From 45 to 13.5 ka low sedimentation rates prevailed (0.35 cm/kyr). They increased drastically at the transition from the last glacial to interglacial (Termination Ia, 13.5 ka) leading into high Holocene sedimentation rates (1.06 cm/kyr). Low carbonate concentrations (〈 4%) prevailed from 13.5 to 9 ka at Termination I. Decreased salinities can be expected for Termination la (Zahn et al., 1985, Jones & Keigwin, 1988, Mienert et al., 1989) due to glacial meltwater influence possibly accompanied by sea ice melting. As a result of the freshwater influence, productivity of planktic foraminifers decreased and this, in turn, resulted in a drastic decrease in carbonate concentration during Termination Ia. Although carbonate concentration varies only between 0 and 9%, it distinctly changes both the compressional-wave velocity (from 1485 to 1510 m/s) and the wave attenuation (from 0.1 to 0.45 dB/m/kHz) in the sediment. Climatically driven changes in magnetic susceptibility have proved to be a valuable paleoclimatic tool for intercore correlations. Our results indicate that the same general conclusions are valid for pelagic environments of both Atlantic and Arctic Ocean basins.
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  • 47
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Climate-Ocean Interaction. , ed. by Schlesinger, M. Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 319-342.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-07
    Description: Based on organic carbon accumulation rates, nine time slices of oceanic export paleoproductivity (Pnew) are presented which depict the variability of Pnew on a global scale through the last 30,000 years and document that the basic distribution patterns did not change through glacial and interglacial times. However, the glacial ocean shows an increased contrast of high- versus low-productivity zones. δ13C values of near-surface-dwelling planktonic foraminifera Globigerinoides ruber suggest that the same contrast applies to the glacial nutrient inventories of the ambient surface waters, with a significant glacial transfer of PO4 from low- to high-productivity zones. In this way, glacial Pnew increased by a global average of about 2–4 Gt Cyr−1 and led, via an enhanced CaCO3 dissolution and alkalinity in the deep ocean, to a significant extraction of CO2 from the surface water and the atmosphere.
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  • 48
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Paleoecology, Biostratigraphy, Paleoceanography and Taxonomy of Agglutinated Foraminifera. , ed. by Hemleben, C. NATO ASI series: Series C, Mathematical and physical sciences, 327 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 3-11.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-03
    Description: Unicellular protozoans are among the oldest fossils which we can recognize from the Precambrian. Presumably, foraminiferal ancestors were among the earliest of them, but had not yet benefitted from being sheltered by a biomineralized test. During the earliest Cambrian the first agglutinating foraminifera made their first appearance in the geologic record. These “primitive” forms built their test of foreign particles held together by an organic cement. This organic cement may have been secreted by the foraminifer in cytoplasmic vacuoles as is the case with Recent agglutinating foraminifera. Yet, the capability to biomineralize calcite did not evolve until after another 60 million years when the fusulinids developed their microgranular wall. Calcitic cemented agglutinates occur even later, at the base of the Carboniferous. Thus, in the fossil record the agglutinated foraminifera occur as a twofold group with a rather distinct evolution.
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  • 49
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. 〈https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3452-2208〉 NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 308 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 647-675.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-14
    Description: Based on accumulation rates of the bulk sediment and some pelagic components (carbonate, total organic carbon, and biogenic opal fractions) major changes in the paleoceanography of the northern North Atlantic from Miocene to Recent are discussed. Interactions of various processes could have created a stepwise evolution of cold climates in the northern hemisphere. Prominent events were the onset of deep water export across the Greenland-Scotland Ridge with the first significant overflow across the Iceland-Scotland segment occurring most probably between 13 – 11 Ma and at about 7 Ma across the Denmark Strait. Oscillations of sea-level around the critical sill depth in the early phases of the subsidence may have influenced the oceanic circulation in the North Atlantic as well as in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. Furthermore the potential of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea to form and export dense deep water, increased the meridionality in the northern hemisphere. During 10.2 – 9.3, 8.7 – 8.2, 5.8 – 5.4 and 4.8 – 3.2 Ma representing times of increased water mass exchange to the central North Atlantic, carbonate deposition occurred. On the other hand, higher opal accumulation rates and decreased water mass exchange (9.3 – 8.7 and 5.4 – 4.8 Ma) may be correlated with sea-level oscillations around the critical sill depth of the Greenland-Scotland Ridge. The build-up of northern hemisphere cooling can probably traced back to late Miocene times with modest ice-rafted debris input. A significant stepwise increase of northern hemisphere cooling occurred around 4 Ma and finally resulted in the first large extension of sea ice and ice-rafting in the entire North Atlantic at ca. 2.6 Ma.
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  • 50
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 308 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 489-497.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-13
    Description: A stable oxygen isotope stratigraphy for the last 150.000 yr is established in sedimentary cores from the central Fram Strait. Radiometric ages obtained by the U/Th method in one core provide an absolute time framework for the oxygen isotope stratigraphy. The oxygen isotope record from substage 5a in the central Fram Strait is represented by lighter oxygen isotope ratios than substage 5e. This probably reflects lower salinities of the uppermost water column due to intense melting of icebergs and/or the supply of meltwater from adjacent landmasses rather than higher sea surface temperatures.
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  • 51
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 308 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 187-211.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-13
    Description: Much of Arctic sea ice forms over the shallow continental shelves along the perimeter of the basin. Ice which escapes the shelf is transported several years within the Beaufort Gyre and Transpolar Drift stream, before exiting the Arctic Basin through Fram Strait. This ice, and especially that in the Siberian branch of the Transpolar Drift stream in the Eurasian Basin, may incorporate large quantities of particulate matter during formation on the shelf. Subsequent seasonal surface melting and winter freezing on the ice underside results in surface accumulation of particulate matter. Rafting of floes over and under each other results in a complex ice stratigraphy and redistribution of sediment accumulations. In contrast, Antarctic sea ice has only limited sources for sediment incorporation, and most of the ice-cover melts each year. These variations in Arctic and Antarctic ice characteristics are illustrated by analyses of ice crystal texture, c-axis orientations, salinity, δ 18O on ice cores and discussion of potential sediment input.
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  • 52
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Paleoecology, Biostratigraphy, Paleoceanography and Taxonomy of Agglutinated Foraminifera. , ed. by Hemleben, C. NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 327 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 53-75.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-14
    Description: We live in a world of ever increasing complexity. In the 25 years since the publication of the Treatise volumes by Loeblich and Tappan (1964), the number of validly described foraminiferal genera has more than doubled from 1192 in 1964, to at least 2455 in 1988. Agglutinated foraminifera (including the proteinaceous allogromiids) occupy about 180 pages of the recently revised version (Loeblich and Tappan, 1988). From the astrorhizids to the chrysalidinids, there are now at least 624 valid agglutinated genera, nearly as many genera as in the hyaline calcareous benthic suborder Rotaliina.
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  • 53
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. 〈https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3452-2208〉 Kluwer, Netherlands, pp. 475-487.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-13
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  • 54
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part A: Oceanographic Research Papers, 37 (12). pp. 1805-1823.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: Two stacked outflow cores of the Mediterranean Water undercurrent pass through a broad “gateway” between Cape St. Vincent and Gettysburg Bank entering the Iberian Basin. The upper core (depth ∼750 m, σ1=31.85) shows a strong tendency to follow the contours of the Portuguese continental rise. Yet, the lower core (depth ∼1250 m, σ1=32.25) primarily meanders west and northwestward forming large blobs of Mediterranean Water. The predominance of isolated Meddy structures embedded in a background field is reflected in a long-term current meter record from the deep Iberian Basin.
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