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  • 2015-2019
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  • 1995  (1,064)
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  • 2015-2019
  • 2000-2004
  • 1995-1999  (1,064)
  • 1955-1959
  • 1945-1949
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  • 1
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Frank, Martin; Eisenhauer, Anton; Bonn, Wolfgang J; Walter, Peter; Grobe, Hannes; Kubik, Peter W; Dittrich-Hannen, Beate; Mangini, Augusto (1995): Sediment redistribution versus paleoproductivity change: Weddell Sea margin sediment stratigraphy and biogenic particle flux of the last 250,000 years deduced from 230Thex, 10Be and biogenic barium profiles. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 136(3-4), 559-573, https://doi.org/10.1016/0012-821X(95)00161-5
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: High resolution 230Thex and 10Be and biogenic barium profiles were measured at three sediment gravity cores (length 605-850 cm) from the Weddell Sea continental margin. Applying the 230Thex dating method, average sedimentation rates of 3 cm/kyr for the two cores from the South Orkney Slope and of 2.4 cm/kyr for the core from the eastern Weddell Sea were determined and compared to delta18O and lithostratigraphic results. Strong variations in the radionuclide concentrations in the sediments resembling the glacial/interglacial pattern of the delta18O stratigraphy and the 10Be stratigraphy of high northern latitudes were used for establishing a chronostratigraphy. Biogenic Ba shows a pattern similar to the radionuclide profiles, suggesting that both records were influenced by increased paleoproductivity at the beginning of the interglacials. However, 230Thex0 fluxes (0 stands for initial) exceeding production by up to a factor of 4 suggest that sediment redistribution processes, linked to variations in bottom water current velocity, played the major role in controlling the radionuclide and biogenic barium deposition during isotope stages 5e and 1. The correction for sediment focusing makes the 'true' vertical paleoproductivity rates, deduced from the fluxes of proxy tracers like biogenic barium, much lower than previously estimated. Very low 230Thex0 concentrations and fluxes during isotope stage 6 were probably caused by rapid deposition of older, resedimented material, delivered to the Weddell Sea continental slopes by the grounded ice shelves and contemporaneous erosion of particles originating from the water column.
    Keywords: ANT-II/3; ANT-IV/3; ANT-VI/3; Atka Bay; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS04; PS04/257; PS08; PS08/366; PS1170-3; PS12; PS12/248; PS1388-3; PS1575-1; SL; South Atlantic Ocean; South Orkney
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Niebler, Hans-Stefan (1995): Rekonstruktionen von Paläo-Umweltparametern anhand von stabilen Isotopen und Faunen-Vergesellschaftungen planktischer Foraminiferen im Südatlantik = Reconstruction of paleo-environmental parameters using stable isotopes and faunal assemblages of planktonic foraminifera in the South Atlantic Ocean. Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 167, 198 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0167_1995
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Changes in surface water hydrography in the Southern Ocean (eastern Atlantic sector) could be reconstructed on the basis of isotope-geochemical and micropaleontological studies. A total of 75 high quality multicorer sediment surface samples from the southern South Atlantic Ocean and three Quaternary sediment cores, taken on a meridional transect across the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, have been investigated. The results of examining stable oxygen isotope compositions of 24 foraminiferal species and morphotypes were compared to the near-surface hydrography. The different foraminifera have been divided into four groups living at different depths in the upper water column. The 8180 differences between shallow-living (e.g. G. bulloides, N. pachyderma) and deeper-dwelling (e. g. G. inflata) species reflect the measured temperature gradient of the upper 250 m in the water column. Thus, the 6180 difference between shallow-living and deeper-living foraminifera can be used as an indicator for the vertical temperature gradient in the surface water of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which is independent of ice volume. All planktonic foraminifera in the surface sediment samples have been counted. 27 species and morphotypes have been selected, to form a reference data Set for statistical purposes. By using R- and Q-mode principal component analysis these planktonic foraminifera have been divided into four and five assemblages, respectively. The geographic distribution of these assemblages is mainly linked to the temperature of sea-surface waters. The five assemblages (factors) of the Q-mode principal component analysis account for 97.l % of the variance of original data. Following the transferfunction- technique a multiple regression between the Q-mode factors and the actual mean sea-surface environmental parameters resulted in a set of equations. The new transfer function can be used to estimate past sea-surface seasonal temperatures for paleoassemblages of planktonic foraminifera with a precision of approximately ±1.2°C. This transfer function F75-27-5 encompasses in particular the environmental conditions in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. During the last 140,000 years reconstructed sea-surface temperatures fluctuated in the present northern Subantarctic Zone (PS2076-1/3) at an amplitude of up to 7.5°C in summer and of up to 8.5°C in winter. In the present Polarfrontal Zone (PS1754-1) these fluctuations between glacials and interglacials show lower temperatures from 2.5 to 8.5°C in summer and from 1.0 to 5.0°C in winter, respectively. Compared to today, calculated oxygen isotope temperature gradients in the present Subantarctic Zone were lower during the last 140,000 years. This is an indicator for a good mixing of the upper water column. In the Polarfrontal Zone also lower oxygen isotope temperature gradients were found for the glacials 6, 4 and 2. But almost similar temperature gradients as today were found during the interglacial stages 5, 3 and the Holocene, which implicates a mixing of the upper water column compared to present. Paleosalinities were reconstructed by combining d18O-data and the evaluated transfer function paleotemperatures. Especially in the present Polarfrontal Zone (PS1754-1) and in the Antarctic Zone (PS1768-8), a short-term reduction of salinity up to 4 %o, could be detected. This significant reduction in sea-surface water salinity indicates the increased influx of melt-water at the beginning of deglaciation in the southern hemisphere at the end of the last glacial, approximately 16,500-13,000 years ago. The reconstruction of environmental Parameters indicates only small changes in the position of the frontal Systems in the eastern sector of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current during the last 140,000 years. The average position of the Subtropical Front and Subantarctic Front shifted approximately three latitudes between interglacials and glacials. The Antarctic Polar Front shifted approximately four latitudes. But substantial modifications of this scenario have been interpreted for the reconstruction of cold sea-surface temperatures at 41Â S during the oxygen isotope stages 16 and 14 to 12. During these times the Subtropical Front was probably shified up to seven latitudes northwards.
    Keywords: Agulhas Basin; ANT-IX/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-X/4; ANT-X/5; ANT-X/6; Atlantic Indik Ridge; Atlantic Ridge; AWI_Paleo; Brazil Basin; Cape Basin; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Discovery Seamount; GeoB1716-2; GeoB1717-2; GeoB1718-1; GeoB1719-5; GeoB1720-4; GeoB1721-4; GeoB1726-2; GeoB1728-3; GeoB1729-1; GeoB2002-2; GeoB2003-1; GeoB2004-1; GeoB2007-1; GeoB2008-1; GeoB2009-1; GeoB2016-3; GeoB2018-1; GeoB2019-2; GeoB2021-4; GeoB2022-3; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KL; M20/2; M23/1; Meteor (1986); Meteor Rise; MIC; MiniCorer; MUC; MultiCorer; Namibia Continental Margin; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS12; PS12/557; PS16; PS16/262; PS16/267; PS16/271; PS16/278; PS16/281; PS16/284; PS16/294; PS16/303; PS16/311; PS16/312; PS16/334; PS16/337; PS16/342; PS16/345; PS16/351; PS1654-1; PS1750-7; PS1751-2; PS1752-5; PS1754-1; PS1754-2; PS1755-1; PS1756-6; PS1759-1; PS1764-2; PS1768-8; PS1769-1; PS1775-5; PS1776-6; PS1777-7; PS1778-1; PS1779-3; PS18; PS18/229; PS18/231; PS18/232; PS18/236; PS18/237; PS18/238; PS18/239; PS18/241; PS18/242; PS18/243; PS18/244; PS18/260; PS18/261; PS18/262; PS18/263; PS18/264; PS18/269; PS2073-1; PS2075-3; PS2076-1; PS2076-3; PS2080-1; PS2081-1; PS2082-3; PS2083-1; PS2084-2; PS2085-1; PS2085-2; PS2086-3; PS2087-1; PS2102-1; PS2102-2; PS2103-2; PS2104-1; PS2105-2; PS2106-1; PS21 06AQANTX_4; PS2110-1; PS22; PS22/678; PS22/755; PS22/840; PS22/841; PS22/842; PS22/850; PS22/851; PS22/852; PS22/853; PS22/879; PS22/899; PS22/902; PS22/908; PS22/947; PS22/973; PS22 06AQANTX_5; PS2230-1; PS2231-1; PS2233-1; PS2234-1; PS2235-1; PS2237-1; PS2238-1; PS2239-1; PS2240-1; PS2241-1; PS2242-1; PS2250-5; PS2250-6; PS2272-1; PS2341-1; PS2342-1; PS2343-1; PS2351-1; PS2352-1; PS2353-2; PS2354-1; PS2363-1; PS2366-1; PS2367-1; PS2368-1; PS2372-1; PS2376-1; Shona Ridge; SL; South African margin; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; Van Heesen Ridge; Walvis Ridge
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 22 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Rutsch, H J; Mangini, Augusto; Bonani, Georges; Dittrich-Hannen, Beate; Kubik, Peter W; Suter, Martin; Segl, Monika (1995): 10Be and Ba concentrations in West African sediments trace productivity in the past. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 133(1-2), 129-143, https://doi.org/10.1016/0012-821X(95)00069-O
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Particle reactive elements are scavenged to a higher degree at ocean margins than in the open ocean due to higher fluxes of biogenic and terrigenous particles. In order to determine the influence of these processes on the depositional fluxes of 10Be and barium we have performed high-resolution measurements on sediment core GeoB1008-3 from the Congo Fan. Because the core is dominated by terrigenous matter supplied by the Congo River, it has a high average mass accumulation rate of 6.5 cm/kyr. Biogenic 10Be and Ba concentrations were calculated from total concentrations by subtracting the terrigenous components of10Be and Ba, which are assumed to be proportional to the flux of Al2O3. The mean Ba/Al weight ratio of the terrigenous component was determined to be 0.0045. The unusualy high terrigenous 10Be concentrations of 9.1 * 10**9 atoms/g Al2O3 are either due to input of particles with high10Be content by the Congo River or due to scavenging of oceanic 10Be by riverine particles. The maxima of biogenic 10Be and Ba concentrations coincide with maxima of the paleoproductivity rates. Time series analysis of the 10Be and of Ba concentration profiles reveals a strong dominance of the precessional period of 24 kyr, which also controls the rates of paleoproductivity in this core. During the maxima of productivity the flux of biogenic Ba is enhanced to a larger extent than that of biogenic 10Be. Applying a model for coastal scavenging, we ascribe the observed higher sensitivity of Ba to biogenic particle fluxes to the fact that the ocean residence time of Ba is approximately 10 times longer than that of 10Be.
    Keywords: AGE; Angola Basin; Barium; Beryllium-10; Beryllium-10, standard deviation; DEPTH, sediment/rock; GeoB1008-3; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Isotope ratio mass spectrometry; M6/6; Meteor (1986); Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; SL; X-ray fluorescence (XRF)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 182 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schneider, Ralph R; Müller, Peter J; Ruhland, Götz (1995): Late Quaternary surface circulation in the east-equatorial South Atlantic: evidence from alkenone sea surface temperatures. Paleoceanography, 10(2), 197-220, https://doi.org/10.1029/94PA03308
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Angola Basin and Walvis Ridge records of past sea surface temperatures (SST) derived from the alkenone Uk 37 index are used to reconstruct the surface circulation in the east equatorial South Atlantic for the last 200,000 years. Comparison of SST estimates from surface sediments between 5° and 20°S with modern SST data suggests that the alkenone temperatures represent annual mean values of the surface mixed layer. Alkenone-derived temperatures for the warm climatic maxima of the Holocene and the penultimate interglacial are 1 to 4°C higher than latest Holocene values. All records show glacial to interglacial differences of about 3.5°C in annual mean SST, which is about 1.5°C greater than the difference estimated by CLIMAP (1981) for the eastern Angola Basin. At the Walvis Ridge, significant SST variance is observed at all of the Earth's orbital periodicities. SST records from the Angola Basin vary predominantly at 23- and 100-kyr periodicities. For the precessional cycle, SST changes at the Walvis Ridge correspond to variations of boreal summer insolation over Africa and lead ice volume changes, suggesting that the east equatorial South Atlantic is sensitive to African monsoon intensity via trade-wind zonality. Angola Basin SST records lag those from the Walvis Ridge and the equatorial Atlantic by about 3 kyr. The comparison of Angola Basin and Walvis Ridge SST records implies that the Angola-Benguela Front (ABF) (currently at about 14-16°S) has remained fairly stationary between 12° and 20°S (the limits of our cores) during the last two glacial-interglacial cycles. The temperature contrast associated with the ABF exhibits a periodic 23-kyr variability which is coherent with changes in boreal summer insolation over Africa. These observations suggest that surface waters north of the present ABF have not directly responded to monsoon-modulated changes in the trade-wind vector, that the central field of zonally directed trades in the southern hemisphere was not shifted or extended northward by several degrees of latitude during glacials, and that a cyclonic gyre circulation has existed in the east equatorial South Atlantic over the last 200,000 years. This scenario contradicts former assumptions of glacial intensification of the Benguela Current into the eastern Angola Basin and increased coastal upwelling off Angola.
    Keywords: Angola Basin; Angola Benguela Front; Congo Fan; GeoB1005-2; GeoB1006-2; GeoB1007-2; GeoB1008-3; GeoB1008-6; GeoB1015-2; GeoB1016-2; GeoB1016-3; GeoB1017-3; GeoB1020-1; GeoB1023-2; GeoB1024-3; GeoB1025-2; GeoB1027-2; GeoB1028-2; GeoB1028-4; GeoB1028-5; GeoB1702-6; GeoB1703-5; GeoB1704-1; GeoB1705-2; GeoB1706-1; GeoB1707-2; GeoB2307-2; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M20/2; M6/6; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; off Kunene; PROBOSWA; SFB261; SL; SO86; Sonne; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents; Walvis Ridge; Walvis Ridge, Southeast Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bauch, Dorothea (1995): The distribution of d18O in the Arctic Ocean: implications for the freshwater balance of the halocline and the sources of deep and bottom waters (Die Verteilung von d18O im Arktischen Ozean: Implikationen für die Süßwasserbilanz der Halokline und die Quellen des Tiefen- und Bodenwassers). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 159, 144 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0159_1995
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Data from sections across the Eurasian Basin of the Arctic Ocean occupied by the German Research Vessel Polarstern in 1987 and by the Swedish icebreaker Oden in 1991 are used to derive information on the freshwater balance of the Arctic Ocean halocline and on the sources of the deep waters of the Nansen, Amundsen and Makarov basins. Salinity, d18O and mass balances allow separation of the river-runoff and the sea-ice meltwater fractions contained in the Arctic halocline. This provides the basis for tracking the river-runoff signal from the shelf seas across the central Arctic Ocean to Fram Strait. The halocline has to be divided into at least three lateral regimes: the southern Nansen Basin with net sea-ice melting, the northern Nansen Basin and Amundsen Basin with net sea-ice formation and increasing river-runoff fractions, and the Canadian Basin with minimum sea-ice meltwater and maximum river-runoff fractions and water of Pacific origin. In the Canadian Basin, silicate is used as a tracer to identify Pacific water entering through Bering Strait and an attempt is made to quantify its influence on the halocline waters of the Canadian Basin. For this purpose literature data from the CESAR and LOREX ice camps are used. Based on mass balances and depending on the value of precipitation over the area of the Arctic Ocean the average mean residence time of the river-runoff fraction contained in the Arctic Ocean halocline is determined to be about 14 or 11 years. Water column inventories of river-runoff and sea-ice meltwater are calculated for a section just north of Fram Strait and implications for the ice export rate through Fram Strait are discussed. Salinity, tritium, 3He and the d18O ratio of halocline waters sampled during the 1987 Polarstern cruise to the Nansen Basin are used to estimate the mean residence time of the river-runoff component in the halocline and on the shelves of the Arctic Ocean. These estimates are done by comparing ages of the halocline waters based on a combination of tracers yielding different time information: the tritium 'vintage' age which records the time that has passed since the river-runoff entered the shelf and the tritium/3He age which reflects the time since the shelf waters left the shelf. The difference between the ages determined by these two methods is about 3 to 6 years. Correction for the initial tritium/3He age of the shelf waters (about 0.5 to 1.5 years) yields a mean residence time of the river-runoff on the shelves of about 3.5 ± 2 years. Comparison of the 18O/16O ratios of shelf water, Atlantic water and the deep waters of the Arctic Ocean indicate that the sources of the deep and bottom waters of the Eurasian Basin are located in the Barents and Kara seas.
    Keywords: 91004; 91008; Arctic Ocean; ARK-IV/2; ARK-IV/3; AWI_Paleo; Chejsa Island; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Dalniye Zelentsy; DZ-68; DZ-68_1; DZ-68_10; DZ-68_11; DZ-68_12; DZ-68_13; DZ-68_14; DZ-68_15; DZ-68_16; DZ-68_2; DZ-68_3; DZ-68_5; DZ-68_8; DZ-68_9; E.S.A.R.E.92; ESARE92/14; ESARE92/17; ESARE92/2; ESARE92/3; ESARE92/4; ESARE92/5; ESARE92/6; ESARE92/7; ESARE92/8; Green Bell Island; Greenland Sea; M71; M71_79; M8/1; M8/1_617; Meteor (1964); Meteor (1986); MULT; Multiple investigations; Nordenskiöld Bay; North Greenland Sea; OD91; OD91_004; OD91_008; OD91_009-1; OD91_010-1; OD91_011-1; OD91_012-1; OD91_014-1; OD91_016-1; OD91_017-1; OD91_018-1; OD91_021-1; OD91_023-1; OD91_026-1; OD91_031-1; OD91_033-1; OD91_043-1; OD91_046-1; OD91_048-1; OD91_049-1; OD91_051-1; OD91_055-1; OD91_058-1; OD91_061-1; Oden; off Franz-Josef-Land; off Novaya Zemlya; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS11; PS11/185-1; PS11/187-1; PS11/188-1; PS11/189-1; PS11/190-1; PS11/191-1; PS11/193-1; PS11/194-1; PS11/195-1; PS11/219-1; PS11/220-1; PS11/221-1; PS11/222-1; PS11/223-1; PS11/224-1; PS11/225-1; PS11/226-1; PS11/227-1; PS11/245-1; PS11/246-1; PS11/247-1; PS11/248-1; PS11/249-1; PS11/250-1; PS11/251-1; PS11/252-1; PS11/253-1; PS11/269-1; PS11/285-1; PS11/287-1; PS11/310; PS11/340; PS11/358; PS11/362; PS11/364; PS11/365; PS11/371; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Sampling/drilling ice; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; SNOW; Snow/ice sample; Surface water sample; SWS; Water sample; Wilczek Island; WS
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Lazarus, David B; Spencer-Cervato, Cinzia; Pika-Biolzi, Milena; Beckmann, Jean-Pierre; von Salis, Katharina H; Hilbrecht, Hienz; Thierstein, Hans R (1995): Revised chronology of Neogene DSDP holes from the world ocean. Ocean Drilling Program, Texas A&M University, Technical Note, 24, 301 pp, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.tn.24.1995
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: After nearly 30 years of growth in geochronologic knowledge, the originally published age models for many older deep sea marine sections have become badly outdated. In this report we present newly revised age models for Neogene sediments from 94 DSDP holes. Biostratigraphic data for planktonic foraminifers, calcareous nannofossils, diatoms and radiolarians, paleomagnetic and other stratigraphic data were compiled from the original Initial Reports volumes of DSDP. The Berggren et al. (1985 doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1985)96〈1407:CG〉2.0.CO;2) scale was used for the age of magnetic reversals, and a variety of recent papers were used to establish a standard modern set of calibrations for marine microfossil events to the magnetic reversal scale. New age vs depth plots were made for each hole, and for each a new line of correlation was created. All tabulated stratigraphic data, new age models, and age depth plots are given as appendices to the report.
    Keywords: 13-125; 13-132; 14-141; 16-158; 18-173; 18-178; 19-192; 22-213; 24-233; 24-233A; 24-236; 24-238; 26-253; 28-265; 28-266; 28-267B; 29-278; 29-281; 30-289; 33-317B; 40-362; 41-366A; 41-369A; 49-408; 55-433A; 56-436; 57-438A; 57-440B; 60-458; 63-469; 63-470; 63-470A; 63-472; 67-495; 67-499; 68-502A; 68-502B; 68-502C; 68-503A; 68-503B; 71-513A; 71-514; 72-517; 73-522; 74-525A; 7-63; 7-64; 80-548; 80-548A; 81-552A; 85-572A; 85-572C; 85-572D; 85-573; 85-573A; 85-573B; 85-574; 85-574C; 86-577; 86-578; 86-579A; 88-581; 89-586B; 90-587; 90-588; 90-588A; 90-588C; 90-590A; 90-590B; 90-591; 90-592; 90-593; 90-594; 90-594A; 92-599; 94-606; 94-607; 94-607A; 94-608; 94-608A; 94-609; 94-609B; 94-610; 94-610A; 95-603; 95-603C; Antarctic Ocean/BASIN; Antarctic Ocean/RIDGE; Antarctic Ocean/Tasman Sea/CONT RISE; Caribbean Sea/RIDGE; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Glomar Challenger; Indian Ocean//BASIN; Indian Ocean//FRACTURE ZONE; Indian Ocean//RIDGE; Indian Ocean/Gulf of Aden/TRENCH; Leg13; Leg14; Leg16; Leg18; Leg19; Leg22; Leg24; Leg26; Leg28; Leg29; Leg30; Leg33; Leg40; Leg41; Leg49; Leg55; Leg56; Leg57; Leg60; Leg63; Leg67; Leg68; Leg7; Leg71; Leg72; Leg73; Leg74; Leg80; Leg81; Leg85; Leg86; Leg88; Leg89; Leg90; Leg92; Leg94; Leg95; Mediterranean Sea/CONT RISE; Mediterranean Sea/RIDGE; North Atlantic/CONT RISE; North Atlantic/CONT SLOPE; North Atlantic/DIAPIR; North Atlantic/FLANK; North Atlantic/PLATEAU; North Atlantic/RIDGE; North Atlantic/SPUR; North Pacific; North Pacific/ABYSSAL FLOOR; North Pacific/BASIN; North Pacific/ESCARPMENT; North Pacific/FLANK; North Pacific/GUYOT; North Pacific/PLAIN; North Pacific/PLATEAU; North Pacific/RIDGE; North Pacific/SEAMOUNT; North Pacific/SLOPE; North Pacific/TRENCH; North Pacific/TROUGH; South Atlantic; South Atlantic/CREST; South Atlantic/FLANK; South Atlantic/PLATEAU; South Atlantic/RIDGE; South Pacific; South Pacific/CONT RISE; South Pacific/Coral Sea/BANK; South Pacific/PLATEAU; South Pacific/Tasman Sea/CONT RISE; South Pacific/Tasman Sea/PLATEAU
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 86 datasets
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Keywords: ALTITUDE; ANT-XII/1; AWI_Meteo; Celtic Sea; Humidity, relative; Meteorological Long-Term Observations @ AWI; Polarstern; Pressure, at given altitude; PS32/11871; PS32 06AQANTXII_1; RADIO; Radiosonde; Temperature, air; Wind direction; Wind speed
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 3345 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Keywords: ALTITUDE; ANT-XII/1; AWI_Meteo; Humidity, relative; Meteorological Long-Term Observations @ AWI; North Sea; Polarstern; Pressure, at given altitude; PS32/11870; PS32 06AQANTXII_1; RADIO; Radiosonde; Scheldt Delta Estuary; Temperature, air; Wind direction; Wind speed
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1070 data points
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Keywords: ALTITUDE; ANT-XII/1; AWI_Meteo; Humidity, relative; Meteorological Long-Term Observations @ AWI; Polarstern; Pressure, at given altitude; PS32/11872; PS32 06AQANTXII_1; RADIO; Radiosonde; South Atlantic Ocean; Temperature, air; Wind direction; Wind speed
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 3430 data points
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Keywords: ALTITUDE; ANT-XII/1; AWI_Meteo; Humidity, relative; Meteorological Long-Term Observations @ AWI; Polarstern; Pressure, at given altitude; PS32/11873; PS32 06AQANTXII_1; RADIO; Radiosonde; South Atlantic Ocean; Temperature, air; Wind direction; Wind speed
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 3358 data points
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