ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • Other Sources  (88)
  • Elsevier  (84)
  • Cell Press
  • Oxford University Press
  • 2020-2023
  • 2000-2004  (88)
  • 1955-1959
  • 2001  (88)
  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 300 pp., Elsevier, vol. 34, no. 22, pp. 65-70, (ISBN 3-7643-0253-4)
    Publication Date: 2001
    Keywords: Fluids ; Textbook of geophysics ; Geochemistry
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 298 pp., Elsevier, vol. 70, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 1039-1054, (ISBN 0-444-50971-2)
    Publication Date: 2001
    Keywords: Subduction zone ; Review article ; Hypocentral depth ; Fault plane solution, focal mechanism ; Seismicity ; Mineralogy ; Hilst ; triggering ; Stress ; Rheology ; Geochemistry ; Strength ; Fluids ; ConvolutionE
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, Elsevier, vol. 10, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 329, (ISBN: 0-08-043649-8)
    Publication Date: 2001
    Description: Following the breakthrough in the last decade in identifying the key parameters for time and depth imaging in anisotropic media and developing practical methodologies for estimating them from seismic data, this title primarily focuses on the far reaching exploration benefits of anisotropic processing. This volume provides the first comprehensive description of reflection seismic signatures and processing methods in anisotropic media. It identifies the key parameters for time and depth imaging in transversely isotropic media and describes practical methodologies for estimating them from seismic data. Also, it contains a thorough discussion of the important issues of uniqueness and stability of seismic velocity analysis in the presence of anisotropy. The book contains a complete description of anisotropic imaging methods, from the theoretical background to algorithms to implementation issues. Numerous applications to synthetic and field data illustrate the improvements achieved by the anisotropic processing and the possibility of using the estimated anisotropic parameters in lithology discrimination.
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Reflection seismics ; Anisotropy
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    In:  New York, 294 pp., Oxford University Press, vol. 26, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 329, (ISBN 0-521-62434-7 hc (0-521-62478-9 pb))
    Publication Date: 2001
    Keywords: outreach ; communication ; publishing
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 680 pp., Elsevier, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 125-169, (ISBN: 3-540-42642-6, Approx. 620 p. 30 illus., Hardcover)
    Publication Date: 2001
    Keywords: Borehole geophys. ; Textbook of geophysics ; Electromagnetic methods/phenomena
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 356 pp., Elsevier, vol. 2, no. XVI:, pp. 1-14, (ISBN: 0-387-30752-4)
    Publication Date: 2001
    Keywords: Textbook of engineering ; Textbook of geophysics ; Statistical investigations
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-07-07
    Description: Understanding how complex, highly variable sedimentary systems interact in time and space to release, transport and concentrate diamonds is the basis for successful exploration strategies for placer diamond deposits. De Beers’ and Namdeb's West Coast operations are widely involved in a variety of applied scientific research to unravel the complex interactions of Cainozoic fluvial, marine and aeolian systems that have contributed to the formation of the most spectacular gem diamond placer in the world. Geological models produced not only provide the basis for exploration target selection but also high-resolution orebody characterisation, a prerequisite for high confidence geostatistical evaluation, mining system design and mine planning. This paper draws on some of the many applied research projects that have contributed to De Beers’ and Namdeb's placer exploration success that continues to deliver new mineral resources on the West Coast. The history of the Orange River has, and continues to be intensively studied both on- and offshore as the principal conduit for diamond introduction to the continental margin. Use of the “Jago” submersible has introduced a new dimension to offshore sedimentological studies on the continental shelf through direct seafloor observation, which helped us to identify the latest deep-water offshore development—the late Pliocene/early Pleistocene Orange River fan-delta.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Publication Date: 2020-05-13
    Description: The relationship between partial melting and granite intrusion in a classic Barrovian metamorphic terrane has been assessed. Thirteen samples were dated by SHRIMP U–Pb zircon geochronology from the island of Naxos, Greece, one of the Aegean metamorphic core complexes. The effect of partial melting during peak Barrovian metamorphism on Naxos is recorded by fine (〈30 mm) zircon overgrowths surrounding older cores in seven of nine samples of migmatite analyzed. The ages of these overgrowths suggest that partial melting commenced prior to 20.7 Ma. The timing of partial melting on Naxos also constrainsthe onset of extensional tectonism in the area to pre-20.7 Ma. The preservation of zircon overgrowth rims with distinctly different concordant ages, ranging from 20.7 to 16.8 Ma, both from different samples and from within the one handspecimen, suggests that zircon precipitation, associated with the partial melting process, was episodic over this age range on both local(cm) and regional (km) scales. Zircons from four granite intrusives were also dated and range in age from 15.4 to 11.3 Ma, with the main period of magmatic activity at ca. 12 Ma, clearly post-dating metamorphism. The sequence of partial melting, Barrovian metamorphism and magmatism in the Naxos metamorphic core complex can be related to a change from overall crustal shortening to extensional tectonism in the Aegean region, caused by post-collisional roll-back of the subducting African slab along the Hellenic trench system.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Tectonophysics, 338 (2). pp. 179-206.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-13
    Description: Miocene exhumation of metamorphic rocks in the Aegean Sea is partly a consequence of post-orogenic extension. If the post-orogenic mechanism of exhumation is rather well understood, the earlier syn-orogenic Eocene exhumation is still largely enigmatic. Previous authors have argued in terms of extension or compression. New structural and petrological data on Sifnos and Syros islands show that exhumation of high pressure–low temperature (HP–LT) rocks involves crustal-scale extensional ductile shear zones during the Eocene. We observe a continuum of top-to-the-NE and -E ductile shear from the Eocene (in the blueschist facies) to the Miocene (in the greenschist facies). This deformation is distributed in the eclogites and blueschists, whereas it is rather localised along ductile shear zones in the greenschists. Eclogites, which are preserved only at the top of the structural pile, are exhumed with a ‘cold’ retrograde P–T path. In the lower part of the structural pile we observe a progressive retrogression of eclogites in blueschist then greenschist facies. This lower part of pile is subsequently exhumed with P–T paths showing a nearly isothermal decompression before cooling. P–T–t-deformation data suggest that the Cycladic blueschists are progressively exhumed by a continuum of accretion at the base of the orogenic wedge, and by a partly non-coaxial extensional deformation above, distributed during the syn-orogenic stage, then localised during the post-orogenic stage. We then compare the mechanism of syn-orogenic exhumation of Crete and the Cyclades and we discuss a simple geodynamic scenario for the Aegean domain and the external Hellenides which accounts for (1) the southward migration of the Hellenic trench and arc during the Cenozoic; (2) the P–T–t-deformation data for the Cycladic blueschists and the Phyllite–quartzite nappe; and (3) the transition from syn-orogenic to post-orogenic in the Cyclades.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  In: Nitrogen Excretion. Fish physiology, 20 . Elsevier, San Diego, pp. 31-75. ISBN 0-12-350444-9
    Publication Date: 2018-03-08
    Description: Protein synthesis is fundamental to all living organisms and it has been studied intensively and at varying levels of complexity. This chapter provides a comprehensive review of research on protein synthesis in fish, examines data to produce simple models describing protein synthesis in terms of key variables, and provides explanations for variations from expected or predicted rates of protein synthesis. The underlying there is to integrate information at the organismal level. A variety of methods for measuring protein synthesis have been used and comparison suggest they give similar results for fish. Major influences on protein synthesis are species, life-history stage, temperature, feeding, and nutrition. The effects of other factors such as pollutants, anoxia, salinity, and hormones have also been investigated. In growing fish between 20 and 50% of energy expenditure is associated with protein synthesis. Protein synthesis is, therefore, a major energy-demanding process in fish that is influenced by many environmental and biotic factors.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 11
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48 (14-15) . pp. 3083-3106.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: A synopsis of results from two sediment trap moorings deployed at the mid- and outer slope (water depths 1450 and 3660 m, respectively) of the Goban Spur (N.E. Atlantic Margin) is presented. Fluxes increase with trap deployment depth; below 1000 m resuspended and advected material contributes increasingly to bulk flux. Fluxes of dry weight, POC and diatoms in the traps 400 m above bottom (mab) are smaller than those recorded at the sediment surface due to lateral fluxes in the benthic nepheloid layer. These near-bottom fluxes are larger at shallower water depths. 231Pa/230Th ratios in sedimenting material suggest that boundary scavenging is not significant at the Goban Spur. Fluxes of 210Pb in the intermediate and deep traps are comparable to the 210Pb supply rate at this site. At the outer slope, sediment 210Pb fluxes are similar to those measured in the traps 400 mab; at the mid-slope they are a factor of 2 higher, once again indicating large near-bottom lateral particle input. Based on POC-normalised biomarkers in sedimenting material, we followed changes in the quality of sedimenting material with differing trap depth and on seasonal and event-related time scales. In spring fresh, diatom-dominated sedimentation occurs, with progressive degradation of POC with time (to winter) and depth (from 600 to 3220 m). Deeper traps are distinguished on the basis of opal and aluminium fluxes that are dominant in lateral input. A storm event during late September 1993 was clearly reflected in the δ15N isotope ratio of sedimenting material, with a time lag of 2–3 weeks. Diatom and opal fluxes were elevated in this storm-related signal, and its biomarker composition in the 600-m trap was similar to that during spring. An estimate made of upward nitrate flux (new production) at the shelf break and at the outer slope indicated a 2-fold higher new (export) production at the shelf break. Particulate organic carbon export from the shelf break to below the depth of maximal seasonal mixing ranges between 3 and 9% of primary production.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 12
    Publication Date: 2016-10-07
    Description: A systematic intercomparison of three realistic eddy-permitting models of the North Atlantic circulation has been performed. The models use different concepts for the discretization of the vertical coordinate, namely geopotential levels, isopycnal layers, terrain-following (sigma) coordinates, respectively. Although these models were integrated under nearly identical conditions, the resulting large-scale model circulations show substantial differences. The results demonstrate that the large-scale thermohaline circulation is very sensitive to the model representation of certain localised processes, in particular to the amount and water mass properties of the overflow across the Greenland–Scotland region, to the amount of mixing within a few hundred kilometers south of the sills, and to several other processes at small or sub-grid scales. The different behaviour of the three models can to a large extent be explained as a consequence of the different model representation of these processes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 13
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 175 . pp. 325-341.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-07
    Description: The accurate dating of fossil coral reefs is of prime importance in determining the timing of deglaciation events and thus understanding the mechanisms driving glacial–interglacial cycles. So far, the most useful coral reef records of past sea level changes are those related to the last deglaciation and the Last Interglacial period. U/Th ages for older isotopic stages are more limited, due to the scarcity of datable material, reflecting diagenetic alteration. Most data are from emergent parts of reefs and reef terraces in active subduction zones where relative sea level records may be biased by variations in rates of tectonic uplift. New constraints on sea level changes over the past 300 000 yr are based on high-precision U-series age measurements of successive reef units on Mururoa. These have been cored in four continuous 300-m-long drill holes with seaward inclinations of 30 to 45° on the northeastern rim of the atoll. Past sea level positions have been calculated from the radiometric ages of corals by correcting the present depth of subsurface horizons both for thermal subsidence and for depositional palaeodepth. The location of this atoll at a considerable distance from former ice sheets (‘far field’) minimises the influence of glacio–isostatic rebound. Prominent units formed during four periods of relative sea level highstands, including the Holocene and stages 5 (∼125 ka), 7 (∼212 ka) and 9 (∼332 ka). These are primarily composed of coralgal frameworks that grew in very shallow water. Three periods of relative low stand correspond to stages 2 (∼17–23 ka), 4 (∼60 ka) and 8 (∼270 ka) during which small reefs developed in association with large bioclastic accumulations. Good agreement with the timing of sea level changes based on oxygen isotope measurements in deep-sea cores is noted for most of the dated reef units. We report here the first accurate coral record of the Last Glacial Maximum in the Pacific, 135–143 m below the present sea surface, suggesting that sea level may have been lower than expected during this period.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 14
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences - Series III - Sciences de la Vie, 324 (4). pp. 305-319.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-24
    Description: The present study is the first comprehensive phylogeny of the class of the Phaeophyceae. For 67 species representing all orders of the class, the sequences of the 3’-end of the small and the 5ˈ-end of the large subunit nrRNA genes were aligned and analysed. A further analysis based on sequences of the 3’-end of the small and of the complete sequences of the 28S gene of the large subunits was also performed, but for only eight taxa. In both analyses, Tribonema marinum (Xanthophyceae) was used as outgroup. The analyses showed the Dictyotales as diverging first, followed by the Sphacelariales, then the Syringodermatales. Most of the orders currently accepted were confirmed as monophyletic groups but the Laminariales and Tilopteridales remained polyphyletic. The relationships of the remaining orders to each other were not resolved with the present data set. Ascoseira, included for the first time in a molecular study, appeared as a separate lineage without any clear relationship with other algae possessing conceptacles (Splachnidium and Fucales). Algae with stellate plastids, never studied in a global context, were polyphyletic; this result is consistent with their plastid ultrastructure and is discussed in detail. As further result of the present study, the South African genus Bifurcariopsis appeared as the sister taxon of the North Atlantic genus Himanthalia, and Xiphophora appeared as the sister taxon of Hormosira rather than as a member of the Fucaceae; the taxonomic position of these genera is discussed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 15
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: This paper shows that the mean flow of an eddy-permitting model can be altered by assimilation of surface height variability, providing that information about the mean sea surface is included, using an adaption of a statistical–dynamical method devised by Oschlies and Willebrand. We show that for a restricted depth range (about 1000 m), dynamical knowledge can make up for the null space present in surface data whose temporal extent may be too short to distinguish between vertical modes. The lack of an accurate geoid has meant that most assimilation methods, while representing variability well, have been unable to modify the mean flow to any extent. However, we show that by including several approximate forms for the mean sea surface, the mean interior flow in the upper kilometer can be rapidly adjusted towards reality by the assimilation, with the location of major current systems moved by hundreds of kilometers.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 16
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Progress in Oceanography, 48 (2-3). pp. 289-312.
    Publication Date: 2016-10-07
    Description: Seasonal changes in eddy energy are used to investigate the role of high-frequency wind forcing in generating eddy kinetic energy in the oceans. To this end, we analyze two experiments of an eddy-permitting model of the North Atlantic driven by daily and monthly mean wind stress fields, and compare results with corresponding changes in the variance of the wind fields, and related results from previous studies using altimeter and current meter data. With daily wind-stress forcing the model is found to be in general agreement with altimetric observations and reveal a complex pattern of temporal changes in variability over the North Atlantic. Observations and the model indicate enhanced levels of eddy energy during winter months over several areas of the northern and, particularly northeastern North Atlantic. Since the wind-generated variability is primarily barotropic, its signal can be detected mostly in the low-energy regions of the northern and north-eastern North Atlantic, which are remote from baroclinically unstable currents. There the winter-to-summer difference in simulated eddy kinetic energy caused by the variable wind forcing is 〈0.5 cm2 s2 between 30° and 55°N, and is 1–3 cm2 s2 north of 55°N. Seasonal changes in kinetic energy are insignificant along the path of the North Atlantic current and south of about 30°N. The weak depth dependence of the seasonal changes in eddy energy implies that the relative importance of wind-generated eddy energy is maximum at depth where the general (baroclinic) variability level is low. Accordingly, a significant correlation is found between the seasonal cycle in the variance of wind stress and the seasonal cycle in eddy energy over a substantially wider area than near the surface, notably across the entire eastern North Atlantic between the North Atlantic Current and the North Equatorial Current.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 17
    Publication Date: 2017-07-12
    Description: We show the distribution of nutrients, oxygen, total dissolved inorganic carbon (CT) and total alkalinity (AT) along three sections close to the Canary Islands, between 18°W and the African coast during Meteor 37/2 cruise (January 1997). From the thermohaline properties of Eastern North Atlantic Central Water (ENACW), Mediterranean Water (MW), Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) and North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW), a mixing model has been established based on the water mass description. It can explain most of the variabilities found in the distribution of the chemical variables, including the carbon system, and it is validated through the use of conservative chemical variables like ‘NO.’ From nutrients, oxygen, AT and CT, the chemical characterisation of the water masses was performed by calculating the concentration of these variables in the previously defined thermohaline end-members. The relative variation of nutrient concentrations, resulting from the regeneration of organic matter, was estimated. Close to the African shelf-break, a poleward undercurrent conveying as much as a 11% of AAIW was observed only in the southern section (28.5°N). From the chemical and thermohaline properties of the end-members, a comparison with data from other oceanic regions was made in respect to conservative chemical variables (‘NO’). In addition, a north–south gradient in the ventilation pattern of water masses is observed from the residuals of the model.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 18
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Physics and Chemistry of The Earth Part B-Hydrology Oceans and Atmosphere, 26 (5-6). pp. 383-389.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: The closing of the water and energy cycle of the Baltic Sea is one of the main aims of BALTEX (Baltic Sea Experiment), which particularily focuses on the exploration, modelling and quantification of the various processes determining the space and time variability of the energy and water budget. On the long-term mean the water budget of the Baltic Sea is determined by river runoff, net precipitation (precipitation minus evaporation) and the in- and outflows through the Baltic Sea entrance area, assuming that the mean sea level remains constant, i.e. the ability of the Baltic Sea to store a huge amount of water is averaged out over the long-term period. For shorter periods, the water storage which can be expressed by the mean sea level plays an important role on the water budget. The objective of the present study is to investigate the variability of the water storage of the Baltic Sea and relate its fluctuations to the different components of the water balance equation. The anomaly of the mean sea level of the Baltic Sea shows a well pronounced seasonal cycle, with negative values between the end of February to the end of June (minimum in the middle of May), and positive anomalies from July to mid-February (maximum in January). There is a high correlation between the mean sea level expressed by the Landsort tide gauge and the local atmospheric conditions over the Baltic Sea. The annual course of the total water balance is controlled by the local atmospheric conditions with the net fresh-water inflow only controls the general outflow conditions. Sea level, precipitation and river runoff have been obtained from observations provided by the SMHI. For the in- and outflow through the entrance area of the Baltic Sea and evaporation over the open ocean, coupled sea ice-ocean model simulations for a 10-years period have been utilized.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 19
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 258 (1). pp. 101-114.
    Publication Date: 2014-01-23
    Description: In this study, patterns of community development were investigated within vs. outside 'habitats'. These habitats represented five different monospecific assemblages of one of the following species: the brown alga Fucus serratus, the red alga Delesseria sanguinea, the green alga Enteromorpha intestinalis, the seagrass Zostera marina and the blue mussel Mytilus edulis. Natural assemblages were allowed to develop on paired artificial substrata-separated by ca. 1 m -within (treatment) vs, outside (control) of habitats. The same colonizer species settled on treatment and control substrata for given habitats. However, after 5 months of settlement and post-settlement dynamics, their proportional abundance and the structure of treatment and control assemblages differed in many instances. Variability among replicates of a given treatment, seperated by up to 50 m, was large, indicating a patchy spatial distribution of organisms. Despite this spatial heterogeneity among within-treatment replicates, analysis of similarity revealed that in most instances significantly different assemblages developed between treatments on a small spatial scale depending on whether substrate were positioned within as compared to outside a, given habitat. Consequently, the algae, seagrass or mussels constituting a habitat seem to control the structure of the benthic assemblage developing in their vicinity by one or more possible mechanisms: reduction of larval advection, exudation of metabolites that influence settlement and/or post-settlement survival, and/or-in the case of mussel assemblages-predation on larvae. In addition to spatial variability in larval supply, stochasticity in succession, substratum heterogeneity, competition and predation effects, this investigation reveals the potential of a further assemblage structuring factor: the impact of neighboring organisms
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 20
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 48 (6). pp. 1423-1441.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-30
    Description: Observations of transient tracers such as tritium and helium-3 Full-size image (〈1 K) are frequently combined to construct “age-like” quantities generally interpreted to represent time elapsed since a fluid parcel was last at the surface. In a turbulent (“diffusive”) environment such as the ocean, we must regard the fluid parcel as being composed of material fluid elements that have spent different lengths of time since their last contact with the surface. Hence, they are characterized by an age spectrum or distribution of transit times. In this study we explore the concepts of tracer-derived “ages” and the transit-time probability density function (PDF) with the aim of improving our understanding of their interpretation. Using an ocean general circulation model, we illustrate the effect of mixing on tracer-derived “ages” within the Atlantic Ocean. The mixing biases such ages towards younger values with respect to the ideal or mean age of a water parcel. In the North Atlantic, this bias is particularly pronounced in the thermocline because of large vertical gradients in tracer concentration, and in the deep ocean, where the penetration of recently ventilated water creates large gradients along the isopycnal surfaces. In contrast, the effect of mixing appears to be relatively small in the subtropical subduction region. Calculations of the transit-time PDF in the ocean model show, however, that the mean age can potentially be very large because of contributions from long transit-time pathways, in spite of the fact that such pathways make up a small fraction of the fluid parcel. These results illustrate the key idea that tracer-derived ages are weighted towards the leading part of the transit-time distribution, while the ideal age is more sensitive to its “tail”. These tracers are thus sensitive to and help constrain different time scales. We also find that the ideal age converges much more rapidly to the mean age compared with the first moment of the age spectrum, an important consideration in numerical studies.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 21
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Microbes and Infection, 3 (7). pp. 545-548.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-01
    Description: Pathogenicity islands represent distinct genetic elements encoding virulence factors of pathogenic bacteria. Pathogenicity islands belong to the class of genomic islands, which are common genetic elements sharing a set of unifying features. Genomic islands have been acquired by horizontal gene transfer. In recent years many different genomic islands have been discovered in a variety of pathogenic as well as non-pathogenic bacteria. Because they promote genetic variability, genomic islands play an important role in microbial evolution
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 22
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: On the basis of various lithological, mircopaleontological and isotopic proxy records covering the last 30,000 calendar years (cal kyr) the paleoenvironmental evolution of the deep and surface water circulation in the subarctic Nordic seas was reconstructed for a climate interval characterized by intensive ice-sheet growth and subsequent decay on the surrounding land masses. The data reveal considerable temporal changes in the type of thermohaline circulation. Open-water convection prevailed in the early record, providing moisture for the Fennoscandian-Barents ice sheets to grow until they reached the shelf break at ∼26 cal. kyr and started to deliver high amounts of ice-rafted debris (IRD) into the ocean via melting icebergs. Low epibenthic δ18O values and small-sized subpolar foraminifera observed after 26 cal. kyr may implicate that advection of Atlantic water into the Nordic seas occurred at the subsurface until 15 cal. kyr. Although modern-like surface and deep-water conditions first developed at ∼13.5 cal. kyr, thermohaline circulation remained unstable, switching between a subsurface and surface advection of Atlantic water until 10 cal. kyr when IRD deposition and major input of meltwater ceased. During this time, two depletions in epibenthic δ13C are recognized just before and after the Younger Dryas indicating a notable reduction in convectional processes. Despite an intermittent cooling at ∼8 cal. kyr, warmest surface conditions existed in the central Nordic seas between 10 and 6 cal. kyr. However, already after 7 cal. kyr the present day situation gradually evolved, verified by a strong water mass exchange with the Arctic Ocean and an intensifying deep convection as well as surface temperature decrease in the central Nordic seas. This process led to the development of the modern distribution of water masses and associated oceanographic fronts after 5 cal. kyr and, eventually, to today's steep east–west surface temperature gradient. The time discrepancy between intensive vertical convection after 5 cal. kyr but warmest surface temperatures already between 10 and 6 cal. kyr strongly implicates that widespread postglacial surface warming in the Nordic seas was not directly linked to the rates in deep-water formation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 23
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Trends in Microbiology, 9 (12). p. 585.
    Publication Date: 2020-04-30
    Description: Refers to: Werner Goebel, Roy Gross Intracellular survival strategies of mutualistic and parasitic prokaryotes Trends in Microbiology, Volume 9, Issue 6, 1 June 2001, Pages 267-273 doi:10.1016/S0966-842X(01)02040-6
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 24
    Publication Date: 2017-05-30
    Description: The design and deployment of an in situ flow injection (FI) monitor for high temporal resolution monitoring of phosphate in the River Frome, Dorset, UK, is described. The monitor incorporates solenoid, self-priming micropumps for propulsion, solenoid-operated switching valves for controlling the fluidics and a miniature CCD spectrometer for full spectrum (200-1000 nm) acquisition and operates in a graphical programming environment. A tangential filtration unit is attached to the sample inlet line to remove suspended particulate matter and prevent blockage of the micropumps and valves. Detection (at 7 10 nm) is based on molybdenum blue chemistry with tin(II) chloride reduction. The detection limit is 0.67 muM PO4 and the linear range can be adjusted by using different wavelengths for detection. Pump noise is eliminated by subtraction of the signal at a non-absorbing wavelength (447 nm). Data from an intensive (sample every 30 min) field trial on the River Frome performed in October 2000 are presented, and the implications of the data for refining an export coefficient model for phosphorus from the catchment are discussed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 25
    Publication Date: 2017-09-26
    Description: In order to develop the potential tool of diatom oxygen isotopes for paleoenvironmental studies we compared oxygen isotopes of natural marine diatoms sampled from ocean surface water, sediment traps and surface sediments with oxygen isotopic fractionations determined for laboratory diatom cultures. Freshly grown natural diatoms (phytoplankton samples and sediment trap material) and cultured diatoms reveal similar oxygen isotope fractionation factors. The fresh diatoms have 3 to 10 parts per thousand lower isotope fractionation factors than fossil (sedimentary) diatoms. A temperature-related oxygen isotope fractionation could not be established for the laboratory cultures (and the natural phytoplankton samples), and there is evidence that diatom growth rate until reaching the stationary growth state also controls the measured silica-water oxygen isotope fractionation factor. It is possible, however, that slow diatom growth in sea surface water may well lead to a temperature-dependent silica-water oxygen isotope fractionation which is the prerequisite for a use of diatom oxygen isotopes in palco-surface water studies. FTIR-spectroscopic analyses of various diatomaceous materials revealed that the ratio of integrated peak intensities for Si-O-Si/Si-OH correlates with the 3 to 10 parts per thousand delta O-18(silica) increase from fresh to fossil diatoms. Open-system (flow-through) silica dissolution experiments suggest that the diatom frustules are isotopically homogenous and that the increase in O-18 is therefore not due to dissolution of isotopically light surficial Si-OH groups. It is concluded that slow internal condensation reactions during silica maturation in surface sediments cause both an increase in the intensity ratio of Si-O-Si/Si-OH and the O-18 content of framework oxygen. These findings also indicate that the oxygen isotope compositions of marine sediment diatoms do not indicate sea surface water temperature but rather reflect variable O-18 contents of surface sediments. Copyright (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 26
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: The beaks of 10 cephalopod species were found in the diet of foraging and moulting king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) from a breeding colony at Volunteer Beach, Falkland Islands during austral winter (September/October 1996). A total of 486 lower cephalopod beaks were collected, identified and measured (LRL: lower rostral length). Six cephalopod families occurred in the penguins’ diet with Onychoteuthidae being the most abundant (256 lower beaks) and represented by Moroteuthis ingens (168; LRL range 2.1–6.8 mm), Moroteuthis knipovitchi (79; LRL range 1.9–5.5 mm), and Kondakovia longimana (9; LRL range 2.1–7.4 mm). Other families were Ommastrephidae (135) with Martialia hyadesi (127; LRL range 2.6–8.7 mm), Illex argentinus (6; LRL range 5.0–6.0 mm), and Ommastrephes bartrami (2; LRL range 7.9–8.8 mm); Loliginidae with Loligo gahi (60; LRL range 0.8–2.1 mm); Gonatidae with Gonatus antarcticus (28; LRL range 1.3–3.3 mm); Neoteuthidae with Alluroteuthis antarcticus (4; LRL range 2.4–3.9 mm), and Histioteuthidae with Histioteuthis eltaninae (3; LRL range 3.3–3.4 mm). Allometric equations were used to relate lower rostral beak length with cephalopod body size and mass. M. ingens was the dominating cephalopod prey in terms of numbers (n=168), whereas M. hyadesi was most important in terms of biomass (64 682 g). The present study provides first information on the cephalopod prey of Falkland Islands king penguins. The data suggest that penguins take squid at coastal islands slope regions as well as in oceanic waters which demonstrates their ability to forage in a wide geographical area and to alternate between specific foraging sites. Possible competition with the commercial squid fishery off the Falkland Islands is discussed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 27
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: Bottom-simulating reflections (BSRs) are probably the most commonly used indicators for gas hydrates in marine sediments. It is now widely accepted that BSRs are primarily caused by free gas beneath gas-hydrate-bearing sediments. However, our insight into BSR formation to date is mostly limited to theoretical studies. Two endmember processes have been suggested to supply free gas for BSR formation: (i) dissociation of gas hydrates and (ii) migration of methane from below. During a recent campaign of the German Research Vessel Sonne off the shore of Peru, we detected BSRs at locations undergoing both tectonic subsidence and non-sedimentation or seafloor erosion. Tectonic subsidence (and additionally perhaps seafloor erosion) causes the base of gas hydrate stability to migrate downward with respect to gas-hydrate-bearing sediments. This process rules out dissociation of gas hydrates as a source of free gas for BSRs at these locations. Instead, free gas at BSRs is predicted to be absorbed into the gas hydrate stability zone. BSRs appear to be confined to locations where the subsurface structure suggests focusing of fluid flow. We investigated the seafloor at one of these locations with a TV sled and observed fields of rounded boulders and slab-like rocks, which we interpreted as authigenic carbonates. Authigenic carbonates are precipitations typically found at cold vents with methane expulsion. We retrieved a small carbonate-cemented sediment sample from the seafloor above a BSR about 20 km away. This supported our interpretation that the observed slabs and boulders were carbonates. All these observations suggest that BSRs in Lima Basin are maintained predominantly by gas that is supplied from below, demonstrating that this endmember process for BSR formation exists in nature. Results from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 112 showed that methane for gas hydrate formation on the Peru lower slope and the methane in hydrocarbon gases on the upper slope is mostly of biogenic origin. The δ13C composition of the recovered carbonate cement was consistent with biologic methane production below the seafloor (although possibly above the BSR). We speculate that the gas for BSR formation in Lima Basin also is mainly biogenic methane. This would suggest the biologic productivity beneath the gas hydrate zone in Lima Basin to be relatively high in order to supply enough methane to maintain BSRs.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 28
    Publication Date: 2017-12-06
    Description: This paper presents a revised chemical purification method of Hf for the measurement of Hf isotope ratios of Fe–Mn crusts on a new generation of double focusing multiple collector plasma source mass spectrometer (MC-ICP-MS). By measuring surface scrapings of hydrogenetic Fe–Mn crusts distributed over the three major ocean basins, the present-day Hf isotope distribution of oceanic deep water is assessed in detail. The results show an εHf provinciality correlated with those of other radiogenic isotope tracers such as Nd and Pb in agreement with previous studies. This supports the use of Hf isotopes as tracer of element source provenance and water masses. Fe–Mn crusts display the same present-day Hf–Nd isotope array as given before for Mn nodules. The smaller isotopic variability of Hf compared with Nd may either be caused by a more efficient mixing of Hf than Nd in the ocean due to a longer residence time or may be a consequence of a systematically more radiogenic Hf than Nd isotope signature delivered to the oceans by weathering of continental crust. A Hf isotope time series was measured on crust VA13/2 to assess the Hf isotope compositions of the Central Pacific deep water over the past 26 Ma. No consistency is observed between the Hf and Pb isotope time series. In contrast, Hf and Nd isotope time series display similar patterns which are, however, apparently offset by 2 Ma prior to 14 Ma. Differential diffusion of Hf and Nd does not explain this offset. The smaller amplitude in the Hf isotope variations compared with the Nd isotopes rather argues for more efficient mixing of Hf in the ocean. We suggest that both isotope systems have responded in a similar way to the processes affecting the dissolved radiogenic isotope composition of Pacific deep water during this time interval. The parallel increase in εHf and εNd observed between 14 and 3 Ma may probably be attributed to the increased inputs of Hf and Nd into the Central Pacific Ocean derived from the weathering of the Pacific Islands Arcs. Over the past 3 Ma an increased aeolian continental input derived from Asia most likely caused negative shifts in εNd and εHf recorded by VA13/2. The fact that Hf and Nd isotope compositions plot along the present-day array for Fe–Mn crusts and Mn nodules over the entire past 26 Ma suggests that aeolian supply of Hf to the Pacific Ocean has been a long-term important feature.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 29
    Publication Date: 2017-07-12
    Description: The Almeria–Oranfront forms where surface waters of Atlantic and Mediterranean origin meet at the eastern end of the Alboran Sea. A multidisciplinary field experiment on RRS Discovery in December 1996, in the second observational phase of the EU-funded Observations and Modelling of Eddy scale Geostrophic and Ageostrophic motions (OMEGA) project, observed the biological impact of mesoscale frontal instability of the Almeria–Oran frontal jet. It is concluded that periodic vertical velocities of ∼20 m/day, associated with the propagation of wave-like meanders along the front, have a significant effect on the vertical distribution of zooplankton across the front despite their ability to migrate at greater speeds. Observations of a layer of fluorescence coincident with subducted surface waters indicated that phytoplankton were drawn down and along isopycnals, by cross-front ageostrophic motion, to depths of 200 m. From the study of sound-scattering layers (SSL) identified in acoustic backscatter data, a layer of zooplankton was found coincident with the drawn-down phytoplankton. This layer persisted during and despite diel vertical migration. High-resolution optical plankton counter (OPC) data showed smaller zooplankton, which did not undertake diel vertical migration, remained concentrated near the surface in the fast-flowing frontal jet.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 30
    Publication Date: 2017-12-11
    Description: Embryos and larvae of bivalves are frequently used in marine ecotoxicology for the purpose of assessing seawater quality, because they are very sensitive to pollutants and provide rapid responses. Laboratory studies, however, cannot accurately simulate natural conditions. We conducted bivalve embryo-larval studies in situ at the marina of Arcachon (southwest French Atlantic coast), in order to assess ‘biological quality’ of the water. One experiment conducted in winter 1999 (temperatures of 10 °C) with embryos of the Mediterranean mussel, Mytilus galloprovincialis, has shown that such tests are practicable in winter at low temperatures. This study did not show any deterioration in ‘biological quality’ of the water. Four series of experiments were subsequently performed during summer 2000 (ambient water temperatures of 19 to 22.4 °C) with embryos of the Japanese oyster, Crassostrea gigas. The results show that the ‘sea water biological quality’ deteriorates from the port entrance towards its inner part. To our knowledge, this is the first investigation of the marine environment in which bivalve embryos have been used in situ. They are very suitable for this type of study, because bivalve embryos and larvae are more sensitive to pollutants than the adults, and also because they belong to euryhaline species and the embryos tolerate summer temperatures (both species) as well as winter temperatures (mussels), allowing biomonitoring to be conducted all over the year.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 31
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    In:  FEMS Microbiology Letters, 197 . pp. 171-178.
    Publication Date: 2019-08-05
    Description: A PCR protocol for the detection of sulfur-oxidizing bacteria based on soxB genes that are essential for thiosulfate oxidation by sulfur-oxidizing bacteria of various phylogenetic groups which use the 'Paracoccus sulfur oxidation' pathway was developed. Five degenerate primers were used to specifically amplify fragments of soxB genes from different sulfur-oxidizing bacteria previously shown to oxidize thiosulfate. The PCR yielded a soxB fragment of approximately 1000 bp from most of the bacteria. Amino acid and nucleotide sequences of soxB from reference strains as well as from new isolates and environmental DNA from a hydrothermal vent habitat in the North Fiji Basin were compared and used to infer relationships of soxB between sulfur-oxidizing bacteria belonging to various 16S rDNA-based phylogenetic groups. Major phylogenetic lines derived from 16S rDNA were confirmed by soxB phylogeny. Thiosulfate-oxidizing green sulfur bacteria formed a coherent group by their soxB sequences. Likewise, clearly separated branches demonstrated the distant relationship of representatives of alpha-, beta-, and gamma-Proteobacteria including representative species of the former genus Thiobacillus (now Halothiobacillus - gamma-Proteobacteria, Thiobacillus - beta-Proteobacteria and Starkeya - alpha-Proteobacteria). This general picture emerged although apparent evidence for lateral transfer of the soxB gene is indicated and comparison of soxB phylogeny and 16S rDNA phylogeny points to the significance of this gene transfer in hydrothermal vent bacterial communities of the North Fiji Basin.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 32
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 48 (12). pp. 2541-2567.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: In September 1993 (M26) and June/July 1996 (M36), a total of 239 surface samples (7 m depth) were collected on two transects across the open Atlantic Ocean (224 samples) and northwest European shelf edge area. We present an overview of the horizontal variability of dissolved Cd, Co, Zn, and Pb in between the northwest and northeast Atlantic Ocean in relation to salinity and the nutrients. Our data show a preferential incorporation of Cd relative to P in the particulate material of the surface ocean when related to previously published parallel measurements on suspended particulate matter from the same cruise. There is a good agreement with results recently estimated from a model by Elderfield and Rickaby (Nature 405 (2000) 305), who predict for the North Atlantic Ocean a best fit for αCd/P=[Cd/P]POM/[Cd/P]SW of 2.5, whereas the approach of our transect shows a αCd/P value of 2.6. The Co concentrations of our transects varied from 〈5 to 131 pmol kg−1, with the lowest values in the subtropical gyre. There were pronounced elevations in the low-salinity ranges of the northwest Atlantic and towards the European shelf. The Co data are decoupled from the Mn distribution and support the hypothesis of marginal inputs as the dominant source. Zinc varied from a minimum of 〈0.07 nmol kg−1 to a maximum of 1.2 and 4.8 nmol kg−1 in regions influenced by Labrador shelf or European coastal waters, respectively. In subtropical and northeast Atlantic waters, the average Zn concentration was 0.16 nmol kg−1. Zinc concentrations at nearly three quarters of the stations between 40°N and 60°N were 〈0.1 nmol kg−1. This suggests that biological factors control Zn concentrations in large areas of the North Atlantic surface waters. The Pb data indicated that significant differences in concentration between the northwest and northeast Atlantic surface waters presently (1996) do not exist for this metal. The transects in 1993 and 1996 exhibited Pb concentrations in the northeast Atlantic surface waters of 30 to 40 pmol kg−1, about a fifth to a quarter of the concentrations observed in 1981. This decline is supported by our particle flux measurements in deep waters of the same region.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 33
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Physics and Chemistry of The Earth Part B-Hydrology Oceans and Atmosphere, 26 (5-6). pp. 437-442.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-02
    Description: Precipitation plays an important role in the hydrological cycle. But to date, nearly no in-situ precipitation measurements are available over the Baltic Sea. This paper presents first results of rain measurements made by the Institut für Meereskunde at the University of Kiel over a period of two years (1997–1998). A simple interpolation method using autocorrelation functions was used to get a first insight of the spatial distribution in precipitation over the Baltic Proper.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 34
    Publication Date: 2017-12-11
    Description: ODP Leg 189 was designed to test the hypothesis that opening of the Tasmanian Seaway and initiation of circumpolar circulation contributed to the thermal isolation of Antarctica, leading to the development of initial ice-sheet and oceanic thermohaline circulation. The clay assemblages of the Tasmanian region contain the traces of two tectonic stages associated with ocean opening south of the south Tasman Rise near the Palaeocene–Eocene boundary and strike-slip activity between the western Tasmanian land-bridge and Antarctica during the Late Eocene. Earliest Oligocene clays indicate that cooling of Antarctic margins and activity of western boundary circulation progressed with the regional subsidence.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 35
    Publication Date: 2016-10-07
    Description: Three different, eddy-permitting numerical models are used to examine the seasonal variation of meridional mass and heat flux in the North Atlantic, with a focus on the transport mechanisms in the subtropics relating to observational studies near 25°N. The models, developed in the DYNAMO project, cover the same horizontal domain, with a locally isotropic grid of 1/3° resolution in longitude, and are subject to the same monthly-mean atmospheric forcing based on a three-year ECMWF climatology. The models differ in the vertical-coordinate scheme (geopotential, isopycnic, and sigma), implying differences in lateral and diapycnic mixing concepts, and implementation of bottom topography. As shown in the companion paper of Willebrand et al. (2001), the model solutions exhibit significant discrepancies in the annual-mean patterns of meridional mass and heat transport, as well as in the structure of the western boundary current system. Despite these differences in the mean properties, the seasonal anomalies of the meridional fluxes are in remarkable agreement, demonstrating a robust model behavior that is primarily dependent on the external forcing, and independent of choices of numerics and parameterization. The annual range is smaller than in previous model studies in which wind stress climatologies based on marine observations were used, both in the equatorial Atlantic (1.4 PW) and in the subtropics (0.4–0.5 PW). This is a consequence of a weaker seasonal variation in the zonal wind stresses based on the ECMWF analysis than those derived from climatologies of marine observations. The similarities in the amplitude and patterns of the meridional transport anomalies betwen the different model realizations provide support for previous model conclusions concerning the mechanism of seasonal and intraseasonal heat flux variations: they can be rationalized in terms of a time-varying Ekman transport and their predominantly barotropic compensation at depth. Analysis for 25°N indicates that the net meridional flow variation at depth is concentrated near the western boundary, but cannot be inferred from transport measurements in the western boundary current system, because of significant and complex recirculations over the western half of the basin. The model results instead suggest that the main requirement for estimating the annual cycle of heat flux through a transoceanic section, and the major source of error in model simulations, is an accurate knowledge of the wind stress variation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 36
    Publication Date: 2016-09-21
    Description: The objective of COMWEB was to develop efficient analytical, numerical and experimental methods for assessing and predicting the effects of nutrient (N, P, Si) supply on the stability and persistence of pelagic food web structure and function in coastal waters. The experimental comparative work included a geographic gradient covering Baltic, Mediterranean, and NE Atlantic waters and a NE Atlantic gradient in state of eutrophication. COMWEB has been an experimental approach to coastal eutrophication, studying effects of enhanced nutrient supply on components and flows of the entire lower pelagic food web. Flow network representations of pelagic food webs has been a framework of data reduction and flows were established by sophisticated inverse modelling. Fundamental information on physiological properties of functional key species in the pelagic food web was used to constrain flow estimations. A main conclusion derived from the flow networks was that very little energy and materials were transferred from the microbial food web to the main food chain. The lower food web could therefore be described as two parallel food chains with relatively limited interaction between heterotrophic groups. Short-term effects of nutrient perturbations were examined in mesocosms along the geographic gradient. The response was comparable in all systems, with a stronger effect on the activity and biomass of autotrophic groups than those of heterotrophic ones. Mediterranean waters showed much lower autotrophic biomass response than Baltic and NE Atlantic waters, which responded almost equally. The response of primary production was, however, more comparable. High phytoplankton lysis rate explained this low accumulation of biomass in Mediterranean waters. The study of Atlantic coastal waters of different eutrophic states revealed that the ecological response was higher in the closed nutrient perturbed mesocosms than in open systems exposed for 〉4 summer months (summer/autumn season). The Atlantic lagoon evolved gradually from the natural oligotrophic situation towards the more eutrophicated North Sea during fertilisation. The responses observed on seasonal and long-term scale (〉10 years) may therefore be equal. The differences between short-term (weeks) and intermediate-term (seasonal) responses is most likely a result of the different time scales of perturbation and observation and the variable exchange rates with surrounding waters (water dilution rate). The analysis of pelagic flow networks provided a framework of diagnostic criteria for state and quality assessment of coastal waters. The nutrient loading rates related better to estimates of biotic fluxes than to concentrations of biotic compartments and total nutrients. On the contrary, the concentration of biotic compartments, or the biomasses, related better to total nutrient concentrations. Primary production, mesozooplankton grazing and growth, fraction of primary production consumed by grazers, bacterial production relative to primary production, cycling indices, and path lengths were all well related to nutrient loading rate. Autotrophic biomass, ratio of autotrophic to heterotrophic biomass, and fraction of pico-cyanobacteria of total autotrophic biomass were all related to total nutrients. Some of these variables, which responded equally in all systems, have the potential of becoming unified response functions in a management model for European coastal waters. COMWEB has provided further insight into the mechanisms behind coastal eutrophication. A main achievement is the conceptual framework for unified response functions, important components of management models for nutrient emission to coastal waters.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 37
    Publication Date: 2017-08-22
    Description: The methane concentration and pCO2 in surface waters and the overlying marine air were continuously surveyed along the pathway of the Kuroshio, from the eastern coast of Honshu to Taiwan, and then across the eastern part of the East China and South China Seas in September of 1994. Off Honshu, the CH4 content was controlled by the confluence of the relatively CH4-poor waters of the Kuroshio and the Oyashio and the CH4-rich Tsugaru Warm Current, the latter carrying water into the Pacific Ocean with a methane content more than twice the equilibrium value with the atmospheric CH4 partial pressure. Along the Kuroshio, the surface water was supersaturated in methane with respect to the atmosphere by 10–15% and appears considerably enriched relative to open Pacific surface waters at same latitudes. The northeastern part of the South China Sea, part of the deep basin of this marginal sea, showed CH4 concentrations similar to those found in open-ocean waters. In contrast, highly variable oversaturations up to 700% were observed along the northwestern coast of Borneo, most probably related to known seepage from oil and gas deposits in this area. The pCO2 of surface water was higher than the atmospheric pCO2 throughout the area surveyed. However, the ΔpCO2 of the surface waters varied from close to 0 to more than 60 μatm. The observed oversaturation in areas influenced by the Kuroshio confirm that, during a short period in late summer, the surface waters of this current between Taiwan and Japan act as a moderate source for atmospheric CO2.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 38
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Marine Systems, 30 . pp. 241-261.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-12
    Description: Taxon-specific microzooplankton dynamics were studied along a transect through the North Atlantic Drift from 70°N 04°E to 40°N 20°W during July 1997 using serial dilution and nutrient-enrichment experiments. Nutrient concentrations and microzooplankton composition indicated postbloom conditions at 40°N, 47°N, and 50°N, a transitional system at 54°N, and bloom conditions at 62°N and 70°N. The ratio of microzooplankton to phytoplankton biomass was inversely related to nitrate and phosphate concentrations. Potential grazing thresholds were observed in four of nine experiments at 40–66% of the initial phytoplankton concentration. Grazing losses were determined for six pigment-specific classes of phytoplankton. Selective grazing losses of phytoplankton taxa ranged from 73% to 248% of the nonselective grazing losses predicted according to their biomass contributions. The grazing selectivity varied considerably between communities, with the microherbivores showing positive selection for cyanobacteria and dinoflagellates and predominantly avoidance of chlorophyta and bacillariophyceae. Microzooplankton did not show a preference for the dominant phytoplankton taxa, but grazed preferentially on fast-growing phytoplankton with minor contributions (〈15%) to the phytoplankton biomass. However, bacillariophyceae were the major contributors to phytoplankton biomass and accounted for major fractions of the total losses through microzooplankton grazing. Microzooplankton consumed the equivalent of 0.12–5.5 times their own biomass daily on a carbon basis, amounting to 65–197% of gross phytoplankton production. With the conservative assumption that 20% of the consumed phytoplankton was converted to microzooplankton biomass, the latter was estimated to contribute 27–381% to the net production of the entire microzooplankton community. We therefore conclude that the taxonomic structure and the net production of the microzooplankton communities were significantly affected by the intensity and selectivity of herbivorous microzooplankton grazing.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 39
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: During the expeditions ANT-XV/2 with R/V Polarstern in 1997/98 and NBP 99-04 with R/V IB N.B. Palmer in 1999, the first samples of hydrothermally influenced sediments of Bransfield Strait were obtained at Hook Ridge, a volcanic edifice in the Central Basin of the Strait. The vent sites are characterized by white siliceous crusts on top of the sediment layer and temperatures measured immediately on deck are up to 48.5°C. The shallow depth of these vent sites (1050 m) particularly controls the chemistry of the pore fluids that are enriched in silica and sulfide and show low pH values. Chloride is depleted up to 20% and the calculated hydrothermal endmember concentration is in the range of 1–84 mM. Since other mechanisms for Cl depletion can be ruled out clearly, the composition of this fluid is attributed to phase separation. While the Cl-depleted fluid is emanating at Hook Ridge, a Cl-enriched fluid can be identified in the adjacent King George Basin. Using a p,x diagram the two corresponding endmember concentrations reveal that the phase separation takes place at subcritical conditions (total depth: ∼2500 m), probably along the whole volcanic edifice
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 40
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Progress in Oceanography, 48 (2-3). pp. 163-194.
    Publication Date: 2016-10-07
    Description: Three high-resolution ocean circulation models of the North Atlantic, differing chiefly in their description of the vertical coordinate, are used to examine the ventilation of the North Atlantic subtropical gyre. All the models produce mode waters of realistic densities in the Sargasso Sea and the European Basin, but have Azores Currents of differing strengths, which are categorised as strong (of realistic transport), intermediate, and weak. These differences have a critical impact upon the ventilation of the gyre. Most importantly, the strong Azores Current forms an effective barrier to the southward ventilation of Eastern North Atlantic Water from the northern European Basin, initially driving it southwestwards into the central gyre, before turning it back eastwards again in a general cyclonic circulation north of the Current. The intermediate and weak Azores Currents instead allow the southward ventilation of this water mass near the European and African coasts. The situation in Nature appears to be intermediate between these two cases, with the Azores Current acting as a partial block. The study also raises the possibility of the Azores Current forming an advective connection between the Sargasso Sea Mode Waters in the western basin and modes of similar densities found in the eastern basin on the southern side of the Current. Although there are high levels of variability in the extent of these lighter modes in the eastern basin in Nature, this postulate is supported by a number of observational studies. In addition, the present study also provides some support for the local production of Madeira Mode Water in the eastern basin, associated with retroflecting current branches on the southern side of the Azores Current. Overall, the Azores Current is, therefore, likely to have a critical impact upon the ventilation of the subtropical gyre over a large area, rather than just locally, affecting the potential vorticity and density structure of the upper ocean between subtropical latitudes and the northern European Basin. The study also contributes to an ongoing community effort to assess the realism of our current generation of ocean models.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 41
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 48 (2). pp. 529-553.
    Publication Date: 2017-06-29
    Description: Organic carbon fluxes through the sediment/water interface in the high-latitude North Atlantic were calculated from oxygen microprofiles. A wire-operated in situ oxygen bottom profiler was deployed, and oxygen profiles were also measured onboard (ex situ). Diffusive oxygen fluxes, obtained by fitting exponential functions to the oxygen profiles, were translated into organic carbon fluxes and organic carbon degradation rates. The mean Corg input to the abyssal plain sediments of the Norwegian and Greenland Seas was found to be 1.9 mg C m−2 d−1. Typical values at the seasonally ice-covered East Greenland continental margin are between 1.3 and 10.9 mg C m−2 d−1 (mean 3.7 mg C m−2 d−1), whereas fluxes on the East Greenland shelf are considerably higher, 9.1–22.5 mg C m−2 d−1. On the Norwegian continental slope Corg fluxes of 3.3–13.9 mg C m−2 d−1 (mean 6.5 mg C m−2 d−1) were found. Fluxes are considerably higher here compared to stations on the East Greenland slope at similar water depths. By repeated occupation of three sites off southern Norway in 1997 the temporal variability of diffusive O2 fluxes was found to be quite low. The seasonal signal of primary and export production from the upper water column appears to be strongly damped at the seafloor. Degradation rates of 0.004–1.1 mg C cm−3 a−1 at the sediment surface were calculated from the oxygen profiles. First-order degradation constants, obtained from Corg degradation rates and sediment organic carbon content, are in the range 0.03–0.6 a−1. Thus, the corresponding mean lifetime of organic carbon lies between 1.7 and 33.2 years, which also suggests that seasonal variations in Corg flux are small. The data presented here characterize the Norwegian and Greenland Seas as oligotrophic and relatively low organic carbon deep-sea environments.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 42
    Publication Date: 2016-10-07
    Description: The time dependent circulation of the North Brazil Current is studied with three numerical ocean circulation models, which differ by the vertical coordinate used to formulate the primitive equations. The models are driven with the same surface boundary conditions and their horizontal grid-resolution (isotropic, 1/3° at the equator) is in principle fine enough to permit the generation of mesoscale eddies. Our analysis of the mean seasonal currents concludes that the volume transport of the North Brazil Current (NBC) at the equator is principally determined by the strength of the meridional overturning, and suggests that the return path of the global thermohaline circulation is concentrated in the NBC. Models which simulate a realistic overturning at 24°N of the order of 16–18 Sv also simulate a realistic NBC transport of nearly 35 Sv comparable to estimates deduced from the most recent observations. In all models, the major part of this inflow of warm waters from the South Atlantic recirculates in the zonal equatorial current system, but the models also agree on the existence of a permanent coastal mean flow to the north-west, from the equator into the Carribean Sea, in the form of a continuous current or a succession of eddies. Important differences are found between models in their representation of the eddy field. The reasons invoked are the use of different subgrid-scale parameterisations, and differences in stability of the NBC retroflection loop because of differences in the representation of the effect of bottom friction according to the vertical coordinate that is used. Finally, even if differences noticed between models in the details of the seasonal mean circulation and water mass properties could be explained by differences in the eddy field, nonetheless the major characteristics (mean seasonal currents, volume and heat transports) appears to be at first order driven by the strength of the thermohaline circulation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 43
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 65 (15). pp. 2469-2485.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-03
    Description: The turnover of water and 18O in the outer terrestrial sphere is investigated considering mantle degassing, subduction zone processes, hydrothermal circulation at spreading centers, seafloor alteration, and continental weathering processes. Mass balances indicate that the ocean currently loses water to the mantle because the water emission by mantle degassing proceeds at a significantly slower rate than the subduction of water structurally bound in the down-going slab. The current input of 18O into the ocean through hydrothermal circulation and water emissions at arc volcanoes surpasses the fixation of 18O via low-temperature water/rock interactions at the seafloor and on continents, inducing an increase in marine δ 18O values. Results of a box model simulating the Phanerozoic water and 18O cycles suggest that the mass of seawater decreased significantly causing a continuous drop in global sea-level by several hundred meters over the Phanerozoic. Model results and mass balances also allow for an enhanced estimate of current water fluxes in subduction zones consistent with the secular changes in sea-level and marine δ 18O observed in the geological record. Moreover, the model generates a secular trend for seawater δ 18O - produced by the surplus of 18O inputs and through internal feed-backs associated with isotopic exchange reactions at the seafloor - comparable to that observed in Phanerozoic carbonates. This coincidence suggests that the marine carbonates record a continuous change in isotopic composition of seawater with superimposed temperature-related fluctuations. A continuous record of near-surface temperatures was calculated using the model curve for seawater δ 18O and the corresponding carbonate data. This new climate record indicates three icehouse-greenhouse cycles with a duration of 127 My between the Cambrian and the Triassic followed by an additional cycle with extended periodicity spanning the Jurassic to Cenozoic. Simulations of the Precambrian water and 18O cycles imply that the strong 18O depletion in seawater during the early Cambrian (δ 18O around -8 ‰) was caused by enhanced weathering, diminished hydrothermal activity and extreme glaciations during the preceding late Neo- proterozoic.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 44
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Major element, trace element and Sr–Nd–Pb isotope data, combined with 40Ar/39Ar age determinations, of volcanic rocks from the Selvagen Islands and neighboring seamounts in the eastern North Atlantic reveal the earlier history of the ≥70 Ma old Canary hotspot. A basanitic to phonolitic late shield stage intrusive complex (29 Ma) is exposed on Selvagem Pequena. The evolution of Selvagem Grande can be divided into three magmatic phases: a tephritic to phonolitic late shield stage intrusive complex (24–26 Ma) and two rejuvenated or post-erosional stages (8–12 and 3.4 Ma) consisting of alkali basalt, basanite and rare phonolite. During the early to mid-Miocene volcanic hiatus (12–24 Ma), the top of the volcano was beneath sea level as evidenced by marine carbonate sediments (13–24 Ma, dated through correlation of 87Sr/86Sr with the seawater Sr isotope curve). The geochemistry of the shield stage lavas indicates that they derive from plume sources, whereas the post-erosional lavas are derived from metasomatized lithospheric sources. Five sampled seamounts to the east and northeast of the islands range in composition from alkali basalt and basanite to phonolite. Samples from Dacia, Conception Bank and Lars were dated at 9, 17 and 68 Ma, respectively. Geochemical data suggest that the dredged samples come from the post-erosional stage of volcanism, and therefore, the dates represent minimum ages for the seamount volcanoes. The elevation of erosional platforms formed at wave base decrease from Selvagen Grande (∼100 m above sea level) to Lars seamount (∼900 m below sea level), suggesting a southwest to northwest age progression and that all of these seamounts are older than the Selvagen Islands. Trace element and Sr–Nd–Pb isotopic composition of the Selvagen Islands and neighboring seamounts are consistent with their origin from the Canary plume. Interaction of the weak Canary mantle plume with a slow moving plate appears to be responsible for generating a 450-km-wide, irregular hotspot track extending 800 km from the youngest Canary Island of Hierro in the southwest to Lars seamount in the northeast.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 45
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 193 (3-4). pp. 409-421.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-09
    Description: The results of a combined geophysical and geochemical research program are presented that focused on Grimsey hydrothermal field (GHF) which is located at 66 degrees 35'30"N, 17 degrees 39'30"W east of the island of Grimsey in the Tjornes Fracture Zone. The vent field is situated at the sourthernmost tip of a submarine ridge which is connected to the offshore part of the Theistareykir Fissure Swarm. Reflection seismic recordings were interpreted in conjunction with earthquake catalogue data to detect active fault structures and potential heat sources in the subsurface. An inter-linked fracture network forming a downwards converging system of faults connected to a deep-reaching normal fault is assumed to provide the preferential pathways for gases (He-3, CO2, CH4 etc.) migrating from a possible deep-seated gas source (lower crust/upper mantle) to the surface. The location of hydrothermal vents was detected by concentration measurements of dissolved methane in the water column, which coincide with polarity reversals in the seismic seafloor reflection. Both the molecular composition of the gas and the isotopic composition of methane at GHF indicate a predominating abiogenic source (Fischer-Tropsch reactions at 250-500 degreesC) mixed with thermogenic hydrocarbons. New seismic data from the GHF were compared with gas geochemical data which indicate that the thermogenic hydrocarbons are related to (up to 60 m thick) sediments deposited in a basin located east of the ridge.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 46
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 48 (1). pp. 49-62.
    Publication Date: 2016-10-28
    Description: Carbon overconsumption, i.e. the consumption of inorganic carbon relative to inorganic nitrogen in excess of the Redfield ratio at the sea surface, was examined in relation to the dynamics of dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen (DOC and DON) in the northeast Atlantic. We observed the presence of N-poor dissolved organic matter (DOM) in surface water during summer, requiring the consumption of inorganic carbon and nitrogen in a ratio exceeding the Redfield ratio. The C : N ratio of bulk DOM is not only different from the Redfield ratio but also variable, i.e. no fixed conversion factor of C and N exists where DOM is important in C and N transformations. The existence of N-poor DOM is recognized as a feature typical of oligotrophic systems. At the same time, the C : N ratios of particles conform to Redfield stoichiometry as does deep-ocean chemistry. The implications of this finding are discussed, the conclusion being that, while DOM buildup contributes to CO2 drawdown seasonally, its impact on long-term carbon and nitrogen balance of the ocean is small.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 47
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Sea Research, 45 (2). pp. 95-103.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-14
    Description: Experimental periphyton communities were grown in aquaria receiving media of differently enriched seawater (fully enriched, without Si enrichment, without N and P enrichment) and supplied differently with medium (batch and weekly replacement). Periphyton was subject to grazing by 1-6 individuals of juvenile Littorina littorea. Periphyton biomass was higher in the replacement aquaria than in the batch aquaria and higher in the full and the -Si medium than in the -NP medium. The N:C ratio of the periphyton increased with Littorina number in the batch aquaria and was unaffected by Littorina number in the replacement aquaria. Diatoms were most dominant in the -NP treatments and rarest in the -Si treatments. Chlorophytes were dominant in the -Si and the fully enriched treatments, but also Cyanobacteria contributed significantly to periphyton biomass in those treatments under nutrient replacement. Somatic growth of Littorina was negatively correlated to Littorina density in the replacement aquaria and positively density dependent in the batch aquaria. The latter is explained by improved food quality under stronger grazing pressure.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 48
    Publication Date: 2017-08-22
    Description: Observations of wintertime nutrient concentrations in surface waters are scarce in the temperate and subarctic North Atlantic Ocean. Three new methods of their estimation from spring or early summer observations are described and evaluated. The methods make use of a priori knowledge of the vertical distribution of oxygen saturation and empirical relationships between nutrient concentrations and oxygen saturation. A south–north increase in surface water winter nutrient concentration is observed. Winter nitrate concentrations range from very low levels of about 0.5 μmol dm−3 at 33°N to about 13.5 μmol dm−3 at 60°N. Previous estimates of winter nitrate concentrations have been overestimates by up to 50%. At the Biotrans Site (47°N, 20°W), a typical station in the temperate Northeast Atlantic, a mean winter nitrate concentration of 8 μmol dm−3 is estimated, compared to recently published values between 11 and 12.5 μmol dm−3. It is shown that most of the difference is due to a contribution of remineralised nitrate that had not been recognized in previous winter nutrient estimates. Mesoscale variation of wintertime nitrate concentrations at Biotrans are moderate (less than ±15% of the regional mean value of about 8 μmol dm−3). Interannual variation of the regional mean is small, too. In the available dataset, there was only 1 year with a significantly lower regional mean winter nitrate concentration (7 μmol dm−3), presumably due to restricted deep mixing during an atypically warm winter. The significance of winter nitrate estimates for the assessment of spring-bloom new production and the interpretation of bloom dynamics is evaluated. Applying estimates of wintertime nitrate concentrations of this study, it is found that pre-bloom new production (0.275 mol N m−2) at Biotrans almost equals spring-bloom new production (0.3 mol N m−2). Using previous estimates of wintertime nitrate yields unrealistically high estimates of pre-bloom new production (1.21–1.79 mol N m−2) which are inconsistent with observed levels of primary production and the seasonal development of biomass.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 49
    Publication Date: 2016-05-11
    Description: The principal research objective was to test an integrated gas (GC) and ion chromatographic (IC) technique for analysis of trapped fluids in seafloor hydrothermal precipitates and to compare the results with independently analyzed vent fluids. Twenty-three samples of chalcopyrite, pyrite, sphalerite, barite and anhydrite from hydrothermal chimneys from four seafloor sites, Axial Seamount (Juan de Fuca Ridge), the Vai Lili vent field (Lau Basin), the TAG hydrothermal field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge), and the 21°N vent field (East Pacific Rise), as well as of pyrite/marcasite and quartz from the TAG mound, were analyzed. A new type of blank for sulphides and sulphates was also developed. Water contents obtained by GC analysis are in agreement with known compositions of seafloor hydrothermal solutions. Also, the volatiles occur in the same order of abundance as in vent fluids CO2〉N2(±CO±Ar±O2)≥CH4〉COS〉C2–C3 hydrocarbons. For all analyzed hydrothermal fluids, the mean Cl− concentrations are similar to those for the respective measured vent fluid compositions. Furthermore, the GC/IC results are directly comparable to salinity data determined by microthermometric methods. NH4+ can be enriched and is most probably formed by decomposition of organic matter. Volatile concentrations in fluid inclusions and data from vent fluids differ significantly for some of the investigated sites. Furthermore, the GC data indicate systematic variations regarding the volatile contents of trapped fluids from different active seafloor hydrothermal systems. Fluid inclusion volatile data of samples from the ASHES vent field at Axial Seamount define an inclined array consistent with phase separation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 50
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Many world-class porphyry copper–gold and epithermal gold deposits worldwide are hosted by volatile-rich and oxidized alkaline rocks. This study investigates potassic igneous rocks from the vicinity of epithermal gold mineralization at Lihir Island, Papua New Guinea. The island consists of five Pliocene–Pleistocene stratovolcanoes, one of which hosts Ladolam, one of the largest epithermal gold deposits discovered to date. Petrographically, the rocks range from porphyritic trachybasalts, trachyandesites and latites to rare phonolites and olivine–clinopyroxene cumulates. In some places, these rocks are cut by monzodiorite stocks. According to Al-in-hornblende barometry, the main crystallization of these rocks occurred close to the surface. Titanium-in-hornblende thermometry as well as olivine–spinel geothermometry and oxygen barometry indicate temperatures of 787–965°C at elevated oxygen fugacities (fO2) of 1.4–4.8 log units above that of the FMQ buffer. Although previous studies have suggested high fO2 of alkaline rocks associated with copper–gold mineralization based on abundant primary magnetite contents, this is the first direct determination of the fO2 of such rocks. High fO2 of parental melts commonly delays the early crystallization of magmatic sulphides; this is important because metals such as Au and Cu preferentially partition into sulphide phases resulting in their depletion in the melt during increasing fractionation. Geochemically, the rocks range from primitive to relatively evolved compositions, as reflected by their SiO2 (45.8–55.0 wt.%) and MgO (1.4–15.3 wt.%) contents and variable concentrations of mantle-compatible elements (130–328 ppm V, 1–186 ppm Ni). Their high K2O content (up to 4.7 wt.%), high average K2O/Na2O ratios (0.8) and high average Ce/Yb ratios (14) are typical of high-K igneous rocks transitional to shoshonites. Although these rocks formed by decompression melting related to back-arc rifting in the Manus Basin, the high LILE, low LREE and very low HFSE concentrations are typical of potassic igneous rocks from oceanic (island) arc settings. The reason for this remarkable composition is the partial melting of subduction-modified lithospheric mantle, which developed in a stalled subduction zone. Mica phenocrysts in the rocks reveal unusually high halogen concentrations. Magmatic phlogopites contain high F (up to 5.6 wt.%) and elevated Cl contents (〈0.08 wt.%). Hydrothermal biotites from rocks that display potassic alteration have low F (〈0.08 wt.%), but very high Cl concentrations (up to 0.15 wt.%). It is suggested that chloride complexing largely controlled the abundances of Au and Cu in the aqueous fluids responsible for the hydrothermal gold mineralization at Ladolam.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 51
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 65 (18). pp. 3005-3025.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: A new box model for the global carbon-calcium-strontium cycle is developed to simulate the evolution of Cretaceous and Cenozoic seawater and atmosphere. The model accounts for carbon masses in ocean and atmosphere, in carbonate, in particulate organic carbon (POC), and in the mantle. Major processes considered in the model are mantle degassing and hydrothermal fluxes, alteration of oceanic crust, chemical weathering, metamorphism of carbonates, carbonate accumulation, carbonate turnover in subduction zones, and the turnover of POC. Model outputs are partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2), seawater pH, concentrations of Ca, Sr, and HCO3 in seawater as well as the C and Sr isotopic composition of seawater and marine carbonates. A comprehensive review of current fluxes is given to define the flux equations and parameters. Secular trends recorded in marine carbonates are used to constrain the remaining open model parameters. The model includes a new parameterization of silicate weathering considering the contribution of young volcanic deposits. The weathering of these deposits consumes a large fraction of volcanically-released CO2 and maintains moderate pCO2 levels during periods of intense mantle degassing and volcanic/tectonic activity. Further negative feed-back is provided by POC burial which is coupled to pCO2-dependent weathering rates. The model produces high Ca concentrations during the Cretaceous and a strong increase in both pH and carbonate alkalinity during the late Cenozoic. Moreover, it predicts high atmospheric CO2 and surface temperatures for the mid-Cretaceous and early Cenozoic and low values for the late Cenozoic icehouse world thus suggesting a close coupling between climate and pCO2. Finally, it demonstrates that the mid-Cretaceous greenhouse was caused by enhanced volcanic/tectonic activity and confirms that the late Cenozoic cooling has been induced by an increase in silicate weatherability caused by enhanced mountain building and erosion.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 52
    Publication Date: 2017-01-23
    Description: Twenty gravity cores and a large set of high-resolution seismic profiles from various lagoonal settings were studied to determine the Holocene sediment distribution and sequence architecture within the Mayotte barrier reef–lagoon complex. The Holocene seismic sequence comprises a type 1 sequence with lowstand, transgressive and highstand systems tracts. The lowstand systems tract consists of a paleosoil horizon formed during subaerial exposure. The transgressive systems tract is composed of four depositional systems: (1) inner transgressive layer, (2) proximal and distal incised valley fills, (3) mid-lagoonal layer and (4) keep-up or catch-up fringing and barrier reef sequence. The highstand systems tract comprises three depositional systems: (1) of a proximal terrigenous wedge, (2) mid-lagoonal and distal carbonate sands or muds and (3) reefal carbonates. Our studies show that the nature of the Holocene sequence is controlled by the rate and amplitude of sea-level rise and environmental changes, which are expressed by changes in clastic sediment supply and carbonate production. The pre-Holocene topography and water dynamics steer the vertical and spatial sediment thickness distribution of the Holocene. Additional important parameters are the proximity to a source area (carbonate or terrigenous) and the width of the depositional area. Climate dynamics are also of great importance while they determine carbonate production and terrigenous runoff. Sedimentation rates in the subtidal settings always lacked behind sea-level rates. Thus, a steep relief was created keeping most lagoonal parts within the deep subtidal realm in which sediment production was not efficient enough to fill up accommodation space. In addition, wave and/or current energy might prevent the fill up of the lagoon. This ultimately resulted in a typical empty bucket morphology. Only a high amplitude sea-level fall would allow the subtidal lagoon to build up to base-level. Unfilled accommodation space, therefore, must be a very common feature in the geologic record.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 53
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: As part of the OMEX I project, nutrient determinations were made on 17 cruises in the region of the Goban Spur and La Chapelle Bank between 46 and 51°N, in all seasons of the year, between 1993–1995. Over this period no change was detectable in the structure of the water masses below the deep winter mixed layer. The N : P (dissolved nitrate-to-phosphate) ratio changed from 16 at 100-m depth to less than 15 at 3300-m depth. At intermediate depths nutrient and oxygen data indicate the presence of Mediterranean Outflow water overlying Labrador Sea Water at its most eastern extension. Estimated maximum levels of production in the spring bloom are the total N-limited new primary production equivalent between 24 and 41 gC m−2, the equivalent maximum diatom production is 11 gC m−2. Measurements during the spring bloom suggest a conversion factor of 1 μM nitrate to 1 μg l−1 chlorophyll, at the shelf break, which is consistent with other recent measurements in European shelf seawaters. Sediment trap data suggest that 80% (5.4 g m−2) of the opal produced in the spring bloom dissolved before reaching the sediment trap at 600 m. A comparison of the winter and summer profiles for dissolved silicon suggests a similar dissolution of 9±3 g opal m−2 above 300-m depth. Measurements of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in September 1994 show an enrichment of 7 μM-C above the seasonal thermocline relative to the winter values (52±4 μM). In winter dissolved organic nitrogen represents 40% of the pool of total dissolved nitrogen. There is no consistent evidence of an increase in the concentration of DON during summer. Measurements of nitrate in surface waters in January 1994 show that concentrations off-shelf vary with the temperature of the water and are related to the depth of winter mixing. Mixing in surface waters is discontinuous at the shelf break, demonstrating the degree to which exchange across the shelf break is limited even in winter. OMEX winter measurements of nitrate concentrations can be used to estimate the flow of water across the shelf break that would be required to maintain the nitrogen balance in the North Sea at a steady state. The estimate is 0.6 Sv (1 Sv=106 m3 s−1), which is similar to an earlier estimate of a total flow of 1.7 Sv based on salt budgets (cf. Huthnance, Deutsche Hydrographische Zeitschrift, 49 (1997) 153).
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 54
    Publication Date: 2017-06-27
    Description: Recent studies of the vertical flux of organic matter into the deep ocean have prompted the search for key organic compounds (biomarkers) as tracers for its production, flux and burial into the sediment. Particulate matter was collected with sediment traps moored at the Barents Sea continental margin (75°11.78′N/12°29.21′E; water depth 2050 m) at 610, 1840 and 1950 m depth. The compositions of the organic material in the two bottoms near traps differ significantly. This difference cannot be the result of a change of the vertical sedimentation alone. A combination of biomarker analyses, quantitative microscopy and bulk parameter determinations on water and sediment trap samples is used in this study to demonstrate that a turbidity plume event at the shelf edge is a vehicle to transport organic and lithogenic particles at high velocities to the benthos of the lower continental margin. It is suggested that fine particles were advected into the trap at 1850 m, whereas the coarser fraction of higher settling velocities, passing several resuspension loops entered the lower trap.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 55
    Publication Date: 2016-05-11
    Description: Ultramafic, mafic and sedimentary xenoliths have been recovered from a recently erupted, shoshonitic submarine cinder cone (Tubaf and Edison volcanoes) from the Tabar–Lihir–Tanga–Feni island arc, located in the New Ireland basin of Papua New Guinea. These samples represent a proxy drill hole that can be re-assembled into an ‘ophiolite-type’ model of oceanic lithosphere. Petrographic and geochemical examination of the gabbroic and depleted mantle xenoliths indicates that the New Ireland fore-arc lithosphere is a fragment of ancient Pacific Plate generated at a mid-ocean ridge spreading centre and transported to the Pacific–Australian Plate margin. Convergent margin processes subjected the harzburgitic mantle wedge to hydrofracturing and hydration metasomatism at T=790–1030°C as a consequence of dewatering of a subducted slab. Advection of a high-density, H2O-rich fluid containing a substantial dissolved component (alkali aluminosilicate melt and aqueous carbon and sulphur species) through these mantle fractures caused a net transfer of soluble elements from the lower to upper mantle wedge and created a network of oxidised (ΔFMQ≈1.8–2.0) metasomatised peridotite enriched in orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, phlogopite, amphibole, magnetite, and Fe–Ni sulphides. The vein mineral assemblage magnetite+sulphide indicates precipitation from a hydrous fluid with high SO2/H2S, consistent with the hydrous fluid being derived from dehydration of subducted, altered oceanic crust. Preferential partial melting of these metasomatically enriched mantle wedge regions could account for the highly oxidised, sulphur- and alkali-rich nature of the high-K calc-alkaline volcanoes of the Tabar–Lihir–Tanga–Feni island chain.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 56
    Publication Date: 2018-01-02
    Description: High-temperature (250°C) hydrothermal vents and massive anhydrite deposits have been found in a shallow water, sediment-filled graben near 66°36′N in the Tjornes Fracture Zone north of Iceland. The site is located about 30 km offshore, near the small island of Grimsey. The main vent field occurs at a depth of 400 m and consists of about 20 large-diameter (up to 10 m) mounds and 1–3 m chimneys and spires of anhydrite and talc. A north–south alignment of the mounds over a 1-km strike length of the valley floor suggests that their distribution is controlled by a buried fault. Widespread shimmering water and extensive white patches of anhydrite in the sediment between the mounds indicates that the entire 1-km2 area occupied by the vents is thermally active. A 2-man research submersible JAGO was used to map the area and to sample vent waters, gases, and chimneys. Actively boiling hydrothermal vents occur on most of the mounds, and extensive two-phase venting indicates that the field is underlain by a large boiling zone (200×300 m). The presence of boiling fluids in shallow aquifers beneath the deposits was confirmed by sediment coring. The highest-temperature pore fluids were encountered in talc- and anhydrite-rich sedimentary layers that occur up to 7 m below the mounds. Baked muds underlie the talc and anhydrite layers, and pyrite is common in stockwork-like fractures and veins in the hydrothermally altered sediments. However, massive sulfides (pyrite–marcasite crusts) were found in only one relict mound. Subseafloor boiling has likely affected the metal-carrying capacity of the hydrothermal fluids, and deposition of sulfides may be occurring at greater depth. Although the mounds and chimneys at Grimsey resemble other deposits at sedimented ridges (e.g. Middle Valley, Escanaba Trough, Guaymas Basin), the shallow water setting and extensive boiling of the hydrothermal fluids represent a distinctive new type of seafloor hydrothermal system.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 57
    Publication Date: 2014-02-04
    Description: TOROS (Tinto-Odiel-River-Ocean Study) has been studying the biogeochemical processes which control metals and nutrients cycling in the mixing zone of the Tinto and Odiel rivers (SW Spain) and has established the fate of metals in the Gulf of Cadiz in relation to hydrodynamics and biological activity. The Tinto and Odiel rivers are small, with a combined mean discharge of 18m 3/s. They drain the largest sulphide mineralisation in the world. Predominantly, Zn-Cu-Pb mineralisation has been worked since 2500yr BC. The estuarine zone includes both an extensive area of salt marsh and an intensively industrialised urban area. As a consequence of pyrite oxidation, the Tinto and Odiel rivers are strongly acidic (pH〈3) with extremely high and variable metal concentrations. Transition metals are poorly removed from the water column in the mixing zone. Moreover, drainage from large phosphogypsum waste deposits contributes to As, Hg, U and phosphate contamination of the estuary. The collapse of the tailing reservoir at los Frailes in 1998 had not impacted the chemistry of the coastal waters up to 6 months later. A large plume of metal-rich waters due to the Tinto and Odiel discharges occurs along the coast of the Gulf of Cadiz. This plume affects seasonally the Atlantic inflow through the Strait of Gibraltar. The dispersion of the metal discharges has been simulated by injection of a tracer in the 3-D hydrodynamical model. Both model and field study clearly show the inflow of metal contaminated Spanish Shelf Water through the Strait of Gibraltar. © 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All right reserved.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 58
    Publication Date: 2017-05-30
    Description: There have been several reports on storage protocols for the determination of nutrients in natural waters but each one has been limited to a particular sample matrix and they have reached different, matrix specific conclusions. The aim of this study was therefore to systematically apply the various recommended storage protocols to a range of natural water matrices. Samples from four contrasting sites in the UK, collected in late winter (February, 1999), were filtered and stored under different conditions (-80°C, -20°C, 4°C and at 4°C and -20°C with 0.1 (v/v) chloroform) for up to 247 days prior to analysis. The sites were the River Frome in Dorset (a chalk stream catchment) and three sites from the Tamar Estuary (draining a non-chalk catchment) with salinities of 0.5‰, 10‰ and 34‰. Samples and controls were analysed for total oxidised nitrogen (TON) and filterable reactive phosphorus (FRP) using a segmented flow analyser with spectrophotometric detection. To investigate possible seasonal effects (particularly changes in biological and chemical matrix composition), a second sampling campaign was undertaken in early autumn (October, 1999). The results showed that the optimum storage conditions for the determination of TON and FRP were highly matrix dependent, with significant differences in FRP stability between the Frome and Tamar catchments (due to different calcium concentrations) and between samples of different salinities (due to different bacterial populations and/or dissolved organic matter). General guidelines for sample handling and storage are listed and matrix specific recommendations presented for samples rich in calcium and dissolved organic matter. Copyright © 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 59
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Analytica Chimica Acta, 442 (1). pp. 1-14.
    Publication Date: 2014-02-04
    Description: Iron plays an important role in oceanic biogeochemistry and is known to limit biological activity in certain ocean regions. Such regions have a replete complement of major nutrients but low primary production of phytoplankton due to low ambient iron concentrations. The determination of iron in seawater is a major challenge, although much progress has been made during the last two decades. Techniques for total dissolved iron and iron speciation have been developed in order to rationalise its biogeochemical cycling and better understand its role in limiting phytoplankton growth. In this paper, a critical review of historical and current analytical methods for the determination of iron in seawater is presented and their capabilities evaluated. The need for standard protocols for the clean sampling and storage of low-level (〈1 nM) iron seawater in order to maintain sample integrity is emphasised. The importance of laboratory and shipboard intercomparison exercises to distinguish between environmental variability and operationally measured fractions is also considered. © 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 60
    Publication Date: 2014-02-04
    Description: A purpose built UV digestion system was successfully used for the breakdown of Cu complexing organic ligands in seawater samples, prior to total dissolved Cu determination using flow injection with chemiluminescence detection (FI-CL) and on-line micro-column preconcentration/matrix removal. Residual dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was quantified using a DOC analyser. Humic acid (1.8-7.2 mg l-1C) in ultra high purity (UHP) water was completely broken down within 4h in all batch experiments (125 and 400 W lamps; with and without 15 mM H2O2 and, as expected, was more rapid with the 400 W lamp, in the presence of H2O2, and for lower humic acid concentrations. UV digestion experiments with seawater showed that the residual DOC concentration after batch UV treatment (4h) was 〈0.08 mg l-1C compared with >0.32 mg l-1C after on-line irradiation (residence time 11.2 min). Therefore, the batch method was more efficient than on-line UV digestion at breaking down added humic acid and naturally present organic compounds in seawater. However, the release of Cu from metal complexing organic matter in seawater and estuarine water was the same using both on-line and batch UV digestion (sample irradiation residence time: 5.6 min and 8h, respectively). UV digestion is, therefore, a contamination-free approach for seawater pretreatment prior to micro-column preconcentration and FI-CL determination of total dissolved Cu and should also be applicable to the selective determination of the total dissolved fractions of other trace metals in seawater (e.g. Co, Fe, Mn). © 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 61
    Publication Date: 2014-02-04
    Description: The first Southern Ocean Iron RElease Experiment (SOIREE) was performed during February 1999 in Antarctic waters south of Australia (61°S, 140°E), in order to verify whether iron supply controls the magnitude of phytoplankton production in this high nutrient low chlorophyll (HNLC) region. This paper describes iron distributions in the upper ocean during our 13-day site occupation, and presents a pelagic iron budget to account for the observed losses of dissolved and total iron from waters of the fertilised patch. Iron concentrations were measured underway during daily transects through the patch and in vertical profiles of the 65-m mixed layer. High internal consistency was noted between data obtained using contrasting sampling and analytical techniques. A pre-infusion survey confirmed the extremely low ambient dissolved (0.1 nM) and total (0.4 nM) iron concentrations. The initial enrichment elevated the dissolved iron concentration to 2.7 nM. Thereafter, dissolved iron was rapidly depleted inside the patch to 0.2-0.3 nM, necessitating three re-infusions. A distinct biological response was observed in iron-fertilised waters, relative to outside the patch, unequivocally confirming that iron limits phytoplankton growth rates and biomass at this site in summer. Our budget describing the fate of the added iron demonstrates that horizontal dispersion of fertilised waters (resulting in a quadrupling of the areal extent of the patch) and abiotic particle scavenging accounted for most of the decreases in iron concentrations inside the patch (31-58 and 12-49 of added iron, respectively). The magnitude of these loss processes altered towards the end of SOIREE, and on days 12-13 dissolved (1.1 nM) and total (2.3 nM) iron concentrations remained elevated compared to surrounding waters. At this time, the biogenic iron pool (0.1 nM) accounted for only 1-2 of the total added iron. Large pennate diatoms (〉 20 μm) and autotrophic flagellates (2-20 μm) were the dominant algal groups in the patch, taking up the added iron and representing 13 and 39 of the biogenic iron pool, respectively. Iron regeneration by grazers was tightly coupled to uptake by phytoplankton and bacteria, indicating that biological Fe cycling within the bloom was self-sustaining. A concurrent increase in the concentration of iron-binding ligands on days 11-12 probably retained dissolved iron within the mixed layer. Ocean colour satellite images in late March suggest that the bloom was still actively growing 42 days after the onset of SOIREE, and hence by inference that sufficient iron was maintained in the patch for this period to meet algal requirements. This raises fundamental questions regarding the biogeochemical cycling of iron in the Southern Ocean and, in particular, how bioavailable iron was retained in surface waters and/or within the biota to sustain algal growth. © 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 62
    Publication Date: 2019-08-29
    Description: The first association of the synapse as a potential site of neurodegenerative disease burden was suggested for Alzheimer's disease (AD) almost 30 years ago. Since then protease:protease inhibitor (P:PI) systems were first linked to functional regulation of synaptogenesis and synapse withdrawal at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) more than 20 years ago. Confirmatory evidence for the involvement of the synapse, the rate-limiting or key unit in neural function, in AD did not become clear until the beginning of the 1990s. However, over the past 15 years evidence for participation of thrombin, related serine proteases and neural PIs, homologous and even identical to those of the plasma clot cascade, has been mounting. Throughout development a balance between stabilization forces, on the one hand, and breakdown influences, on the other, becomes established at synaptic junctions, just as it does in plasma clot proteins. The formation of protease-resistant cross-links by the transglutaminase (TGase) family of enzymes may add to the stability for this balance. The TGase family includes coagulation factor XIIIA and 8 other different genes, some of which may also influence the persistence of neural connections. Synaptic location of protease-activated, G-protein-coupled receptors (PARs) for thrombin and related proteases, their serpin and Kunitz-type PIs such as protease nexin I (PNI), α1-antichymotrypsin (α-ACT), and the Kunitz protease inhibitor (KPI)-containing secreted forms of β-amyloid protein precursor (β-APP), along with the TGases and their putative substrates, have all been amply documented. These findings strongly add to the conclusion that these molecules participate in the eventual structural stability of synaptic connections, as they do in coagulation cascades, and focus trophic activity on surviving terminals during periods of selective contact elimination. In disease states, this imbalance is likely to be shifted in favor of destabilizing forces: increased and/or altered protease activity, enhanced PAR influence, decreased and/or altered protease inhibitor function, reduction and/or alteration in tTG expression and activity, and alteration in its substrate profile. This imbalance further initiates a cascade of events leading to inappropriate programmed cell death and may well be considered evidenced of synaptic apoptisis.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 63
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Based on a sediment vibro corer, a tool for the sampling of sub-seafloor groundwater aquifers has been developed and successfully deployed in a coastal area of the western Baltic. The device was designed to obtain pure groundwater samples from coarse sediments to be used for tracer investigations and CFC age dating. Operated from a medium size research vessel, a well pipe tipped with a filter segment is vibrated into the sediment down to the aquifer. Groundwater entering the filter is pumped to the ship by a conventional submersible pump situated in the well's filter tip. Groundwater is continuously analysed on board for O2, salinity, pH, Eh and temperature, prior to sampling for CFC and radioisotope analysis. All parameters indicate that pure groundwater had been obtained. CFC concentrations are very low suggesting that the groundwater of this shallow sub-seafloor aquifer recharged prior to 1950. This finding is in accordance with other hydrogeological evidence that this aquifer, located only 4–5 m below the seafloor, is connected to fairly deep confined sandy aquifers on land of Pleistocene or Miocene age. Applying the method described, it is possible to obtain sufficient sample volumes for analyses of natural groundwater tracers such as radon-222 and CFCs which can be used to trace submarine groundwater discharge as well as the origin of groundwater in such environments.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 64
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 65
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Global and Planetary Change, 31 (1-4). pp. 141-153.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Holocene shelf deposits from the Laptev Sea shelf (northern Yakutia) were investigated with palynological means. Data were obtained from a 467-cm-long sediment sequence from the southeastern Laptev Sea (74°30 N/136°00 E). The chronology of the core reaches back to 9.4 calendar years (cal. ka), yielding an average sample resolution of ∼100 years. The temporal changes in pollen and spore spectra of the marine record are primarily the result of variations of transport mechanisms, i.e., the large rivers draining into the shelf sea, the atmospheric circulation, and the coastal erosion. Because of the close land-shelf linkage due to riverine connections, the trends observed in the shelf data seem to be in good agreement with the Holocene vegetational evolution of the coastal hinterland. An enhanced transfer of tree pollen onto the shelf during the middle Holocene began around 7.5 cal. ka and is interpreted as the result of the northernmost occurrence of the treeline between 9 and 3.8 cal. ka. A similar time-coeval accordance between land and shelf pollen records is observed for the late Holocene climatic cooling trend in Arctic Siberia. In the shelf record, this cooling is characterized by increasing abundance of herbaceous pollen that commenced after 2.7 cal. ka, which is about 1 cal. ka later than on land.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 66
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Three cores recovered off the northwest of Svalbard were studied with respect to glacial/interglacial changes of clay and bulk mineralogy, lithology and organic geochemistry. The cores cover the Late Quaternary Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 6–1 (ca. 170,000 years) and are located in the vicinity of the Polar Front which separates the warm Atlantic water of the Westspitsbergen Current and the cold Polar Water of the Transpolar Drift. Globally driven changes in the paleoenvironment like the variable advection of warm Atlantic water into the Arctic Ocean can be distinguished from regional events by means of source mineral signatures and organic geochemistry data. In particular, a combination of high organic carbon and low carbonate contents, high C/N-ratios, a particular lithology and a distinct bulk and clay mineral assemblage can be related to Svalbard ice sheet developments between 23,000 and 19,500 14C years. This complex sediment pattern has been traced to the northwest of Spitsbergen as far north as 82°N. Additionally, the same signature has been recognized in detail in upper MIS 5 sediments. The striking similarity of the history of the Svalbard/Barents Sea Ice Sheet during the late and early/middle Weichselian is elaborated. Both sediment horizons are intercalated between biogenic calcite rich core sequences which contain the so-called “High Productivity Zones” or “Nordway Events” related to the increased advection of warm Atlantic water to the Arctic Ocean. This study provides further evidence that the meridional circulation pattern has been present during most of the Weichselian and that the ice cover was often reduced in the northeastern Fram Strait and above the Yermak Plateau. Our findings contradict the widely used reconstructions in modelling of the last glaciation cycle and reveal a much more dynamic system in the Fram Strait and southwestern Eurasian Basin of the Arctic Ocean.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 67
    Publication Date: 2020-01-29
    Description: The abnormally high surface temperatures in the world's oceans during 1997/1998 resulted in widespread coral bleaching and subsequent coral mortality. An experiment was performed to study the effects of this coral mortality as well as the influence of the structural complexity on fish communities on a Tanzanian coral reef. Changes in fish communities were investigated on plots of transplanted corals after 88% of these corals had died. A distinct shift in fish community composition was found, although diversity was not affected. Fish abundance rose by 39% mostly due to an increase in herbivores, which seemed to benefit from enhanced algal growth on the dead corals. Fish abundance, species diversity and community composition were also strongly influenced by the structural complexity provided by the live and dead corals. This suggests that a coral reef can support abundant and diverse fish populations also after the corals have died as long as the reef structure is sustained.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 68
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 129 (4). pp. 787-796.
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Description: The complete amino acid sequence of squid Todarodes pacificus troponin C (TnC), which was shown to bind only 1 mol Ca2+/mol, was determined by both the Edman and cDNA methods. The squid TnC is composed of 147 amino acids including an unblocked Pro at the N-terminus and the calculated molecular weight is 17 003.9. Among the four potential Ca2+-binding sites, namely sites I–IV from the N-terminus, only site IV completely satisfied the consensus amino acid sequence for the active Ca2+-binding loop. This indicates that squid TnC possesses a single Ca2+-binding site at the site IV as scallop TnCs [Nishita et al., J. Biol. Chem. 269 (1994) 3464–3468; Ojima et al., Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 311 (1994) 272–276). The sequence homology of squid TnC to TnCs of scallop, arthropods, and rabbit was 61%, 31–38%, and 31%, respectively. In the sequence of the central D/E-helix region of squid and scallop TnCs, a deletion of three amino acids was required to maximize the homology with the other TnCs.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 69
    Publication Date: 2021-03-11
    Description: High-resolution seismic profiles (PARASOUND, 4 kHz) of the western Laptev Sea continental margin and the adjacent Vilkitsky Strait were studied in order to gain new evidence about the Weichselian glaciations in Central Siberia and to test reconstructions of maximum ice sheet extents. Four regionally correlatable seismic units, named I (youngest) to IV, were identified in the upper Quaternary sedimentary succession: (I) a thin drape; (II) prograding wedge-shaped deposits along the shelf edge; (III) layered sediments of draping and infilling character with increasing thickness towards the western Laptev Sea shelf edge and the Vilkitsky Strait; (IV) stacked debris-flow deposits. The thin drape of unit I is radiocarbon-dated to Holocene and mainly deposited during the transgression of the Laptev Sea. The wedge-shaped deposits of unit II are interpreted as river deltas, referring to point sources along the shelf edge during the Late Weichselian sea-level lowstand. This indicates that the river input across the Laptev Sea shelf was continuous during marine isotope stage (MIS) 2. The layered sediments of unit III suggest hemipelagic conditions indicative of a sea-level highstand. The pronounced thickening of unit III towards the shelf edge of the western Laptev Sea reflects the lowering of the global sea level during MIS 3. This is associated with increased riverine input due to the northward shift of the Siberian coastline. The stacked debris-flow deposits of unit IV extend continuously from the shelf edge in the Vilkitsky Strait to the continental rise of the western Laptev Sea continental margin. They indicate that large quantities of sediments were deposited directly on the upper continental slope during advances of the Kara Sea ice sheet to the shelf break. These ice-proximal conditions are presumably linked to the Middle Weichselian glaciation (MIS 4). Our evidence confirm earlier reconstructions, suggesting that in central Siberia, the Middle Weichselian glaciation (MIS 4) was of larger extent than the Late Weichselian glaciation (MIS 2).
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 70
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 21 (3). pp. 388-397.
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: In this paper we examine the phylogenetic relationships of the Octopoda utilizing molecular sequence data from the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene and compare results from analyses of molecular data with classifications and phylogenies based on previous morphological studies. Partial COI sequences (657 bp, excluding primers) were obtained from 28 species representing most of the diversity in the Order Octopoda, along with a sequence from the established sister taxon to the Octopoda, Vampyroteuthis infernalis. Our results exhibit a number of basic differences from inferences based on standard morphological data. We attempt to resolve these differences based on our confidence in various morphological features. An important finding is the failure of the molecular data to support the monophyly of the Octopodidae. This family contains over 90% of the species in the Suborder Incirrata and has always been difficult to define. Statistical tests constraining Octopodidae monophyly by use of parsimony and maximum-likelihood techniques suggest that all incirrates may be derived from octopodids.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 71
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 58 (1). pp. 288-297.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: The food habits of the beaked skate were studied utilising 274 individuals obtained from the incidental catches of the Argentine hake (Merluccius hubbsi) fishery. The most important prey were the Argentine hake, the southern cod (Patagonotothen ramsayi), the Argentine shortfin squid (Illex argentinus), the isopod (Serolis schythei), the “raneya” (Raneya brasiliensis , Pisces: Ophidiidae), and the Argentine anchovy (Engraulis anchoita). A total of 45 prey species was identified. No differences in the diet between sexes, but significant differences among size classes and between immature and mature individuals were found. Two size-related dietary shifts previously reported in this species, at around 35 cm and 85 cm total length were confirmed and related to changes in habitat utilisation. The first shift entails a major change from benthic prey (mostly crustaceans) to demersal-benthic prey (mostly fishes) and the second change from demersal-benthic to demersal-pelagic prey (increased consumption of Argentine hake and decreased consumption of southern cod). The second shift coincides with sexual maturation and may reflect a behavioural response to maturation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 72
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    In:  Journal of Molluscan Studies, 67 (1). pp. 95-102.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: Although morphology of firm-bodied shallow-water octopuses resists preservation-linked deformation, preservation and handling of deep-sea specimens of Graneledone are hypothesized to deform specimens by accelerating fluid loss from mantle and arm tissues. Principal components analysis finds that seven of 39 North Pacific specimens of the genus are exceptionally narrow; the remaining specimens show considerable morphological variation, independent of time in preservation. Five exceptionally narrow specimens, including some paratypes of G. pacifica, were collected and preserved by the same trawling study; a single unrecorded factor in their common preservation history may have caused their deformation. The high morphological variation among the remaining specimens, seemingly unique among octopodids, may reflect factors as subtle as how the specimen was stored in the jar. Two types of change with time in preservation are documented. The mantle wall of formalin-fixed specimens thins unpredictably after storage for 30 months in 70% ethanol, consistent with deformation in preservation. Skin tubercles on the dorsal mantle, important taxonomic characters, become more prominent during the first decade in preservation. To maximize the information specimens with fluid-rich tissues convey and to identify the sources of deformation, the full preservation history and measurements made prior to dissection should be permanently recorded.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 73
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 130 (1). pp. 117-123.
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Description: Trypsin inhibitor was purified from the hepatopancreas of squid (Todarodes pacificus). The final inhibitor preparation was nearly homogeneous by SDS-PAGE with an estimated molecular weight of approximately 6300. The squid trypsin inhibitor was acid- and heat-stable, and active against trypsins from the pyloric ceca of starfish (Asterias amurensis) and saury (Cololabis saira) and porcine pancreatic trypsin. Amino acid composition of the squid trypsin inhibitor was compared with other invertebrate trypsin inhibitors. The squid trypsin inhibitor inhibited the autolysis of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) myofibrillar proteins.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 74
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 265 . pp. 101-115.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-10
    Description: A protocol for combined analysis of cholecystokinin (CCK) levels based on radioimmunoassay (RIA) and fluorescence tryptic enzyme activity (FTA) was developed in order to accomplish a sensitive analysis of individual bodies and gut segments of fish larvae. Methanol was used for CCK extraction. The gut of herring larvae contained 8.9±1.2 fmol CCK/mg dry weight and in the post-larval Atlantic halibut the CCK levels varied significantly (p〈0.05) from 20.9±15.6 to 101.8±56.7 fmol/mg dry weight for separated intestinal and pyloric segments, respectively. Acid solution, 0.02 mol/l HCl–CaCl2 (pH 1.8), and alkaline solution, 0.1 mol/l Tris–0.02 mol/l CaCl2 (pH 8.0) were tested to prepare crude trypsin extracts from Coregonids and Atlantic halibut larvae. The tryptic activity of crude extracts prepared with acid solution was enhanced by a factor of 3.19±0.52 compared to the tryptic activity of crude extracts prepared with alkaline solution. The larval trypsins (from yolk sac larvae) were stable in methanol, preserving 88% of its starting activity after 6 days of storage. Based on the results, the method of extraction using methanol and acid solution (pH 1.8) was suitable for the combined analysis for CCK levels and FTA in gut segments or single larvae. The potential application of these analytical tools may allow a better understanding of the individual variability of gut functionality, nutritional condition and the feeding activity of developing fish based on their content of CCK and tryptic activity.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 75
    Publication Date: 2020-01-07
    Description: Nuclear ribosomal DNA (3′-SSU, ITS, 5′-LSU) and plastid-encoded (rbcL and Rubisco spacer) sequences were determined in Caepidium antarcticum and compared to homologous sequences of relatives from Ectocarpales, Scytothamnales, and other brown algae. Plastidial sequences confirmed a previous conclusions from nuclear ribosomal sequences that some taxa with stellate plastids (Asterocladon and relatives) form the closest outgroup to the Ectocarpales as yet identified. To reconcile nomenclature with the clades resolved in recent molecular studies, we propose a subdivision of the Ectocarpales in five families. Plastidial sequences support the recent proposal of Adenocystaceae, and all sequences suggest that Caepidium should be included in this family. As a further result, Geminocarpus was shown to belong to the same clade as Pylaiella and a number of other brown algae with an isomorphic life history and discoid plastids. We recognise this clade, whose correct name is Acinetosporaceae, as another family in the Ectocarpales. We also propose to unite a number of genetically related taxa, which were formely classified in different families, in an extended Chordariaceae. The remaining species of the Ectocarpales belong to Scytosiphonaceae and to Ectocarpaceae, the latter containing only Ectocarpus and Kuckuckia.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 76
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: We carried out a search for hydrothermal vents in the Central Basin of Bransfield Strait, Antarctica. The ZAPS (zero angle photon spectrometer) chemical sensor and instrument package (Oregon State University), OFOS (ocean-floor observation system) camera sled and TVG (TV-grab) (GEOMAR) were used to explore the water column and underlying seafloor. These operations were supplemented with a series of dredges. Hydrothermal plumes over Hook Ridge at the eastern end of the basin are confined to the E ridge crest and SE flank. The plumes are complex and sometimes contain two turbidity maxima one widespread feature centered at 1150 m and a smaller, more localized but broad maximum at 600–800 m. We traced the source of the shallower plume to a sunken crater near the ridge crest using sensors on the ZAPS instrument package. Subsequently two TV-grabs from the crater brought back hot, soupy sediment (42–49°C) overlain by hard, siliceous crusts and underlain by a thick layer of volcanic ash. We also recovered chimney fragments whose texture and mineralogy indicate venting temperatures in excess of 250°C. Native sulfur and Fe-sulfides occur in fractures and porous layers in sediment from throughout the area. Pore water data from the crater site are consistent with venting into a thin sediment layer and indicate phase separation of fluids beneath Hook Ridge. The source of the deeper plumes at Hook Ridge has yet to be located. We also explored a series of three parallel volcanic ridges west of Hook Ridge called Three Sisters. We detected water column anomalies indicative of venting with the ZAPS package and recovered hydrothermal barites and sulfides from Middle Sister. We spent considerable time photographing Middle Sister and Hook Ridge but did not identify classic vent fauna at either location. We either missed small areas with our photography or typical MOR vent fauna are absent at these sites.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 77
    Publication Date: 2017-06-21
    Description: Taxa of Bolboforma, a marine calcareous microfossil group of uncertain origin with affinities to protophytic algae, are generally used for biostratigraphy of lower Eocene to lower Pleistocene marine sediments from high latitudes. Biostratigraphy based on Bolboforma has been applied only rarely to European outcrop sections and very rarely to Mediterranean sections. Three Bolboforma and two planktonic foraminifera events are identified and used to interpret the sedimentation rate of the 90 m of slope sediments from the Palazzolo Section, Palazzolo Acreide area (Sicily) and spanning the interval from 11.9 to approximately 10.5 Ma. Carbon isotope stratigraphy supports the age assigment based on Bolboforma and planktonic foraminifera. In particular, the sediments of the Palazzolo Section seem to record the latest pulse of the Monterey Event, a major perturbation in the global carbon cycle related to global intensification of upwelling. Expanded use of the Bolboforma may, thus, improve stratigraphy in outcropping Miocene sequences in temperate regions, particularly in shallower water facies with poorly resolved planktonic foraminifera and nannofossil stratigraphy.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 78
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 79
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48 (10). pp. 2173-2197.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-30
    Description: Model-derived estimates of marine new production are found to display systematic covariations with the underlying model architecture. Almost regardless of the formulation of biogeochemical processes, model-derived estimates of new production have more than doubled from about Full-size image (〈1 K) to values around Full-size image (〈1 K) when turning from early box models to more recent investigations using coarse-resolution general circulation models. Because none of these models resolves eddies, which have been shown to enhance biological production, a further increase in simulated new production with increasing model resolution might be expected. This study presents results from an eddy-permitting coupled biological–physical model that suggest a basin-scale new production of less than Full-size image (〈1 K) for the North Atlantic, i.e. substantially less than values typical for coarse-resolution models. Sensitivity experiments reveal that the amount of diapycnal mixing, described either explicitly or implicitly in the numerical discretization schemes, has a considerable effect on the simulated input of nutrients into the euphotic zone. Implications for coarse-resolution models used until now are that unrealistically high levels of explicit and implicit diapycnal diffusion may have been responsible for unrealistically high estimates of new production.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 80
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48 (10). pp. 2199-2226.
    Publication Date: 2017-06-06
    Description: The intensive field observational phase of JGOFS in the North Atlantic Ocean has shown the importance of oceanic mesoscale variability on biogeochemical cycles and on the strength of the ocean biological pump. Mesoscale physical dynamics govern the major time/space scales of bulk biological variability (biomass, production and export). Mesoscale eddies seem to have a strong impact on the ecosystem structure and functioning, but observational evidence is rather limited. For the signature of the mesoscale features to exist in the ecosystem, the comparison of temporal scales of formation and evolution of mesoscale features and reaction of the ecosystem is a key factor. Biological patterns are driven by active changes in biological source and sink terms rather than simply by passive turbulent mixing. A first modelling assessment of the regional balances between horizontal and vertical eddy-induced nutrient supplies in the euphotic zone shows that the horizontal transport predominates over the vertical route in the subtropical gyre, whereas the reverse holds true for the other biogeochemical provinces of the North Atlantic. Presently, despite some difference in numbers, the net impact of modelled eddies yields an enhancement of the biological productivity in most provinces of the North Atlantic Ocean. Key issues remaining include variation on the mesoscale of subsurface particle and dissolved organic matter remineralization, improved knowledge of the ecological response to patterns of variability, synopticity in mesoscale surveys along with refining measures of biogeochemical time/space variability. Eventual success of assimilation of in situ and satellite data, still in its infancy in coupled physical/biogeochemical models, will be crucial to achieve JGOFS synthesis in answering which data are most informative, standing stocks or rates, and which ones are relevant. Depending on which end of the spectrum quantification of the effect of mesoscale features on production and community structure is required, complementary strategies are offered. Either one may choose to increase resolution of models up to the very fine mesoscale features scale (a few kms) for the high end, or to include a parametric representation of eddies for the low end.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 81
    Publication Date: 2017-06-27
    Description: Saanich Inlet has been a highly productive fjord since the last glaciation. During ODP Leg 169S, nearly 70 m of Holocene sediments were recovered from Hole 1034 at the center of the inlet. The younger sediments are laminated, anaerobic, and rich in organic material (1–2.5 wt.% Corg), whereas the older sediments below 70 mbsf are non-laminated, aerobic, with glacio-marine characteristics and have a significantly lower organic matter content. This difference is also reflected in the changes of interstitial fluids, and in biomarker compositions and their carbon isotope signals. The bacterially-derived hopanoid 17α(H),21β(H)-hop-22(29)-ene (diploptene) occurs in Saanich Inlet sediments throughout the Holocene but is not present in Pleistocene glacio-marine sediments. Its concentration increases after ∼6000 years BP up to present time to about 70 μg/g Corg, whereas terrigenous biomarkers such as the n-alkane C31 are low throughout the Holocene (〈51 μg/g Corg) and even slightly decrease to 36 μg/g Corg at the most recent time. The increasing concentrations of diploptene in sediments younger than ∼6000 years BP separate a recent period of higher primary productivity, stronger anoxic bottom waters, and higher bacterial activity from an older period with lesser activity, heretofore undifferentiated. Carbon isotopic compositions of diploptene in the Holocene are between −31.5 and −39.6‰ PDB after ∼6000 years BP. These differences in the carbon isotopic record of diploptene probably reflect changes in microbial community structure of bacteria living at the oxic–anoxic interface of the overlying water column. The heavier isotope values are consistent with the activity of nitrifying bacteria and the lighter isotope values with that of aerobic methanotrophic bacteria. Therefore, intermediate δ13C values probably represent mixtures between the populations. In contrast, carbon isotopic compositions of n-C31 are roughly constant at −31.4±1.1‰ PDB throughout the Holocene, indicating a uniform input from cuticular waxes of higher plants. Prior to ∼6000 years BP, diploptene enriched in 13C of up to −26.3‰ PDB is indicative of cyanobacteria living in the photic zone and suggests a period of lower primary productivity, more oxygenated bottom waters, and hence lower bacterial activity during the earliest Holocene.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 82
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 48 . pp. 661-688.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: Redfield stoichiometry has proved a robust paradigm for the understanding of biological production and export in the ocean on a long-term and a large-scale basis. However, deviations of carbon and nitrogen uptake ratios from the Redfield ratio have been reported. A comprehensive data set including all carbon and nitrogen pools relevant to biological production in the surface ocean (DIC, DIN, DOC, DON, POC, PON) was used to calculate seasonal new production based on carbon and nitrogen uptake in summer along 20°W in the northeast Atlantic Ocean. The 20°W transect between 30 and 60°N covers different trophic states and seasonal stages of the productive surface layer, including early bloom, bloom, post-bloom and non-bloom situations. The spatial pattern has elements of a seasonal progression. We also calculated exported production, i.e., that part of seasonal new production not accumulated in particulate and dissolved pools, again separately for carbon and nitrogen. The pairs of estimates of `seasonal new production’ and `exported production’ allowed us to calculate the C : N ratios of these quantities. While suspended particulate matter in the mixed layer largely conforms to Redfield stoichiometry, marked deviations were observed in carbon and nitrogen uptake and export with progressing season or nutrient depletion. The spring system was characterized by nitrogen overconsumption and the oligotrophic summer system by a marked carbon overconsumption. The C : N ratios of seasonal new as well as exported production increase from early bloom values of 5–6 to values of 10–16 in the post-bloom/oligotrophic system. The summertime accumulation of nitrogen-poor dissolved organic matter can explain only part of this shift.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 83
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Progress in Oceanography, 51 (1). pp. 1-123.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-03
    Description: In this paper, we review observations, theory and model results on the monsoon circulation of the Indian Ocean. We begin with a general overview, discussing wind-stress forcing fields and their anomalies, climatological distributions of stratification, mixed-layer depths, altimetric sea-level distributions, and seasonal circulation patterns (Section 2). The three main monsoon circulation sections deal with the equatorial regime (Section 3), the Somali Current and western Arabian Sea (Section 4), and the Bay of Bengal, seasonally reversing monsoon currents south of India and Sri Lanka, and the eastern and central Arabian Sea (Section 5). For the equatorial regime, we discuss equatorial jets and undercurrents, their interactions with the eastern and western boundaries, and intraseasonal and vertically propagating signals. In the Somali Current section, we describe the ocean's responses to the summer and winter monsoon winds, and outline the modelling efforts that have been carried out to understand them. In the Bay of Bengal section, we present observational and modeling evidence showing the importance of remote forcing from the east, which to a large extent originates along the equator. In the following three sections, we review the southern-hemi sphere subtropical regime and its associated boundary currents (Section 6), the Indonesian Throughflow (Section 7), the Red Sea and Persian Gulf circulations (Section 8), and discuss aspects of their interactions with other Indian-Ocean circulations. Next, we describe the Indian Ocean's deep and shallow meridional overturning cells (Section 9). Model results show large seasonal variability of the meridional overturning streamfunction and heat flux, and we discuss possible physical mechanisms behind this variability. While the monsoon-driven variability of the deep cell is mostly a sloshing motion affecting heat storage, interesting water-mass transformations and monsoonal reversals occur in the shallow cross-equatorial cell. In the mean, the shallow cell connects the subduction areas in the southern subtropics and parts of the Indonesian Throughflow waters with the upwelling areas of the northern hemisphere via the cross-equatorial Somali Current. Its near-surface branch includes a shallow equatorial roll that is seasonally reversing. We close by looking at coupled ocean-climate anomalies, in particular the large events that were observed in the tropical and subtropical Indian Ocean in 1993/94 and 1997/98. These events have been interpreted as an independent Indian-Ocean climate mode by some investigators and as an ENSO-forced anomaly by others.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 84
    Publication Date: 2017-01-04
    Description: A two-dimensional, high-resolution, non-linear, two-layer, free-surface, boundary-fitted co-ordinate, hydrostatic model was applied to study the time–space variability of hydraulic controls and the development of internal bores in the Strait of Gibraltar. The model predicts the occurrence of four averaged (over a tropical month) controls located to the west of the Spartel Sill, at the Spartel and Camarinal Sills and in the Tarifa Narrows. The last of these controls is apparent in the sense that it consists of discrete fragments alternating with subcritical flow regions. The only control which extends over the whole width of the strait is the control at the Camarinal Sill, but it breaks down during neap tide, too. This control exists concurrently with the control in the Tarifa Narrows for short periods, while for much of the tropical month there is either just one or neither of the controls. The model predicts the development of a hydraulic jump and a jump-drop pair near the Camarinal Sill; the appearance of bulges of Mediterranean water to the east and west of the sill; the large-amplitude and small-amplitude internal bores released from the Camarinal Sill, which travel, respectively, eastward and westward, and their transformation due to radial spreading and dissipative effects. Also presented here are the results illustrating the effects of earth's rotation on the internal bores in the Strait of Gibraltar.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 85
    Publication Date: 2017-08-25
    Description: We present integrated relative production rates for cosmogenic nuclides in rock surfaces, which take into account reported variations of the geomagnetic field intensity during the past 800,000 yr. The calculations are based on the model simulating cosmic ray particle interactions with the Earth’s atmosphere given by Masarik and Beer [“Simulation of particle fluxes and cosmogenic nuclide production in the Earth’s atmosphere,” J. Geophys. Res. 104(D10), 12099–12111, 1999]. Corrections are nearly independent on altitude between sea level and at least 5000 m. The correction factors are essentially identical for all stable and radioactive cosmogenic nuclides with half-lives longer than a few hundred thousand years. At the equator, integrated production rates for exposure ages between ∼40,000 to 800,000 yr are 10 to 12% higher than the present-day values, whereas at latitudes 〉40°, geomagnetic field intensity variations have hardly influenced in situ cosmogenic nuclide production. Correction factors for in situ 14C production rates differ from those of longer-lived nuclides. They are always smaller than ∼2% because the magnetic field intensity remained rather constant during the past ∼10 kyr, when the major fraction of the 14C extant today was produced.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 86
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 187 (1-2). pp. 191-205.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: Boron contents and boron, carbon and oxygen stable isotopes were determined for authigenic carbonates recovered from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 146, Oregon margin. Carbonate precipitates are the most widespread authigenic phase in the shallow accretionary wedge and carry chemical information about long-term variations in pore fluid origin and flow paths in the Cascadia subduction zone. Drilling the first ridge (toe area including the frontal thrust) and the second ridge (or Hydrate Ridge) of the prism demonstrated different fluid regimes, with higher B contents in the authigenic precipitates at the toe. The δ11B of 18 authigenic precipitates analysed ranges from 13.9‰ to as high as 39.8‰, extending the upper range of previously reported carbonate δ11B values considerably. When related to the δ11B ratio of their parent solutions, these data are characteristic of fluid-related processes in accretionary prisms. Together with δ13C and δ18O, δ11B ratios of the carbonate concretions, nodules and crusts allow one to distinguish between precipitation influenced by (i) seawater, (ii) fluid reservoirs at different depth levels within the accretionary prism and (iii) cage water from dissociated gas hydrates, the latter possibly indicating a fluctuation of the bottom simulating reflector during most recent Earth’s history. From this first systematic boron study on authigenic precipitates from an accretionary prism it is suggested that B contents of such carbonate crusts and concretions exceed those reported for other marine carbonates. Given the abundance of such precipitates at convergent margins, they represent a significant B sink in geochemical cycling. Isotopic compositions of the parent fluids to the carbonates mirror B chemistry of modern pore waters from convergent margins. The precipitates carry information of different subduction-related fluid processes over a certain period of time, and hence are a crucial tracer in the investigation of palaeo-fluid flow.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 87
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: A 467-cm-long core from the inner shelf of the eastern Laptev Sea provides a depositional history since 9400 cal yr. B.P. The history involves temporal changes in the fluvial runoff as well as postglacial sea-level rise and southward retreat of the coastline. Although the core contains marine fossils back to 8900 cal yr B.P., abundant pf ant debris in a sandy facies low in the core shows that a river influenced the study site until similar to 8100 cal yr B.P. As sea level rose and the distance to the coast increased, this riverine influence diminished gradually and the sediment type changed, by 7400 cal yr B.P., from sandy silt to clayey silt, Although total sediment input decreased in a step-like fashion from 7600 to 4000 cal yr B.P., this interval had the highest average sedimentation rates and the greatest fluxes in most sedimentary components, While this maximum probably resulted from middle Holocene climate warming, the low input of sand to the site after 7400 cal yr B.P. probably resulted from further southward retreat of the coastline and river mouth. Since about 4000 cat yr B.P., total sediment flux has remained rather constant in this part of the Laptev Sea shelf due to a gradual stabilization of the depositional regime after completion of the Holocene sea-level rise.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 88
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: To establish a chronology of the Holocene transgression in Arctic Siberia, a total of 14 sediment cores from the Laptev Sea continental slope and shelf were studied covering the water depth range between 983 and 21 m. The age models of the cores were derived from 119 radiocarbon datings, which were all analyzed on marine biogenic calcite (mainly bivalve shells). The oldest shell sample was found at the slope and dates back to about 15.3 cal. ka, indicating that the time interval investigated starts prior to the onset of the meltwater pulse 1A (similar to 14.2 cal. ka) when global sea-level rose dramatically. The inundation history was reconstructed mainly on the basis of major changes in average sedimentation rates (ASR), but also other sedimentological parameters were incorporated. A diachronous reduction in ASR from the outer to the inner shelf region is recognized, which was related to the southward migration of the coastline as the primary sediment source. We estimate that the flooding of the 50-, 43-, and 31-m isobaths was completed by approximately 11.1, 9.8, and 8.9 cal. ka, and that Holocene sea-level highstand was approached near 5 cal. ka. Between these time intervals, sea level in the Laptev Sea rose by 5.4, 13.3, and 7.9 mm/year, respectively.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...