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  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Weber, Michael E; Clark, Peter U; Ricken, Werner; Mitrovica, Jerry X; Hostetler, Steven W; Kuhn, Gerhard (2011): Interhemispheric ice-sheet synchronicity during the last glacial maximum. Science, 334(6060), 1265-1269, https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1209299
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The timing of the last maximum extent of the Antarctic ice sheets relative to those in the Northern Hemisphere remains poorly understood. We develop a chronology for the Weddell Sea sector of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet that, combined with ages from other Antarctic ice-sheet sectors, indicates that the advance to and retreat from their maximum extent was within dating uncertainties synchronous with most sectors of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets. Surface climate forcing of Antarctic mass balance would probably cause an opposite response, whereby a warming climate would increase accumulation but not surface melting. Our new data support teleconnections involving sea-level forcing from Northern Hemisphere ice sheets and changes in North Atlantic deep-water formation and attendant heat flux to Antarctic grounding lines to synchronize the hemispheric ice sheets.
    Keywords: ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/5; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Halley Bay; Lyddan Island; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; PS10; PS10/778; PS12; PS12/319; PS1498-2; PS1599-3; PS16; PS16/409; PS16/410; PS16/413; PS16/417; PS16/432; PS1789-1; PS1790-1; PS1791-2; PS1793-2; PS1798-1; SL; SPP1158; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Pape, Thomas; Feseker, Tomas; Kasten, Sabine; Fischer, David; Bohrmann, Gerhard (2011): Distribution and abundance of gas hydrates in near-surface deposits of the Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano, SW Barents Sea. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 12(9), Q09009, 21 PP., https://doi.org/10.1029/2011GC003575
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The occurrence of gas hydrates at submarine mud volcanoes (MVs) located within the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) is controlled by upward fluid and heat flux associated with MV activity. Determining the spatial distribution of gas hydrates at MVs is crucial to evaluate their sensitivity to known episodic changes in volcanic activity. We determined the hydrocarbon inventory and spatial distribution of hydrates at an individual MV structure. The Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano (HMMV), located at 1,250 m water depth on the Barents Sea slope, was investigated by combined pressure core sampling, heat flow measurements, and pore water chemical analysis. Quantitative pressure core degassing revealed gas-sediment ratios between 3.1 and 25.7, corresponding to hydrate concentrations of up to 21.3% of the pore volume. Hydrocarbon compositions and physicochemical conditions imply that gas hydrates incipiently crystallize as structure I hydrate, with a dissociation temperature of around 13.8°C at this water depth. Based on numerous in situ measurements of the geothermal gradient in the seabed, pore water sulfate profiles and microbathymetric data, we show that the thickness of the GHSZ increases from less than 1 m at the warm center to around 47 m in the outer parts of the HMMV. We estimate the total mass of hydrate-bound methane stored at the HMMV to be about 102.5 kt, of which 2.8 kt are located within the morphological Unit I around the center and thus are likely to be dissociated in the course of a large eruption.
    Keywords: ARK-XXII/1b; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GC; Gravity corer; HERMES; Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European Seas; MARUM; Norwegian Sea; PC; Piston corer; Polarstern; PS70; PS70/053-1; PS70/054-1; PS70/068-1; PS70/069-1; PS70/081-1; PS70/092-1; PS70/093-1; PS70/094-1; PS70/097-1; PS70/098-1; PS70/102-1; PS70/110-1; PS70/113-1; PS70/117-1; PS70/122-1; PS70/126-1; PS70/133-1
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Melles, Martin; Kuhn, Gerhard; Larter, Robert D (2012): Marine geological constraints for the grounding-line position of the Antarctic Ice Sheet on the southern Weddell Sea shelf at the Last Glacial Maximum. Quaternary Science Reviews, 32, 25-47, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2011.11.017
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Abstract: The history of grounded ice-sheet extent on the southern Weddell Sea shelf during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and the timing of post-LGM ice-sheet retreat are poorly constrained. Several glaciological models reconstructed widespread grounding and major thickening of the Antarctic Ice Sheet in the Weddell Sea sector at the LGM. In contrast, recently published onshore data and modelling results concluded only very limited LGM-thickening of glaciers and ice streams feeding into the modern Filchner and Ronne ice shelves. These studies concluded that during the LGM ice shelves rather than grounded ice covered the Filchner and Ronne troughs, two deep palaeo-ice stream troughs eroded into the southern Weddell Sea shelf. Here we review previously published and unpublished marine geophysical and geological data from the southern Weddell Sea shelf. The stratigraphy and geometry of reflectors in acoustic sub-bottom profiles are similar to those from other West Antarctic palaeo-ice stream troughs, where grounded ice had advanced to the shelf break at the LGM. Numerous cores from the southern Weddell Sea shelf recovered sequences with properties typical for subglacially deposited tills or subglacially compacted sediments. These data sets give evidence that grounded ice had advanced across the shelf during the past, thereby grounding in even the deepest parts of the Filchner and Ronne troughs. Radiocarbon dates from glaciomarine sediments overlying the subglacial deposits are limited, but indicate that the ice grounding occurred at the LGM and that ice retreat started before ~15.1 corrected 14C kyrs before present (BP) on the outer shelf and before ~7.7 corrected 14C kyrs BP on the inner shelf, which is broadly synchronous with ice retreat in other Antarctic sectors. The apparent mismatch between the ice-sheet reconstructions from marine and terrestrial data can be attributed to ice streams with very low surface profiles (similar to those of "ice plains") that had advanced through Filchner Trough and Ronne Trough at the LGM. Considering the global sea-level lowstand of ~130 metres below present, a low surface slope of the expanded LGM-ice sheet in the southern Weddell Sea can reconcile grounding-line advance to the shelf break with limited thickening of glaciers and ice streams in the hinterland. This scenario implies that ice-sheet growth in the Weddell Sea sector during the LGM and ice-sheet drawdown throughout the last deglaciation could only have made minor contributions to the major global sea-level fluctuations during these times.
    Keywords: 002; 011; 013; 016; 2-19-1; 2-20-1; 2-22-1; 3-10-1; 3-1-1; 3-11-1; 3-1-2; 3-7-1; ANT-I/2; ANT-II/4; ANT-III/3; ANT-IV/3; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; AWI_Paleo; Cape Fiske; Dredge; DRG; Filchner Shelf; Filchner Trough; G1; G15; G17; G18; G2; G5; GC; Giant box corer; GKG; Glacier; Gould Bay; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); International Weddell Sea Oceanographic Expeditions; IWSOE68; IWSOE68-002; IWSOE68-011; IWSOE68-013; IWSOE68-016; IWSOE69; IWSOE69-G1; IWSOE69-G15; IWSOE69-G17; IWSOE69-G18; IWSOE69-G2; IWSOE69-G5; IWSOE70; IWSOE70-2-19-1; IWSOE70-2-20-1; IWSOE70-2-22-1; IWSOE70-3-10-1; IWSOE70-3-1-1; IWSOE70-3-11-1; IWSOE70-3-1-2; IWSOE70-3-7-1; MG; Multiboxcorer; NARE77; NARE77_11; NARE77_12; NARE77_13; NARE77_14; NARE77_16; NARE77_19; NARE77_20; NARE77_22; NARE77_23; NARE79; NARE79_210; NARE79_212; NARE79_213; NARE79_214; NARE79_221; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; PC; Piston corer; Polarsirkel; Polarstern; PS01; PS01/154; PS01/155; PS01/156; PS01/161; PS01/162; PS01/177; PS01/184; PS01/186; PS01/189; PS04; PS04/318; PS04/334; PS04/335; PS04/337; PS04/340; PS04/346; PS04/348; PS04/350; PS04/351; PS04/357; PS04/368; PS04/370; PS04/380; PS04/382; PS04/389; PS04/414; PS04/423; PS04/429; PS04/433; PS04/434; PS04/442; PS04/447; PS04/449; PS04/472; PS04/477; PS04/481; PS04/484; PS04/495; PS04/500; PS04/508; PS04/509; PS06/301; PS06/302; PS06/303; PS06/304; PS06/306; PS06 SIBEX; PS08; PS08/379; PS08/380; PS08/381; PS08/382; PS08/384; PS08/385; PS08/386; PS08/387; PS08/439; PS08/442; PS08/444; PS08/449; PS08/450; PS08/452; PS10; PS10/778; PS1010-1; PS1011-1; PS1012-1; PS1013-1; PS1014-1; PS1016-1; PS1017-1; PS1018-1; PS1019-1; PS1194-1; PS1196-1; PS1197-1; PS1197-2; PS1198-1; PS1199-1; PS1199-2; PS12; PS12/344; PS12/348; PS12/350; PS12/372; PS1200-2; PS1200-4; PS1201-1; PS1202-2; PS1203-1; PS1204-1; PS1205-1; PS1206-1; PS1207-2; PS1208-1; PS1209-1; PS1210-1; PS1210-2; PS1211-2; PS1212-1; PS1213-1; PS1214-1; PS1215-2; PS1216-1; PS1217-1; PS1219-1; PS1220-3; PS1222-1; PS1223-1; PS1275-1; PS1276-1; PS1277-1; PS1278-1; PS1279-1; PS1396-1; PS1397-1; PS1397-3; PS1398-1; PS1398-2; PS1399-1; PS1400-1; PS1400-4; PS1401-1; PS1401-2; PS1402-2; PS1403-1; PS1418-1; PS1420-1; PS1420-2; PS1422-1; PS1423-1; PS1423-2; PS1424-1; PS1424-2; PS1498-1; PS1498-2; PS1609-2; PS1609-3; PS1611-1; PS1611-3; PS1612-1; PS1612-2; PS1621-2; SL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Voelker, Antje H L (1999): Zur Deutung der Dansgaard-Oeschger Ereignisse in ultra-hochauflösenden Sedimentprofilen aus dem Europäischen Nordmeer (Dansgaard-Oeschger events in ultra-high resolution sediment records from the Nordic Seas). Berichte-Reports, Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Kiel, 9, 278 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/reports-ifg.1999.9
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: High-, i.e. 15-140-yr-resolution climate records from sediment cores 23071, 23074, and PS2644 from the Nordic Seas were used to recon:;truct changes in the surface and deep water circulation during marine isotope stages 1-5.1, i.e. the last 82 000 yr. From this the causal links between the paleoceanographic signals and the Dansgaard-Oeschger events 1-21 revealed in 0180-ice-core records from Greenland were determined. The stratigraphy of the cores is based on the planktic 0180 curves, the minima of which were directly correlated with the GISP2-0180 record, numerous AMS 14C ages, and some ash layers. The planktic d18O and dl3C curves of all three cores reveal numerous meltwater events, the most pronounced of which were assigned to the Heinrich events 1-6. The meltwater events, among other things also accompanied by cold sea surface temperatures and high IRD concentration, correlate with the stadial phases of the Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles and in the western Iceland Sea also to colder periods or abrupt drops in 0180 within a few longer interstadials. Besides being more numerous, the meltwater events also show isotope values lighter in the Iceland Sea than in the central Norwegian Sea, especially if compared to core 23071. This implies a continuous inflow of relative warm Atlantic water into the Norwegian Sea and a cyclonic circulation regime.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-X/2; AWI_Paleo; Denmark Strait; Giant box corer; GIK/IfG; GIK23071-2; GIK23071-3; GIK23074-1; GIK23074-3; GIK23351-1; GIK23351-4; GIK23354-4; GIK23354-6; GKG; GLAMAP; Global Environmental Change: The Northern North Atlantic; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Institute for Geosciences, Christian Albrechts University, Kiel; KAL; Kasten corer; M2/2; M7/5; Meteor (1986); Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Norwegian Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2613-1; PS2613-6; PS2616-7; PS2644-2; PS2644-5; PS2645-2; PS2645-5; PS2646-2; PS2646-5; PS2647-2; PS2647-5; PS31; PS31/113; PS31/116; PS31/160; PS31/160-5; PS31/161; PS31/162; PS31/163; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; SFB313; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 48 datasets
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Guilini, Katja; van Oevelen, Dick; Soetaert, Karline; Middelburg, Jack J; Vanreusel, Ann (2010): Nutritional importance of benthic bacteria for deep-sea nematodes from the Arctic ice margin: Results of an isotope tracer experiment. Limnology and Oceanography, 55, 1977-1989, https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.2010.55.5.1977
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: A stable isotope (13C)-labeling experiment was performed to quantify the importance of bacterial carbon as a food source for an Arctic deep-sea nematode community. Bacterial functional groups were isotopically enriched with 13C-glucose, 13C-acetate, 13C- bicarbonate, and 13C-amino acids injected into sediments collected from 1280 m depth at 79uN, 6uE, west of Svalbard. Incorporation of the 13C label into bacterial phospholipid-derived fatty acids (PLFAs) and nematodes in the top 5 cm of the sediment was monitored over a 7-d period. The 13C dynamics of nematodes was fitted with a simple isotope turnover model to derive the importance of the different bacterial functional groups as carbon sources for the nematodes. The different substrates clearly labeled different bacterial groups as evidenced by differential labeling of the PLFA patterns. The deep-sea nematode community incorporated a very limited amount of the label, and the isotope turnover model showed that the dynamics of the isotope transfer could not be attributed to bacterivory. The low enrichment of nematodes suggests a limited passive uptake of injected 13C-labeled substrates. The lack of accumulation suggests that the injected 13C-labeled dissolved organic carbon compounds are not important as carbon sources for deep-sea nematodes. Since earlier studies with isotopically enriched algae also found limited uptake by nematodes, the food sources of deep-sea nematodes remain unclear.
    Keywords: ARK-XXII/1c; hermes; HERMES; hermione; HERMIONE; Hotspot Ecosystem Research and Mans Impact On European Seas; Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European Seas; MUC; MultiCorer; North Greenland Sea; Polarstern; PS70; PS70/188-1; PS70/190-1; PS70/192-1
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Vogt, Christoph (1997): Zeitliche und räumliche Verteilung von Mineralvergesellschaftungen in spätquartären Sedimenten des Arktische Ozeans und ihre Nützlichkeit als Klimaindikatoren während der Glazial/Interglazial-Wechsel (Regional and temporal variations of mineral assemblages in Arctic Ocean sediments as climate indicator during glacial/interglacial changes). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 251, 309 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0251_1997
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The Arctic Ocean System is a key player regarding the climatic changes of Earth. Its highly sensitive ice Cover, the exchange of surface and deep water masses with the global ocean and the coupling with the atmosphere interact directly with global climatic changes. The output of cold, polar water and sea ice influences the production of deep water in the North Atlantic and controls the global ocean circulation ("the conveyor belt"). The Arctic Ocean is surrounded by the large Northern Hemisphere ice sheets which not only affect the sedimentation in the Arctic Ocean but also are supposed to induce the Course of glacials and interglacials. Terrigenous sediment delivered from the ice sheets by icebergs and meltwater as well as through sea ice are major components of Arctic Ocean sediments. Hence, the terrigenous content of Arctic Ocean sediments is an outstanding archive to investigate changes in the paleoenvironment. Glazigenic sediments of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and surface samples of the Arctic Ocean and the Siberian shelf regions were investigated by means of x-ray diffraction of the bulk fraction. The source regions of distinct mineral compositions were to be deciphered. Regarding the complex circumpolar geology stable christalline shield rocks, active and ancient fold belts including magmatic and metamorphic rocks, sedimentary rocks and wide periglacial lowlands with permafrost provide a complete range of possible mineral combinations. Non- glaciated shelf regions mix the local input from a possible point source of a particular mineral combination with the whole shelf material and function as a sampler of the entire region draining to the shelf. To take this into account, a literature research was performed. Descriptions of outcropping lithologies and Arctic Ocean sediments were scanned for their mineral association. The analyses of glazigenic and shelf sediments yielded a close relationship between their mineral composition and the adjacent source region. The most striking difference between the circumpolar source regions is the extensive outcrop of carbonate rocks in the vicinity of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and in N Greenland while siliciclastic sediments dominate the Siberian shelves. In the Siberian shelf region the eastern Kara Sea and the western Laptev Sea form a destinct region defined by high smectite, (clino-) pyroxene and plagioclase input. The source of this signal are the extensive outcrops of the Siberian trap basalt in the Putorana Plateau which is drained by the tributaries of the Yenissei and Khatanga. The eastern Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea can also be treated as one source region containing a feldspar, quartz, illite, mica, and chlorite asscciation combined with the trace minerals hornblende and epidote. Franz Josef Land provides a mineral composition rich in quartz and kaolinite. The diverse rock suite of the Svalbard archipelago distributes specific mineral compositions of highly metamorphic christalline rocks, dolomite-rich carbonate rocks and sedimentary rocks with a higher diagenetic potential manifested in stable newly built diagenetic minerals and high organic maturity. To reconstruct the last 30,000 years as an example of the transition between glacial and interglacial conditions a profile of sediment cores, recovered during the RV Polarstern" expedition ARK-VIIIl3 (ARCTIC '91), and additional sediment cores around Svalbard were investigated. Besides the mineralogy of different grain size fractions several additional sedimentological and organo-geochemical Parameterswere used. A detailed stratigraphic framework was achieved. By exploiting this data set changes in the mineral composition of the Eurasian Basin sediments can be related to climatic changes. Certain mineral compositions can even be associated with particular transport processes, e.g. the smectitel pyroxene association with sea ice transport from the eastern Kara Sea and the western Laptev Sea. Hence, it is possible to decipher the complex interplay between the influx of warm Atlantic waters into the Southwest of the Eurasian Basin, the waxing and waning of the Svalbard1Barents- Sea- and Kara-Sea-Ice-Sheets, the flooding of the Siberian shelf regions and the surface and deep water circulation. Until now the Arctic Ocean was assumed to be a rather stable System during the last 30,000 years which only switched from a completely ice covered situation during the glacial to seasonally Open waters during the interglacial. But this work using mineral assemblages of sediment cores in the vicinity of Svalbard revealed fast changes in the inflow of warm Atlantic water with the Westspitsbergen Current (〈 1000 years), short periods of advances and retreats of the marine based Eurasian ice sheets (1000-3000 years), and short melting phases (400 years?). Deglaciation of the marine-based Eurasian and the land-based north American and Greenland ice sheets are not simultaneous. This thesis postulates that the Kara Sea Ice Sheet released an early meltwater signal prior to 15,000 14C years leading the Barents Sea Ice Sheet while the western land-based ice sheets are following later than 13,500 14C years. The northern Eurasian Basin records the shift between iceberg and sea-ice material derived from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and N-Greenland and material transported by sea-ice and surface currents from the Siberian shelf region. The phasing of the deglaciation becomes very obvious using the dolomite and quartd phyllosilicate record. It is also supposed that the flooding of the Laptev Sea during the Holocene is manifested in a stepwise increase of sediment input at the Lomonosov Ridge between the Eurasian and Amerasian Basin. Depending on the strength of meltwater pulses from the adjacent ice sheets the Transpolar Drift can probably be relocated. These movements are traceable by the distribution of indicator minerals. Based on the outcome of this work the feasibility of bulk mineral determination can be qualified as excellent tool for paleoenvironmental reconstructions in the Arctic Ocean. The easy preparation and objective determination of bulk mineralogy provided by the QUAX software bears the potential to use this analyses as basic measuring method preceding more time consuming and highly specialised mineralogical investigations (e.g. clay mineralogy, heavy mineral determination).
    Keywords: 302-M0002A; 4391-2; 4413-1; 4416-1; ACEX-M2A; Amundsen Basin; Arctic Coring Expedition, ACEX; Arctic Ocean; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; B20A; B21B; B23A; B24A; B25A; B26B; B28B; B30A; B31A; B32; B5; Barents abyssal plain; Barents Sea; BC; Bear Island Trough; Box corer; CCGS Captain Molly Kool (Vidar Viking); DM49; Dmitry Mendeleev; Exp302; Fletcher Abyssal Plain; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; GC; GERG; Giant box corer; Giant piston corer; GKG; GPC; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Gravity corer (Russian type); Integrated Ocean Drilling Program / International Ocean Discovery Program; IODP; Jenissei; KAL; KAL_R; Kara Sea/St. Anna Trough; Kasten corer; Kasten corer RUS; KS113T; KS117T; Laptev Sea; Laptev Sea, Taymyr Island; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Lomonosov solpe; Makarov Basin; Men4386-2; Men4388-2; Men4391-2; Men4399-2; Men4403-2; Men4409-1; Men4410-2; Men4413-1; Men4414-2; Men4416-1; Men4417-3; Morris Jesup Rise; MUC; MultiCorer; Nansen Basin; Northwind Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Ob; OB64T; OB73T; OB87T; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Pechora Sea (southeast Barents Sea); PI-93-AR; PI-93-AR_B5; PI-94-AR; PI-94-AR_B20A; PI-94-AR_B21B; PI-94-AR_B23A; PI-94-AR_B24A; PI-94-AR_B25A; PI-94-AR_B26B; PI-94-AR_B28B; PI-94-AR_B30A; PI-94-AR_B31A; PI-94-AR_B32; PL-1994; PL94-11; PL94-23; PL94-32; PL94-62; Polar Sea; Polar Star; Polarstern; Pole Abyssal Plain; Professor Logachev; PS07T; PS19/084; PS19/086; PS19/148; PS19/150; PS19/151; PS19/152; PS19/154; PS19/155; PS19/158; PS19/159; PS19/160; PS19/161; PS19/164; PS19/165; PS19/166; PS19/167; PS19/171; PS19/172; PS19/173; PS19/175; PS19/176; PS19/178; PS19/181; PS19/182; PS19/183; PS19/184; PS19/185; PS19/186; PS19/189; PS19/190; PS19/192; PS19/194; PS19/196; PS19/198; PS19/200; PS19/204; PS19/206; PS19/210; PS19/214; PS19/218; PS19/222; PS19/224; PS19/226; PS19/228; PS19/234; PS19/239; PS19/241; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19/252; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS2122-2; PS2123-2; PS2123-3; PS2156-1; PS2157-3; PS2158-1; PS2159-4; PS2161-4; PS2162-1; PS2164-2; PS2165-1; PS2165-3; PS2165-5; PS2166-1; PS2167-3; PS2168-3; PS2170-4; PS2171-2; PS2172-3; PS2174-2; PS2174-4; PS2174-5; PS2175-3; PS2175-4; PS2176-2; PS2177-3; PS2178-4; PS2179-3; PS2180-1; PS2181-4; PS2182-4; PS2183-3; PS2184-3; PS2185-3; PS2185-4; PS2185-6; PS2186-3; PS2187-5; PS2189-3; PS2190-5; PS2191-1; PS2192-1; PS2192-3; PS2193-2; PS2194-1; PS2195-4; PS2196-3; PS2198-4; PS2200-2; PS2200-4; PS2200-5; PS2202-4; PS2204-3; PS2205-1; PS2206-4; PS2208-1; PS2209-1; PS2210-3; PS2212-3; PS2212-5; PS2212-6; PS2213-1; PS2213-4; PS2214-4; PS2215-1; PS2439-1; PS2440-4; PS2441-3; PS2442-4; PS2443-2; PS2444-1; PS2445-3; PS2445-4; PS2446-3; PS2447-4; PS2448-3; PS2449-3; PS2450-2; PS2451-2; PS2452-2; PS2453-2; PS2455-3; PS2456-2; PS2458-3; PS2459-2; PS2460-3; PS2461-2; PS2462-3; PS2463-3; PS2465-3; PS2466-3; PS2468-3; PS2469-3; PS2470-4; PS2471-3; PS2472-3; PS2473-3; PS2474-2; PS2474-3; PS2475-1; PS2476-3; PS2477-3; PS2478-3; PS2480-2; PS2481-2; PS2483-2; PS2484-2; PS2485-1; PS2486-2; PS26T; PS27; PS27/001; PS27/006; PS27/007; PS27/014; PS27/016; PS27/017; PS27/019; PS27/020; PS27/024; PS27/025; PS27/027; PS27/028; PS27/029; PS27/030; PS27/031; PS27/033; PS27/034; PS27/038; PS27/039; PS27/040; PS27/041; PS27/043; PS27/044; PS27/047; PS27/048; PS27/050; PS27/052; PS27/053; PS27/054; PS27/056; PS27/058; PS27/059; PS27/060; PS27/062; PS27/064; PS27/065; PS27/067; PS27/068; PS27/070; PS27/071; PS27/072; PS27/073; Pyasina; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; RGC; RUS_unspec; SAT-077; SAT-136; SL; SPASIBAIII; St. Anna Trough, Kara Sea; Svalbard; van Veen Grab; VGRAB; Vilkitsky Strait; Voronin Trough; VT-123; Wrangel Abyssal Plain; Yakov Smirnitskiy; Yermak Plateau; YR102T; YR107T; YR94T
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 87 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Müller, Juliane; Werner, Kirstin; Stein, Ruediger; Fahl, Kirsten; Moros, Matthias; Jansen, Eystein (2012): Holocene cooling culminates in sea ice oscillations in Fram Strait. Quaternary Science Reviews, 47, 1-14, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.04.024
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: A reconstruction of Holocene sea ice conditions in the Fram Strait provides insight into the palaeoenvironmental and palaeoceanographic development of this climate sensitive area during the past 8,500 years BP. Organic geochemical analyses of sediment cores from eastern and western Fram Strait enable the identification of variations in the ice coverage that can be linked to changes in the oceanic (and atmospheric) circulation system. By means of the sea ice proxy IP25, phytoplankton derived biomarkers and ice rafted detritus (IRD) increasing sea ice occurrences are traced along the western continental margin of Spitsbergen throughout the Holocene, which supports previous palaeoenvironmental reconstructions that document a general cooling. A further significant ice advance during the Neoglacial is accompanied by distinct sea ice fluctuations, which point to short-term perturbations in either the Atlantic Water advection or Arctic Water outflow at this site. At the continental shelf of East Greenland, the general Holocene cooling, however, seems to be less pronounced and sea ice conditions remained rather stable. Here, a major Neoglacial increase in sea ice coverage did not occur before 1,000 years BP. Phytoplankton-IP25 indices ("PIP25-Index") are used for more explicit sea ice estimates and display a Mid Holocene shift from a minor sea ice coverage to stable ice margin conditions in eastern Fram Strait, while the inner East Greenland shelf experienced less severe to marginal sea ice occurrences throughout the entire Holocene.
    Keywords: ARK-X/2; AWI_Paleo; East Greenland Sea; Fram Strait; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Maria S. Merian; MSM05/5; MSM05/5_712-2; MSM05/5_723-2; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2641-4; PS31; PS31/154; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 8
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Franke, Christine; Hofmann, Daniela; von Dobeneck, Tilo (2004): Does lithology influence relative paleointensity records? A statistical analysis on South Atlantic pelagic sediments. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interior, 147, 285-296, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2004.07.004
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The relative paleointensity (RPI) method assumes that the intensity of post depositional remanent magnetization (PDRM) depends exclusively on the magnetic field strength and the concentration of the magnetic carriers. Sedimentary remanence is regarded as an equilibrium state between aligning geomagnetic and randomizing interparticle forces. Just how strong these mechanical and electrostatic forces are, depends on many petrophysical factors related to mineralogy, particle size and shape of the matrix constituents. We therefore test the hypothesis that variations in sediment lithology modulate RPI records. For 90 selected Late Quaternary sediment samples from the subtropical and subantarctic South Atlantic Ocean a combined paleomagnetic and sedimentological dataset was established. Misleading alterations of the magnetic mineral fraction were detected by a routine Fe/kappa test (Funk, J., von Dobeneck, T., Reitz, A., 2004. Integrated rock magnetic and geochemical quantification of redoxomorphic iron mineral diagenesis in Late Quaternary sediments from the Equatorial Atlantic. In: Wefer, G., Mulitza, S., Ratmeyer, V. (Eds.), The South Atlantic in the Late Quaternary: reconstruction of material budgets and current systems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin/Heidelberg/New York/Tokyo, pp. 239-262). Samples with any indication of suboxic magnetite dissolution were excluded from the dataset. The parameters under study include carbonate, opal and terrigenous content, grain size distribution and clay mineral composition. Their bi- and multivariate correlations with the RPI signal were statistically investigated using standard techniques and criteria. While several of the parameters did not yield significant results, clay grain size and chlorite correlate weakly and opal, illite and kaolinite correlate moderately to the NRM/ARM signal used here as a RPI measure. The most influential single sedimentological factor is the kaolinite/illite ratio with a Pearson's coefficient of 0.51 and 99.9% significance. A three-member regression model suggests that matrix effects can make up over 50% of the observed RPI dynamics.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Central South Atlantic; GeoB6405-6; GeoB6407-1; GeoB6408-4; GeoB6422-1; GeoB6425-2; GeoB6428-1; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M46/4; MARUM; Meteor (1986); SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 18 datasets
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  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hulth, Stefan; Blackburn, T H; Hall, Per (1994): Arctic sediments (Svalbard): consumption and microdistribution of oxygen. Marine Chemistry, 46(3), 293-316, https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-4203(94)90084-1
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Total sediment oxygen consumption rates (TSOC or Jtot), measured during sediment-water incubations, and sediment oxygen microdistributions were studied at 16 stations in the Arctic Ocean (Svalbard area). The oxygen consumption rates ranged between 1.85 and 11.2 mmol m**-2 d**-1, and oxygen penetrated from 5.0 to 〉59 mm into the investigated sediments. Measured TSOC exceeded the calculated diffusive oxygen fluxes (Jdiff) by 1.1-4.8 times. Diffusive fluxes across the sediment-water interface were calculated using the whole measured microprofiles, rather than the linear oxygen gradient in the top sediment layer. The lack of a significant correlation between found abundances of bioirrigating meiofauna and high Jtot/Jdiff ratios as well as minor discrepancies in measured TSOC between replicate sediment cores, suggest molecular diffusion, not bioirrigation, to be the most important transport mechanism for oxygen across the sediment-water interface and within these sediments. The high ratios of Jtot/Jdiff obtained for some stations were therefore suggested to be caused by topographic factors, i.e. underestimation of the actual sediment surface area when one-dimensional diffusive fluxes were calculated, or sampling artifacts during core recovery from great water depths. Measured TSOC correlated to water depth raised to the -0.4 to -0.5 power (TSOC = water depth**-0.4 to -0.5) for all investigated stations, but they could be divided into two groups representing different geographical areas with different sediment oxygen consumption characteristics. The differences in TSOC between the two areas were suggested to reflect hydrographic factors (such as ice coverage and import/production of reactive particulate organic material) related to the dominating water mass (Atlantic or polar) in each of the two areas. The good correlation between TSOC and water depth**-0.4 to -0.5 rules out any of the stations investigated to be topographic depressions with pronounced enhanced sediment oxygen consumption.
    Keywords: ADEPD; ARK-VIII/2; Atlantic Data Base for Exchange Processes at the Deep Sea Floor; Giant box corer; GKG; MUC; MULT; MultiCorer; Multiple investigations; Polarstern; PS19/040; PS19/045; PS19/050; PS19/070; PS19/078; PS19/082; PS19/084; PS19/086; PS19/098; PS19/100; PS19/101; PS19/105; PS19/108; PS19/112; PS19/119; PS19/134; PS19/143; PS19/146; PS19 EPOS II
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 20 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 10
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Fahl, Kirsten; Stein, Ruediger (2012): Modern seasonal variability and deglacial/Holocene change of central Arctic Ocean sea-ice cover: New insights from biomarker proxy records. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 351-352, 123-133, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2012.07.009
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: For the reconstruction of sea-ice variability, a biomarker approach which is based on (1) the determination of sea-ice diatom-specific highly-branched isoprenoid (IP25) and (2) the coupling of phytoplankton biomarkers and IP25 has been used. For the first time, such a data set was obtained from an array of two sediment traps deployed at the southern Lomonosov Ridge in the central Arctic Ocean at water depth of 150 m and 1550 m and recording the seasonal variability of sea ice cover in 1995/1996. These data indicate a predominantly permanent sea ice cover at the trap location between November 1995 and June 1996, an ice-edge situation with increased phytoplankton productivity and sea-ice algae input in July/August 1996, and the start of new-ice formation in late September. The record of modern sea-ice variability is then used to better interpret data from sediment core PS2458-4 recovered at the Laptev Sea continental slope close to the interception with Lomonosov Ridge and recording the post-glacial to Holocene change in sea-ice cover. Based on IP25 and phytoplankton biomarker data from Core PS2458-4, minimum sea-ice cover was reconstructed for the Bølling/Allerød warm interval between about 14.5 and 13 calendar kyr BP, followed by a rapid and distinct increase in sea-ice cover at about 12.8 calendar kyr BP. This sea-ice event was directly preceded by a dramatic freshwater event and a collapse of phytoplankton productivity, having started about 100 years earlier. These data are the first direct evidence that enhanced freshwater flux caused enhanced sea-ice formation in the Arctic at the beginning of the Younger Dryas. In combination with a contemporaneous, abrupt and very prominent freshwater/meltwater pulse in the Yermak Plateau/Fram Strait area these data may furthermore support the hypothesis that strongly enhanced freshwater (and ice) export from the Arctic into the North Atlantic could have played an important trigger role for the onset of the Younger Dryas cold reversal. During the Early Holocene, sea-ice cover steadily increased again (ice-edge situation), reaching modern sea-ice conditions (more or less permanent sea-ice cover) probably at about 7–8 calendar kyr BP.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-IX/4; ARK-XI/1; AWI_Paleo; KAL; Kasten corer; Laptev Sea; Mooring (long time); MOORY; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2458-4; PS27; PS27/038; PS2756-1; PS36; PS36/051LOMO-2
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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