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  • Public Library of Science  (131,866)
  • Oxford University Press  (122,791)
  • ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
  • 2020-2020
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  • 1
    Unknown
    New York : Oxford University Press
    Keywords: Inorganic polymers.
    Pages: xiv, 338 p.
    Edition: 2nd ed
    ISBN: 1-423-71993-X
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-11-20
    Description: Siwi caldera, in the Vanuatu arc (Tanna island), is a rare volcanic complex where both persistent eruptive activity (Yasur volcano)and rapid block resurgence (Yenkahe horst) can be investigated simultaneously during a post-caldera stage. Here we provide new constraints on the feeding system of this volcanic complex, based on a detailed study of the petrology, geochemistry and volatile content of Yasur^Siwi bulk-rocks and melt inclusions, combined with measurements of the chemical composition and mass fluxes of Yasur volcanic gases. Major and trace element analyses of Yasur^ Siwi volcanic rocks, together with literature data for other volcanic centers, point to a single magmatic series and possibly long-lived feeding of Tanna volcanism by a homogeneous arc basalt. Olivine-hosted melt inclusions show that the parental basaltic magma, which produces basaltic-trachyandesites to trachyandesites by 50^70% crystal fractionation, is moderately enriched in volatiles ( 1wt % H2O, 0·1wt % S and 0·055 wt % Cl). The basaltic-trachyandesite magma, emplaced at between 4^5 km depth and the surface, preserves a high temperature (1107 158C) and constant H2O content ( 1wt %) until very shallow depths, where it degasses extensively and crystallizes. These conditions, maintained over the past 1400 years of Yasur activity, require early water loss during basalt differentiation, prevalent open-system degassing, and a relatively high heat flow ( 109W). Yasur volcano releases on average 13·4 103 tons d 1 of H2O and 680 tons d 1 of SO2, but moderate amounts of CO2 (840 tons d 1), HCl (165 tons d 1), and HF (23 tons d 1). Combined with melt inclusion data, these gas outputs constrain a bulk magma degassing rate of 5 107 m3 a 1, about a half of which is due to degassing of the basaltic-trachyandesite. We compute that 25 km3 of this magma have degassed without erupting and have accumulated beneath Siwi caldera over the past 1000 years, which is one order of magnitude larger than the accumulated volume uplift of the Yenkahe resurgent block. Hence, basalt supply and gradual storage of unerupted degassed basaltictrachyandesite could easily account for (or contribute to) the Yenkahe block resurgence.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1077-1105
    Description: 2.3. TTC - Laboratori di chimica e fisica delle rocce
    Description: 2.4. TTC - Laboratori di geochimica dei fluidi
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: restricted
    Keywords: Vanuatu arc ; Yasur ; gas fluxes ; volatiles ; melt inclusions ; resurgent block ; volcano thermal budget ; 04. Solid Earth::04.04. Geology::04.04.12. Fluid Geochemistry ; 04. Solid Earth::04.08. Volcanology::04.08.01. Gases ; 04. Solid Earth::04.08. Volcanology::04.08.03. Magmas
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-11-26
    Description: So far, the role of appendicularians in the biogeochemical cycling of organic matter has been largely overlooked. Appendicularians represent only a fraction of total mesozooplankton biomass, however these ubiquitous zooplankters have very high filtration and growth rates compared to copepods, and produce numerous fecal pellets and filtering houses contributing to export production by aggregating small marine particles. To study their quantitative impact on biogeochemical flux, we have included this group in the biogeochemical flux model, using a recently developed ecophysiological model. One-dimensional annual simulations of the pelagic ecosystem including appendicularians were conducted with realistic surface forcing for the year 2000, using data from the DyFAMed open ocean station. The appendicularian grazing impact was generally low, but appendicularians increased detritus production by 8% and export production by 55% compared to a simulation without appendicularians. Therefore, current biogeochemical models lacking appendicularians probably under, or misestimate the detritus and export production by omitting the pathway from small-sized plankton to fast sinking detritus. Detritus production and export rates are 60% lower than the estimates from mesotrophic sites, showing that appendicularians’ role is lower but still significant in oligotrophic environments. The simulated annual export at 200 m exceeds sediment trap values by 44%, suggesting an intense degradation during the sinking of appendicularian detritus, supported by observations made at other sites. Thus, degradation and grazing of appendicularian detritus need better quantification if we are to accurately assess the role of appendicularia in export flux.
    Description: EU-FP6 project SESAME GOCE-036949
    Description: Published
    Description: 855-872
    Description: 3.7. Dinamica del clima e dell'oceano
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: BFM ; zooplankton ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.01. General::03.01.01. Analytical and numerical modeling ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.01. General::03.01.07. Physical and biogeochemical interactions ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.04. Chemical and biological::03.04.01. Biogeochemical cycles ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.04. Chemical and biological::03.04.04. Ecosystems
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2014-06-24
    Description: The early Pliocene warm phase was characterized by high sea surface temperatures and a deep thermocline in the eastern equatorial Pacific. A new hypothesis suggests that the progressive closure of the Panamanian seaway contributed substantially to the termination of this zonally symmetric state in the equatorial Pacific. According to this hypothesis, intensification of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) – induced by the closure of the gateway – was the principal cause of equatorial Pacific thermocline shoaling during the Pliocene. In this study, twelve Panama seaway sensitivity experiments from eight ocean/climate models of different complexity are analyzed to examine the effect of an open gateway on AMOC strength and thermocline depth. All models show an eastward Panamanian net throughflow, leading to a reduction in AMOC strength compared to the corresponding closed-Panama case. In those models that do not include a dynamic atmosphere, deepening of the equatorial Pacific thermocline appears to scale almost linearly with the throughflow-induced reduction in AMOC strength. Models with dynamic atmosphere do not follow this simple relation. There are indications that in four out of five models equatorial wind-stress anomalies amplify the tropical Pacific thermocline deepening. In summary, the models provide strong support for the hypothesized relationship between Panama closure and equatorial Pacific thermocline shoaling.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2018-02-05
    Description: Euphausiids constitute a major biomass component in shelf ecosystems and play a fundamental role in the rapid vertical transport of carbon from the ocean surface to the deeper layers during their daily vertical migration (DVM). DVM depth and migration patterns depend on oceanographic conditions with respect to temperature, light and oxygen availability at depth, factors that are highly dependent on season in most marine regions. Here we introduce a global krill respiration ANN (artificial neural network) model including the effect of latitude (LAT), the day of the year (DoY), and the number of daylight hours (DLh), in addition to the basal variables that determine ectothermal oxygen consumption (temperature, body mass and depth). The newly implemented parameters link space and time in terms of season and photoperiod to krill respiration. The ANN model showed a better fit (r2 = 0.780) when DLh and LAT were included, indicating a decrease in respiration with increasing LAT and decreasing DLh. We therefore propose DLh as a potential variable to consider when building physiological models for both hemispheres. For single Euphausiid species investigated in a large range of DLh and DoY, we also tested the standard respiration rate for seasonality with Multiple Linear Regression (MLR) and General Additive model (GAM). GAM successfully integrated DLh (r2 = 0.563) and DoY (r2 = 0.572) effects on respiration rates of the Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba, yielding the minimum metabolic activity in mid-June and the maximum at the end of December. We could not detect DLh or DoY effects in the North Pacific krill Euphausia pacifica, and our findings for the North Atlantic krill Meganyctiphanes norvegica remained inconclusive because of insufficient seasonal data coverage. We strongly encourage comparative respiration measurements of worldwide Euphausiid key species at different seasons to improve accuracy in ecosystem modeling.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , peerRev
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: Euphausiids constitute a major biomass component in shelf ecosystems and play a fundamental role in the rapid vertical transport of carbon from the ocean surface to the deeper layers during their daily vertical migration (DVM). DVM depth and migration patterns depend on oceanographic conditions with respect to temperature, light and oxygen availability at depth, factors that are highly dependent on season in most marine regions. Here we introduce a global krill respiration ANN (Artificial Neural Network) model including the effect of latitude (LAT), the day of the year (DoY), and the number of daylight hours (DLh), in addition to the basal variables that determine ectothermal oxygen consumption (temperature, body mass and depth). The newly implemented parameters link space and time in terms of season and photoperiod to krill respiration. The ANN model showed a better fit (r2=0.780) when DLh and LAT were included, indicating a decrease in respiration with increasing LAT and decreasing DLh. We therefore propose DLh as a potential variable to consider when building physiological models for both hemispheres. For single Euphausiid species investigated in a large range of DLh and DoY, we also tested the standard respiration rate for seasonality with Multiple Linear Regression (MLR) and General Additive model (GAM). GAM successfully integrated DLh (r2= 0.563) and DoY (r2= 0.572) effects on respiration rates of the Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba, yielding the minimum metabolic activity in mid-June and the maximum at the end of December. We could not detect DLh or DoY effects in the North Pacific krill Euphausia pacifica, and our findings for the North Atlantic krill Meganyctiphanes norvegica remained inconclusive because of insufficient seasonal data coverage. We strongly encourage comparative respiration measurements of worldwide Euphausiid key species at different seasons to improve accuracy in ecosystem modelling.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 7
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 403, pp. 446-455, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2014-08-25
    Description: The transition from last glacial to deglacial and subsequently to modern interglacial climate conditions was accompanied by abrupt shifts in the palaeoceanographic setting in the subpolar North Atlantic. Knowledge about the role that sea ice coverage played during these rapid climate reversals is limited since most marine sediment cores from the higher latitudes provide only a coarse temporal resolution and often poorly preserved microfossils. Here we present a highly resolved reconstruction of sea ice conditions that characterised the eastern Fram Strait – a key area for water mass exchange between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic – for the past 30 ka BP. This reconstruction is based on the distribution of the sea ice biomarker IP25 and phytoplankton derived biomarkers in a sediment core from the continental slope of western Svalbard. During the late glacial (30 ka to 19 ka BP), recurrent advances and retreats of sea ice characterised the study area and point to a hitherto less considered oceanic (and/or atmospheric) variability. A long-lasting perennial sea ice coverage in eastern Fram Strait persisted only at the very end of the Last Glacial Maximum (i.e. from 19.2 to 17.6 ka BP) and was abruptly reduced at the onset of Heinrich Event 1 – coincident with or possibly even inducing the collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). Further maximum sea ice conditions prevailed during the Younger Dryas cooling event and support the assumption of an AMOC reduction due to increased formation and export of Arctic sea ice through Fram Strait. A significant retreat of sea ice and sea surface warming are observed for the Early Holocene.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 8
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 414, pp. 1-19, ISSN: 0031-0182
    Publication Date: 2014-09-04
    Description: Here we present an improvement of paleotemperature reconstructions for the Southern Ocean by combining new diatom data from the Pacific sector with published Atlantic and Indian sector reference data. The statistical analysis of 336 surface sediment samples recovered from a wide area of Southern Ocean environments defines a supra-regional reference data set for quantitative summer sea surface temperature (SSST) estimations. In situ temperature measurements covering the time span from approx. 1900 to 1991 were used as reference instead of more recent time series of satellite-derived data, possibly biased by ocean warming. Different transfer function (TF) models for the Imbrie and Kipp Method (IKM), the Modern Analog Technique (MAT), Weighted Averaging (WA), and Weighted Averaging Partial Least Squares (WAPLS) were tested. Best performance for IKM was obtained using the D336 set with 29 diatom taxa and three factors, resulting in root mean square error of prediction (RMSEP) of 0.833°C for SSST. MAT estimates were best with six analogs resulting in the lowest RMSEP of 0.812°C. WAPLS applied to D336 resulted in a RMSEP of 0.782°C. WA performed less well, expressed by a RMSEP of 0.974°C. Furthermore, two subsets for the Atlantic (D151) and the Pacific sectors (D107) were applied with IKM to test for the advantages of localized TFs. IKM-D151 and IKM-D107 performed comparably good as IKM-D336, with RMSEP of 0.71°C and 0.68°C, respectively. Application of the augmented reference data sets on two Pleistocene sediment records from the Atlantic (PS1768-8) and Pacific (PS58/271-1) sectors led to the best performance of IKM with D336, expressed by high overall communalities (〉0.75) and fewer (PS1768-8) to no (PS58/271-1) no-analogs, compared to the regional data sets, proving IKM-D336 to deal better with higher assemblage variability. SSST estimates for both cores exhibit similar glacial/interglacial patterns for all four applied D336-based TF methods, with the best concordance between IKM and WAPLS.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 12
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Harmful Algae, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 36, pp. 22-28, ISSN: 1568-9883
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Azadinium poporum is a small dinoflagellate from the family Amphidomataceae which is known for the production potential of azaspiracids (AZAs) causative of azaspiracid shellfish poisoning (AZP). A. poporum has been recorded from European and western Pacific waters. Here we report on the high variability of toxin profiles within this species in Chinese coastal waters. Out of 16 analyzed strains of A. poporum from different geographic locations along the Chinese coastline, three strains proved not to contain AZAs, whereas 13 strains contained different combinations of AZA-2, AZA-11, AZA-37, a yet unknown isomer of AZA-1 (named AZA-40) and new AZA with yet unreported molecular mass of 853 Da (named AZA-41). The new AZA-40, other than AZA-1 itself, belongs to the recently discovered “348-type” group, which in tandem mass spectrometry displays a group 4 fragment with m/z 348 instead of the group 4 fragment of the classic AZAs with m/z 362, indicating a shift of a methyl group from the C24-C40 part of the molecule (rings F-I) to the C2-C9 part (carboxylic side chain and ring A). AZA-41 apparently is a dehydro variant of AZA-2. In addition a previously reported AZA with a molecular mass 871 DA could be unambiguously assigned to AZA-11, which is known to be a shellfish metabolite of AZA-2. This is the first report of AZA-11 being also de novo synthetized by dinoflagellates.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 14
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Dynamics of Atmospheres and Oceans, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 50(1), pp. 55-77, ISSN: 0377-0265
    Publication Date: 2018-12-07
    Description: A semi-analytical model of the Panama throughflow is presented. The model expresses the throughflow transport as a function of deep water formation in the North Pacific and in the North Atlantic, and of the Panama Gateway depth. The model is derived from the integral of the momentum equation along a circumpolar path, and can be interpreted from the point of view of the vorticity balance. The important conditions are whether the deep water, whose location is considered to be above the bottom water formed around Antarctica, originates from the North Atlantic or from the North Pacific, and whether the Panama Gateway is shallower than the lower boundary of the deep water. The present model indicates that the barotropic transport through the Panama Gateway is eastward, except for the case where the deep water is formed in the North Pacific and the sill of the Panama Gateway is shallow. The baroclinic structure of the Panama throughflow depends on whether the deep water is formed in the North Pacific or in the North Atlantic. These qualitative implications of the model are consistent with recent numerical studies and proxy-based paleoceanographic studies. Numerical experiments performed in the present study reinforce confidence in the semi-analytical model.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: Background The proportion of conserved DNA sequences with no clear function is steadily growing in bioinformatics databases. Studies of sequence and structural homology have indicated that many uncharacterized protein domain sequences are variants of functionally described domains. If these variants promote an organism's ecological fitness, they are likely to be conserved in the genome of its progeny and the population at large. The genetic composition of microbial communities in their native ecosystems is accessible through metagenomics. We hypothesize the co-variation of protein domain sequences across metagenomes from similar ecosystems will provide insights into their potential roles and aid further investigation. Methodology/Principal findings We calculated the correlation of Pfam protein domain sequences across the Global Ocean Sampling metagenome collection, employing conservative detection and correlation thresholds to limit results to well-supported hits and associations. We then examined intercorrelations between domains of unknown function (DUFs) and domains involved in known metabolic pathways using network visualization and cluster-detection tools. We used a cautious “guilty-by-association” approach, referencing knowledge-level resources to identify and discuss associations that offer insight into DUF function. We observed numerous DUFs associated to photobiologically active domains and prevalent in the Cyanobacteria. Other clusters included DUFs associated with DNA maintenance and repair, inorganic nutrient metabolism, and sodium-translocating transport domains. We also observed a number of clusters reflecting known metabolic associations and cases that predicted functional reclassification of DUFs. Conclusion/Significance Critically examining domain covariation across metagenomic datasets can grant new perspectives on the roles and associations of DUFs in an ecological setting. Targeted attempts at DUF characterization in the laboratory or in silico may draw from these insights and opportunities to discover new associations and corroborate existing ones will arise as more large-scale metagenomic datasets emerge.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2017-01-27
    Description: High acoustic seafloor-backscatter signals characterize hundreds of patches of methane-derived authigenic carbonates and chemosynthetic communities associated with hydrocarbon seepage on the Nile Deep Sea Fan (NDSF) in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. During a high-resolution ship-based multibeam survey covering a ~ 225 km2 large seafloor area in the Central Province of the NDSF we identified 163 high-backscatter patches at water depths between 1500 and 1800 m, and investigated the source, composition, turnover, flux and fate of emitted hydrocarbons. Systematic Parasound single beam echosounder surveys of the water column showed hydroacoustic anomalies (flares), indicative of gas bubble streams, above 8% of the high-backscatter patches. In echosounder records flares disappeared in the water column close to the upper limit of the gas hydrate stability zone located at about 1350 m water depth due to decomposition of gas hydrate skins and subsequent gas dissolution. Visual inspection of three high-backscatter patches demonstrated that sediment cementation has led to the formation of continuous flat pavements of authigenic carbonates typically 100 to 300 m in diameter. Volume estimates, considering results from high-resolution autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV)-based multibeam mapping, were used to calculate the amount of carbonate-bound carbon stored in these slabs. Additionally, the flux of methane bubbles emitted at one high-backscatter patch was estimated (0.23 to 2.3 × 106 mol a− 1) by combined AUV flare mapping with visual observations by remotely operated vehicle (ROV). Another high-backscatter patch characterized by single carbonate pieces, which were widely distributed and interspaced with sediments inhabited by thiotrophic, chemosynthetic organisms, was investigated using in situ measurements with a benthic chamber and ex situ sediment core incubation and allowed for estimates of the methane consumption (0.1 to 1 × 106 mol a− 1) and dissolved methane flux (2 to 48 × 106 mol a− 1). Our comparison of dissolved and gaseous methane fluxes as well as methane-derived carbonate reservoirs demonstrates the need for quantitative assessment of these different methane escape routes and their interaction with the geo-, bio-, and hydrosphere at cold seeps.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 17
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, (402), pp. 44-54, ISSN: 0031-0182
    Publication Date: 2016-10-22
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 18
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Earth-Science Reviews, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 135, pp. 48-58, ISSN: 0012-8252
    Publication Date: 2016-12-23
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 19
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Ecological Modelling, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 220(18), pp. 2173-2186, ISSN: 0304-3800
    Publication Date: 2018-02-16
    Description: We present a five-year (1997-2001) numerical simulation of daily mean chlorophyll a concentrations at station Geesthacht Weir on the lower Elbe River (Germany) using an extremely simple Lagrangian model driven by (a) water discharge, global radiation, water temperature, and (b) silica observations at station Schmilka in the upper reach of the Elbe River. Notwithstanding the lack of many mechanistic details, the model is able to reproduce observed chlorophyll a variability surprisingly well, including a number of sharp valleys and ascents/descents in the observed time series. The model's success is based on the assumption of three key effects: prevailing light conditions, sporadic limitation of algal growth due to lack of silica and algae loss rates that increase above an empirically specified temperature threshold of 20 degrees C. Trimmed-down model versions are studied to analyse the model's success in terms of these mechanisms. In each of the five years the model consistently fails, however, to properly simulate characteristic steep increases of chlorophyll a concentrations after pronounced spring minima. Curing this model deficiency by global model re-calibration was found to be impossible. However, suspension of silica consumption by algae for up to 10 days in spring is shown to serve as a successful placeholder for processes that are disregarded in the model but apparently play an important role in the distinctly marked period of model failure. For the remainder of the year the very simple model was found to be adequate
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 20
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Ecological Modelling, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 213(2), pp. 229-244, ISSN: 0304-3800
    Publication Date: 2018-02-16
    Description: A simple Lagrangian water quality model was designed to investigate the hypothesis of sporadic silica limitations of diatom growth in the lower Elbe River in Germany. For each fluid parcel a limited reservoir of silica was specified to be consumed by diatoms. The model's simplicity notwithstanding, a set of six selected model parameters could not be fully identified from existing observations at one station. After the introduction of prior knowledge of the ranges of meaningful parameter values, calibration of the over-parameterised model manifested itself primarily in the generation of posterior parameter covariances. Estimations of the covariance matrix based on (a) second order partial derivatives of a quadratic cost function at its optimum and (b) Monte Carlo simulations exploring the whole space of parameter values gave consistent results. Diagonalisation of the covariance matrix yielded two linear parameter combinations that were most effectively controlled by data from periods with and without lack of silica, respectively. The two parameter combinations were identified as the essential inputs that govern the successful simulation of intermittently decreasing chlorophyll a concentrations in summer. A satisfactory simulation of the pronounced chlorophyll a minimum in spring, by contrast, was found to be beyond the means of the simple model.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 21
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Precambrian Research, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 250, pp. 143-150, ISSN: 0301-9268
    Publication Date: 2017-10-17
    Description: We report a strong magnetic high over the Giæverryggen at the Grunehogna craton in western DronningMaud Land, East Antarctica. The anomaly was coarsely mapped by previous surveys. Recently acquiredmagnetic data (2012/13) better constrain its spatial extent and permit the estimate of a theoretical ampli-tude value of +4000 to +4200 nT at bedrock surface. From the magnetic data, we estimated a minimummagnetic susceptibility in a spherical source body with a midpoint depth of ∼5.6 km to be greater than193 × 10−3SI, in the absence of relevant remanent magnetization. An exemplary 2.75-D forward mod-eling is carried out. Comparisons with neighboring magnetic highs in a plate tectonic reconstruction ofwestern Dronning Maud Land and southern Africa reveal clear similarities to the magnetic signature ofthe Paleoproterozoic banded iron formation in the Mhlapitsi fold and thrust belt near Polokwane (for-merly Pietersburg) in South Africa, suggesting a similar source for the Giæver Magnetic Anomaly andallow the interpretation that both regions were juxtaposed in Archaean and Paleoproterozoic times.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 22
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Global and Planetary Change, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 123(Part A), pp. 67-76, ISSN: 0921-8181
    Publication Date: 2014-11-17
    Description: A multiproxy analysis based on planktic foraminiferal abundances, derived SSTs, and stable planktic isotopes measurements together with alkenone abundances and Uk′37 SSTs was performed on late MIS 6 to early MIS 5d sediment recovered fromSite 975 (ODP Leg 161) in the South Balearic Islands Basin(Western Mediterranean) with emphasis on reconstructing the climate progression of the last interglacial period. A number of abrupt climate changes related to alternative influence of nutrient rich northern and oligotrophic southernwater masses was revealed. Heinrich event 11 and cooling events C27, C26, C25, C24, and C23, which have been previously described in the North Atlantic, were recognized. However, in comparison to the eastern North Atlantic midlatitude region, events C27 and C26 at Site 975 seem to be significantly more pronounced. Together with evidence of a two-phase climate optimum with maximum SSTs reached during its later phase, this implies a close similarity in climate dynamics between the Western Mediterranean and the Nordic seas. We propose that postglacial effects in the Nordic seas had an influence on the westernMediterranean climate via atmospheric circulation and that these effects competed with the insolation force.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 23
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    In:  EPIC3Polar Science, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, ISSN: 1873-9652
    Publication Date: 2014-11-13
    Description: The Arctic mid-ocean ridge system constitutes the most active source of earthquakes in the north polar region. However, the characteristics of its earthquake activity at teleseismic and local scales are not well studied because of the remote location of the ridge. We present here a comprehensive seismicity analysis that compares the teleseismic earthquake record of 35 years drawn from the catalogue of the International Seismological Centre with reconnaissance-style local earthquake records at six locations along the ridge that were instrumented either with ocean bottom seismometers or with seismometers on drifting ice floes. The teleseismic earthquake activity varies along the ridge and reflects ultraslow spreading processes with more and larger earthquakes produced in magma-rich regions than in magma-starved areas. Large magnitude earthquakes M〉5.5 are common along this ultraslow spreading ridge. Locally recorded earthquakes are of small magnitude (M〈2) and probably reflect the formation of the pronounced topographic relief. Their size and event rate is not as variable along the ridge as that of teleseismic events. Locally recorded earthquakes in the upper mantle are generated at several locations. Their focal depths do not depend on spreading rate but reflect the thermal state of the lithosphere with very deep earthquakes indicating an exceptionally cold lithosphere.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 24
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    In:  EPIC3Tectonophysics, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 630, pp. 300-312, ISSN: 0040-1951
    Publication Date: 2014-11-17
    Description: The Natal Valley (southwest Indian Ocean) has a complicated and protracted opening history, as has the surrounding southwest Indian Ocean. Recently collected multibeam swath bathymetry and 3.5 kHz seismic data from the Natal Valley reveal anomalous sea floor mounds in the northern Natal Valley. The significance, of these domes,as recorders of the geological history of the Natal Valley and SE African Margin has been overlooked with little attempt made to identify their origin, evolution or tectonic significance. This paper aims to describe these features from a morphological perspective and to use their occurrence as a means to better understand the geological and oceanographic evolution of this basin. The sea floor mounds are distinct in both shallow seismic and morphological character from the surrounding sea floor of the Natal Valley. Between 25 km and 31 km long, and 16 km and 18 km wide, these features rise some 400 m above the sedimentary deposits that have filled in the Natal Valley. Such macro-scale features have not previously been described from the Natal Valley or from other passive margins globally. They are not the result of bottom water circulation, salt tectonics; rather, igneous activity is favoured as the origin for these anomalous sea floor features. We propose a hypothesisthat the anomalous seafloor mounds observed in the Natal Valley are related to igneous activity associated with the EARS. The complicated opening history and antecedent geology, coupled with the southward propagation of the East African Rift System creates a unique setting where continental rift associated features have been developed in a marine setting.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2017-02-01
    Description: The Fram Strait is the main gateway for water, heat and sea-ice exchanges between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic. The complex physical environment results in a highly variable primary production in space and time. Previous regional studies have defined key bottom-up (ice cover and stratification from melt water controlling the light availability, and wind mixing and water transport affecting the supply of nutrients) and top-down processes (heterotrophic grazing). In this study, in situ field data, remote sensing and modeling techniques were combined to investigate in detail the influence of melting sea-ice and ocean properties on the development of phytoplankton blooms in the Fram Strait region for the years 1998–2009. Satellite-retrieved chlorophyll-a concentrations from temporarily ice-free zones were validated with contextual field data. These were then integrated per month on a grid size of 20 × 20 km, resulting in 10 grids/fields. Factors tested for their influence on spatial and temporal variation of chlorophyll-a were: sea-ice concentration from satellite and sea-ice thickness, ocean stratification, water temperature and salinity time-series simulated by the ice-ocean model NAOSIM. The time series analysis for those ten ice-free fields showed a regional separation according to different physical processes affecting phytoplankton distribution. At the marginal ice zone the melting sea-ice was promoting phytoplankton growth by stratifying the water column and potentially seeding phytoplankton communities. In this zone, the highest mean chlorophyll concentration averaged for the productive season (April–August) of 0.8 mgC/m3 was observed. In the open ocean the phytoplankton variability was correlated highest to stratification formed by solar heating of the upper ocean layers. Coastal zone around Svalbard showed processes associated with the presence of coastal ice were rather suppressing than promoting the phytoplankton growth. During the twelve years of observations, chlorophyll concentrations significantly increased in the southern part of the Fram Strait, associated with an increase in sea surface temperature and a decrease in Svalbard coastal ice.
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  • 26
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    Oxford University Press
    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Botany, Oxford University Press, ISSN: 0022-0957
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
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  • 27
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    In:  Capponi, G., Crispini, L., Scambelluri, M., 2008. Comment on “Subduction polarity reversal at the junction between the Western Alps and the Northern Apennines, Italy”, by G. Vignaroli, C. Faccenna, L. Jolivet, C. Piromallo, F. Rossetti Tectonophysics, Volume 465, Issues 1-4, 20 February 2009, Pages 221-226
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: We first would like to thank Capponi et al. (2008) for their comments and criticisms on our paper, offering us the opportunity to discuss the data and the model presented in Vignaroli et al. (2008a) and clarify the geological rationale behind our manuscript. Vignaroli et al. (2008a) presented a large-scale reconstruction on the evolution of the Western Alpine–Northern Apennine junction, based on shallow geological information derived from the Northern Apennines, the Western and Ligurian Alps coupled with deep mantle structures from seismic tomography and tectonic reconstructions. The aim of this paper is then to give an alternative, though simplified, tectonic solution to the long-standing debate concerning the polarity of the subduction zone in the central Mediterranean and its linkage with the Alpine orogeny and the formation of the arcs belt. We condensed and simplified the huge wealth of geological information using cross-sections along the three orogenic segments. One of the main points of the paper is that the Voltri Massif of the Ligurian Alps is reinterpreted as an eclogitic-bearing domain exhumed by means of ductile-to-brittle extensional detachment tectonics with a top-to-the-W sense of shear. In this view, the orogenic architecture and evolution of the Ligurian Alps presents affinities (both for geometry and timing of deformation) with the widely accepted extensional structures recognized in the Western Alps, in the Northern Apennines and, in general, in Alpine-type orogenic belts of the Mediterranean. The detailed comment made by Capponi et al. (2008) is indeed centred on the tectonic structure of the Voltri Massif (probably this comment should have been addressed to our companion paper, Vignaroli et al., 2008b, focused on the Voltri Massif structures and available on-line on March 2008). The main point of the comment is that the exhumation of High-Pressure (HP) metamorphic units exposed in the Voltri Massif was produced by thrusts rather than by syn-orogenic extensional detachments. In this reply, we would first like to make some general considerations on the criteria/concepts adopted for the interpretation of the exhumation-related structures and we will then discuss point-by-point the criticism of Capponi et al., 2008 Capponi, G., Crispini, L., Scambelluri, M., 2008. Comment on "Subduction polarity reversal at the junction between the Western Alps and the Northern Apennines, Italy", by G. Vignaroli, C. Faccenna, L. Jolivet, C. Piromallo, F. Rossetti. Tectonophysics.Capponi et al. (2008).
    Description: Published
    Description: 227-231
    Description: 3.3. Geodinamica e struttura dell'interno della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: HIGH-PRESSURE ROCKS ; METAMORPHIC CORE COMPLEX ; SCHISTES-LUSTRES COMPLEX ; ECLOGITES LIGURIAN ALPS ; VOLTRI-MASSIF ; CRUSTAL EXTENSION ; TYRRHENIAN SEA ; POSTOROGENIC EXTENSION ; CONTINENTAL EXTENSION ; SHEAR ZONE ; 04. Solid Earth::04.07. Tectonophysics::04.07.02. Geodynamics
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: Crystal-rich lithic clasts occurring in volcanic deposits are key tools to understand processes of storage, cooling, and fractionation of magmas in pre-eruptive volcanic systems. These clasts, indeed, represent snapshots of the magma-chamber/host-rock interface before eruptions and provide information on crystallization, differentiation, and degrees of interaction between magma and wall-rocks. In this study, with the aim to shed light on magma-carbonate interaction and CO2 emission in volcanic areas, we focused on the petrology of cumulate and skarn rocks by using as case study a suite of mafic and calcite-bearing lithic clasts from the Colli Albani Volcanic District. By means of phase relations, bulk rock chemistry, phase compositions, and stable isotope data we have recognized different types of cumulates and skarns. Cumulates containing either clinopyroxene±olivine associated with Cr-bearing spinel or glass+phlogopite have been divided in primitive and differentiated, respectively. Primitive cumulates originate at the interface between a relatively primitive magma and carbonate-bearing rocks and show evidences of olivine instability (i.e. heteradcumulate texture) due to carbonate assimilation. Differentiated cumulates, characterized by Ca-rich olivines, phlogopite, and glass containing calcite, form from a differentiated magma in a system open to CaO-contamination. Skarns has been divided in exoskarns, characterized by xenomorphic texture and abundant calcite, and endoskarns, characterized by hypidiomorphic texture, Ca-Tschermak-rich mineral phases, and interstitial glass. Exoskarns formed by means of solid state reactions in a dolostone protolith whereas endoskarns crystallized at subliquidus temperature from a silicate melt that experienced exoskarns assimilation. Our study evidences that magma-carbonate interaction can not be considered a one step process exhausting just after the formation of skarn shells. Magma and carbonate rocks, when in contact, continuously interact leading to the formation of exoskarns, endoskarns, cumulates (primitive and differentiated ones), and differentiated melts. Finally, by means of oxygen and carbon isotope compositions of calcite in equilibrium with skarns, we demonstrate that carbonate assimilation represents a source of massive CO2 degassing mechanism due to the consumption of calcite and removing of CO2 during the decarbonation process.
    Description: Sapienza Universita' di Roma INGV-DPC [Project V 3.1, Colli Albani].
    Description: Published
    Description: 2307-2332
    Description: 2.3. TTC - Laboratori di chimica e fisica delle rocce
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: magma/carbonate interaction ; CO2 degassing ; c umulate and skarn ; Colli Albani ; 04. Solid Earth::04.04. Geology::04.04.05. Mineralogy and petrology
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2019-08-23
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 30
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    In:  EPIC3Marine Geology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 254(3-4), pp. 197-215, ISSN: 0025-3227
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: We studied the impact of the last glacial (late Weichselian) sea level cycle on sediment architecture in theinner Kara Sea using high-resolution acoustic sub-bottom profiling. The acoustic lines were ground-truthedwith dated sediment cores. Furthermore we refined the location of the eastern LGM ice margin, by new subbottom profiles. New model results of post-Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) isostatic rebound for this area allowa well-constrained interpretation of acoustic units in terms of sequence stratigraphy. The lowstand (orregressive) system tract sediments are absent but are represented by an unconformity atop of Pleistocenesediments on the shelf and by a major incised dendritic paleo-river network. The subsequent transgressiveand highstand system tracts are best preserved in the incised channels and the recent estuaries while onlyminor sediment accumulation on the adjacent shelf areas is documented. The Kara Sea can be subdividedinto three areas: estuaries (A), the shelf (B) and (C) deeper lying areas that accumulated a total of 114 x1010 t of Holocene sediments.
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: Background: Trace elements have been hypothesised to be involved in the pathogenesis of Multiple Sclerosis and volcanic degassing is the major natural sources of trace elements. Both incidence of Multiple Sclerosis in Catania and volcanic activity of Mount Etna have been significantly increased during the last 30 years. Due to prevailing trade winds direction, volcanic gases from Etna summit craters are mostly blown towards the eastern and southern sectors of the volcano. Objective: To evaluate the possible association between Multiple Sclerosis and exposure to volcanogenic trace elements. Methods: We evaluated prevalence and incidence of Multiple Sclerosis in four communities (47,234 inhabitants) located in the eastern flank and in two communities (52,210 inhabitants) located in the western flank of Mount Etna, respectively the most and least exposed area to crater gas emissions. Results: A higher prevalence was found in the population of the eastern flank compared to the population of the western one (137.6/100,000 versus 94.3/100,000; p-value 0.04). We found a borderline significantly higher incidence risk during the incidence study period (1980–2009) in the population of the eastern flank 4.6/100,000 (95% CI 3.1–5.9), compared with the western population 3.2/100,000 (95% CI 2.4–4.2) with a RR of 1.41 (95% CI 0.97–2.05; p-value 0.06). Incidence risks have increased over the time in both populations reaching a peak of 6.4/100,000 in the eastern flank and of 4.4/100.000 in the western flank during 2000–2009. Conclusion: We found a higher prevalence and incidence of Multiple Sclerosis among populations living in the eastern flank of Mount Etna. According to our data a possible role of TE cannot be ruled out as possible co-factor in the MS pathogenesis. However larger epidemiological study are needed to confirm this hypothesis.
    Description: Published
    Description: e74259
    Description: 6A. Monitoraggio ambientale, sicurezza e territorio
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: open
    Keywords: Mt. Etna volcano ; Multiple Sclerosis ; trace elements ; volcanic activity ; 05. General::05.08. Risk::05.08.01. Environmental risk
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2020-02-24
    Description: Hule and Rı´o Cuarto are maar lakes located 11 and 18 km N of Poa´s volcano along a 27 km long fracture zone, in the Central Volcanic Range of Costa Rica. Both lakes are characterized by a stable thermic and chemical stratification and recently they were affected by fish killing events likely related to the uprising of deep anoxic waters to the surface caused by rollover phenomena. The vertical profiles of temperature, pH, redox potential, chemical and isotopic compositions of water and dissolved gases, as well as prokaryotic diversity estimated by DNA fingerprinting and massive 16S rRNA pyrosequencing along the water column of the two lakes, have highlighted that different bio-geochemical processes occur in these meromictic lakes. Although the two lakes host different bacterial and archaeal phylogenetic groups, water and gas chemistry in both lakes is controlled by the same prokaryotic functions, especially regarding the CO2-CH4 cycle. Addition of hydrothermal CO2 through the bottom of the lakes plays a fundamental priming role in developing a stable water stratification and fuelling anoxic bacterial and archaeal populations. Methanogens and methane oxidizers as well as autotrophic and heterotrophic aerobic bacteria responsible of organic carbon recycling resulted to be stratified with depth and strictly related to the chemical-physical conditions and availability of free oxygen, affecting both the CO2 and CH4 chemical concentrations and their isotopic compositions along the water column. Hule and Rı´o Cuarto lakes were demonstrated to contain a CO2 (CH4, N2)-rich gas reservoir mainly controlled by the interactions occurring between geosphere and biosphere. Thus, we introduced the term of bio-activity volcanic lakes to distinguish these lakes, which have analogues worldwide (e.g. Kivu: D.R.C.-Rwanda; Albano, Monticchio and Averno: Italy; Pavin: France) from volcanic lakes only characterized by geogenic CO2 reservoir such as Nyos and Monoun (Cameroon).
    Description: Published
    Description: e102456
    Description: 4V. Vulcani e ambiente
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: open
    Keywords: bio activity, volcanic lakes, costa rica ; 03. Hydrosphere::03.04. Chemical and biological::03.04.06. Hydrothermal systems
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  • 33
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    In:  EPIC3Sedimentary Geology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 263-26, pp. 36-44, ISSN: 0037-0738
    Publication Date: 2014-09-17
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  • 34
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    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
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  • 35
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    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 300, pp. 112-124, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Mediterranean Sea is at the transition between temperate and tropical air masses and as such of importance for studying climate change. The Gulf of Taranto and adjacent SW Adriatic Sea are at the heart of this region. Their sediments are excellently suited for generating high quality environmental records for the last millennia with a sub-decadal resolution. The quality of these records is dependent on a careful calibration of the transfer functions used to translate the sedimentary lipid signals to the local environment. Here, we examine and calibrate the UK′37 and TEX86 lipid-based temperature proxies in 48 surface sediments and relate these to ambient sea surface temperatures and other environmental data. The UK′37 -based temperatures in surface sediments reflect winter/spring sea surface temperatures in agreement with other studies demonstrating maximum haptophyte production during the colder season. The TEX86-based temperatures for the nearshore sites also reflect winter sea surface temperatures. However, at the most offshore sites, they correspond to summer sea surface temperatures. Additional lipid and environmental data including the distribution of the BIT index and remote-sensed chlorophyll-a suggest a shoreward increase of the impact of seasonal and spatial variability in nutrients and control of planktonic archaeal abundance by primary productivity, particle loading in surface waters and/or overprint by a cold-biased terrestrial TEX86 signal. As such the offshore TEX86 values seem to reflect a true summer signal to the effect that offshore UK′37 and TEX86 reconstruct winter and summer temperature, respectively, and hence provide information on the annual temperature amplitude.
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  • 36
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    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 301, pp. 373-381, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: In locations of rapid sediment accumulation receiving substantial amounts of laterally transported material the timescales of transport and accurate quantification of the transportedmaterial are at the focus of intense research. Here we present radiocarbon data obtained on co-occurring planktic foraminifera, marine haptophyte biomarkers (alkenones) and total organic carbon (TOC) coupled with excess Thorium-230 (230Thxs)measurements on four sediment cores retrieved in 1649–2879 mwater depth fromtwo such high accumulation drift deposits in the Northeast Atlantic, Björn and Gardar Drifts.While 230Thxs inventories imply strong sediment focussing, no age offsets are observed between planktic foraminifera and alkenones, suggesting that redistribution of sediments is rapid and occurs soon after formation ofmarine organic matter, or that transported material contains negligible amounts of alkenones. An isotopic mass balance calculation based on radiocarbon concentrations of co-occurring sediment components leads us to estimate that transported sediment components contain up to 12% of fossil organic matter that is free of or very poor in alkenones, but nevertheless appears to consist of a mixture of fresh and eroded fossil material. Considering all available constraints to characterize transported material, our results showthat although focussing factors calculated frombulk sediment 230Thxs inventoriesmay allowuseful approximations of bulk redeposition, they do not provide a unique estimate of the amount of each laterally transported sediment component. Furthermore, our findings provide evidence that the occurrence of lateral sediment redistribution alone does not always hinder the use ofmultiple proxies but that individual sediment fractions are affected to variable extents by sediment focussing.
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  • 37
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    In:  EPIC3Global and Planetary Change, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 79(1-2), pp. 48-60, ISSN: 0921-8181
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Arctic hydrological cycle throughout the Holocene is analyzed based on the results of transient simulations with the coupled atmosphere-ocean circulation model ECHO-G. The results suggest a ~ 2% increase of mid-Holocene to preindustrial Arctic river discharges for the Eurasian continent. However, rivers of the North America Arctic realm show a moderate runoff decline of approximately 4 to 5% for the same period. The total river discharge into the Arctic Ocean has remained at an approximately constant preindustrial level since the mid-Holocene. The positive discharge trend within Eurasia is caused by a more rapid decrease in local net evaporation compared to a smaller decline in advected moisture and hence precipitation. This effect is neither recognized within the North American Arctic domain nor in the far eastern part of the Eurasian Arctic realm. A detailed comparison of these model findings with a variety of proxy studies is conducted. The collected proxy records show trends of continental surface temperatures and precipitation rates that are consistent with the simulations. A continuation of the transient Holocene runs for the 19th and 20th century with increased greenhouse gasses indicates an increase of the total river influx into the Arctic Ocean of up to 7.6%. The Eurasian river discharges increase by 7.5%, the North American discharges by up to 8.4%. The most rapid increases have been detected since the beginning of the 20th century. These results are corroborated by the observed rising of Arctic river discharges during the last century which is attributed to anthropogenic warming. The acceleration of the Arctic hydrological cycle in the 20th century is without precedence in the Holocene.
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  • 38
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    In:  EPIC3Geomorphology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 187, pp. 135-152, ISSN: 0169-555X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
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  • 39
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    In:  EPIC3Marine Geology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 299-30, pp. 51-62, ISSN: 0025-3227
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: Drift deposits document stages of particular dynamic bottom-currents and associated sedimentary transport activities. The analysis of seismic reflection data from the Amundsen Sea, southern Pacific Ocean, reveals sediment drift formation already in Eocene/Oligocene times. This observation indicates bottom current activity and hence a cold climate for the late Palaeogene in an area, which today lies under the influence of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) originating in the Ross Sea. The generation of sediment drifts is accompanied by the occurrence of mass transport deposits leading to the identification of a phase of strong ice sheet expansion (15-4 Ma), which due to a change in ice regime from wet- to dry-based was followed by less material input during the last  4 Ma.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Sr and Nd isotopic composition of dust extracted from recentsnowlayers at the top of BerknerIslandicesheet (located within the Filchner–Ronne Ice Shelf at the southern end of the Weddell Sea) enables us, for the first time, to document dust provenance in Antarctica outside the East Antarctic Plateau (EAP) where all previous studies based on isotopic fingerprinting were carried out. Berknerdust displays an overall crust-like isotopic signature, characterized by more radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr and much less radiogenic 143Nd/144Nd compared to dust deposited on the EAP during glacial periods. Differences with EAP interglacial dust are not as marked but still significant, indicating that present-day Berknerdust provenance is distinct, at least to some extent, from that of the dust reaching the EAP. The fourteen snow-pit sub-seasonal samples that were obtained span a two-year period (2002–2003) and their dust Sr and Nd isotopic composition reveals that multiplesources are at play over a yearly time period. Southern South America, Patagonia in particular, likely accounts for part of the observed spring/summer dust deposition maxima, when isotopic composition is shifted towards “younger” isotopic signatures. In the spring, possible additional inputs from Australian sources would also be supported by the data. Most of the year, however, the measured isotopic signatures would be best explained by a sustained background supply from putative local sources in East Antarctica, which carry old-crust-like isotopic fingerprints. Whether the restricted East Antarctic ice-free areas produce sufficient eolian material has yet to be substantiated however. The fact that large (〉 5 μm) particles represent a significant fraction of the samples throughout the entire time-series supports scenarios that involve contributions from proximal sources, either in Patagonia and/or Antarctica (possibly including snow-free areas in the Antarctic Peninsula and other areas as well). This also indicates that additional dust transport, which does not reach the EAP, must occur at low-tropospheric levels to this coastalsector of Antarctica.
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  • 41
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    In:  EPIC3Global and Planetary Change, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 80-81, pp. 180-189, ISSN: 0921-8181
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
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  • 42
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    In:  EPIC3Tectonophysics, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 585, pp. 113-123, ISSN: 0040-1951
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 43
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    In:  EPIC3Ecological Complexity, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 11, pp. 75-83, ISSN: 1476-945X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Classifying species into functional groups is a way to understand the functioning of species-rich ecosystems, or to model the dynamics of such ecosystems. Many statistical techniques have been defined to classify species into groups, and a question is whether different techniques bring consistent classifications. In a tropical rain forest in French Guiana, five species classifications have been defined by different authors for the purpose of forest growth modelling but using different data sets and different statistical techniques. The correspondence between the five classifications was measured using four indices that are generalizations of existing indices to compare two classifications. A multiple correspondence analysis was used to identify associations between groups of different classifications. In a second step, two-table multivariate analyses were used to characterize the relationships between species classifications and eight species traits (consisting of seven populational traits and one functional trait). We evidenced a consensus on the potential size of trees: species were similarly clustered by the five classifications along this trait that is correlated to turnover rate. More surprisingly, no consensus was found for growth rate, nor wood density, traits that are correlated with light requirement.
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  • 44
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    In:  EPIC3Marine Micropaleontology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 92 - 9, pp. 16-28, ISSN: 0377-8398
    Publication Date: 2016-03-18
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2014-12-10
    Description: We investigated how physical incorporation, brine dynamics and bacterial activity regulate the distribution of inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in artificial sea ice during a 19-day experiment that included periods of both ice growth and decay. The experiment was performed using two series of mesocosms: the first consisted of seawater and the second consisted of seawater enriched with humic-rich river water. We grew ice by freezing the water at an air temperature of −14 °C for 14 days after which ice decay was induced by increasing the air temperature to −1 °C. Using the ice temperatures and bulk ice salinities, we derived the brine volume fractions, brine salinities and Rayleigh numbers. The temporal evolution of these physical parameters indicates that there was two main stages in the brine dynamics: bottom convection during ice growth, and brine stratification during ice decay. The major findings are: (1) the incorporation of dissolved compounds (nitrate, nitrite, ammonium, phosphate, silicate, and DOC) into the sea ice was not conservative (relative to salinity) during ice growth. Brine convection clearly influenced the incorporation of the dissolved compounds, since the non-conservative behavior of the dissolved compounds was particularly pronounced in the absence of brine convection. (2) Bacterial activity further regulated nutrient availability in the ice: ammonium and nitrite accumulated as a result of remineralization processes, although bacterial production was too low to induce major changes in DOC concentrations. (3) Different forms of DOC have different properties and hence incorporation efficiencies. In particular, the terrestrially-derived DOC from the river water was less efficiently incorporated into sea ice than the DOC in the seawater. Therefore the main factors regulating the distribution of the dissolved compounds within sea ice are clearly a complex interaction of brine dynamics, biological activity and in the case of dissolved organic matter, the physico-chemical properties of the dissolved constituents themselves.
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  • 46
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    In:  EPIC3Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 211, pp. 97-106, ISSN: 0034-6667
    Publication Date: 2015-03-08
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2015-04-10
    Description: Unmixing of grain-size distributionswithmultivariate statistical analysis gives indications of themain sediment transport processes and related environmental conditions in an area. We performed end-member mixing analysis (EMMA) of sedimentological data from 912 terrestrial sediment samples collected in the Donggi Cona catchment, north-eastern Tibetan Plateau. Up to the present, this is the largest sedimentological dataset on the Tibetan Plateau. EMMA resulted in the characterisation of three end-members that explain 88% of the variance within the dataset. The end-members all represent aeolian deposits. The first end-member EM 1 represents very fine dune sediments that were deflated from a former lake system. EM 2 represents medium sand deposits that were blown out from playa and alluvial fan sediments. EM 3 represents fine loess(−like) sediments mainly found at higher elevations. Different transformations, adding of a fourth end-member and adding of up to 200 loess samples do not change the composition of the end-members, demonstrating the robustness of themodel. EMMA allows the synchronous interpretation of very large datasets, resulting in a general characterisation of sediment transport in a particular area. Performing EMMA on the dataset demonstrates the importance of aeolian transport in this part of the world.
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  • 48
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    In:  EPIC3Cold Regions Science and Technology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 83-84, pp. 13-19, ISSN: 0165-232X
    Publication Date: 2020-08-03
    Description: Precise knowledge of the absolute value and frequency dependence of the dielectric permittivity of ice is the basis for interpretation of radio echo sounding data on glaciers and ice sheets. However, in the range of radio-frequencies, data from direct measurements of the permittivity are sparse, and partially lacking uncertainty estimates. Here, we present new results for artificial and natural ice samples obtained by means of frequency-dependent measurements from 10 MHz to 1.5 GHz with a coaxial transmission line cell. Measurements on eight artificial ice samples grown from ultra-pure water within the cell yield a mean value for the real part of the relative permittivity of 3.18 ± 0.01 at − 20 °C. Sole evidence for dispersion is detected for frequencies below 10 MHz, possibly attributed to the Debye-type relaxation behavior. Investigation of the crystal orientation of the artificial ice samples reveals the c-axes to be predominantly parallel to the electric field inside the cell and allows to calculate a value representative for isotropic crystal orientation of 3.16 ± 0.01. Measurements on acid-doped artificial ice show a linear dependence of the real part with acidity with a gradient of (21.1 ± 3.9) [1/M]. The real part of the relative permittivity of natural firn and ice samples from a high Alpine glacier range from 2.02 at a density of 0.515 g/cm3 to 3.08 at 0.875 g/cm3. Quasi-continuous measurements with the present setup on an alpine firn core are now possible, with resolution depending on the coaxial cell's length, for direct comparison with the established dielectric profiling method.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2014-04-17
    Description: Organic geochemical proxy data from surface sediment samples and a sediment core from Lake Donggi Cona were used to infer environmental changes on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau spanning the last 18.4 kyr. Long-chain n-alkanes dominate the aliphatic hydrocarbon fraction of the sediment extract from most surface sediment samples and the sediment core. Unsaturated mid-chain n-alkanes (nC23:1 and nC25:1) have high abundances in some samples, especially in core samples from the late glacial and early Holocene. TOC contents, organic biomarker and non-pollen-palynomorph concentrations and results from organic petrologic analysis on selected samples suggest three major episodes in the history of Lake Donggi Cona. Before ca. 12.6 cal ka BP samples contain low amounts of organic matter due to cold and arid conditions during the late glacial. After 12.6 cal ka BP, relatively high contents of TOC and concentrations of Botryococcus fossils, as well as enhanced concentrations of mid-chain n-alkanes and n-alkenes suggest a higher primary and macrophyte productivity than at present. This is supported by high contents of palynomorphs derived from higher plants and algae and was possibly triggered by a decrease of salinity and amelioration of climate during the early Holocene. Since 6.8 cal ka BP Lake Donggi Cona has been an oligotrophic freshwater lake. Proxy data suggest that variations in insolation drive ecological changes in the lake, with increased aquatic productivity during the early Holocene summer insolation maximum. Short-term drops of TOC contents or biomarker concentrations (at 9.9 cal ka BP, after 8.0 and between 3.5 and 1.7 cal ka BP) can possibly be related to relatively cool and dry episodes reported from other sites on the north-eastern Tibetan Plateau, which are hypothesized to occur in phase with Northern Hemisphere cooling events.
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  • 50
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    In:  EPIC3Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 168(1), pp. 31-40, ISSN: 0034-6667
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Previous studies based on fossil pollen data have reported significant changes in vegetation on the alpine Tibetan Plateau during the Holocene. However, since the relative proportions of fossil pollen taxa are largely influenced by individual pollen productivities and the dispersal characteristics, such inferences on vegetation have the potential to be considerably biased. We therefore examined the modern pollen–vegetation relationships for four common pollen species on the Tibetan Plateau, using Extended R-value (ERV) models. Assuming an average radius of 100 m for the sampled lakes, we estimated the relevant source area of pollen (RSAP) to be 2200 m (which represents the distance from the lake). Using Poaceae as the reference taxa (Pollen Productivity Estimate, PPE = 1), ERV Submodel 2 derived relative high PPEs for the steppe and desert taxa: 2.079 ± 0.432 for Artemisia and 5.379 ± 1.077 for Chenopodiaceae. Low PPEs were estimated for the Cyperaceae (1.036 ± 0.012), whose plants are characteristic of the alpine Kobresia meadows. Applying these PPEs to four fossil pollen sequences since the Late Glacial, the plant abundances on the central and north-eastern Tibetan Plateau were quantified using the “Regional Estimates of Vegetation Abundance from Large Sites” (REVEALS) model. The proportions of Artemisia and Chenopodiaceae were greatly reduced compared to their original pollen percentages in the reconstructed vegetation, owing to their high productivities and their dispersal characteristics, while Cyperaceae showed a relative increase in the vegetation reconstruction. The reconstructed vegetation assemblages of the four pollen sequence sites always yielded smaller compositional species turnovers than suggested by the pollen spectra, as revealed by Detrended Canonical Correspondence Analyses (DCCA) of the Holocene sections. The strength of the previously reported vegetation changes may therefore have been overestimated, which indicates the importance of taking into account pollen–vegetation relationships when discussing the potential drivers (such as climate, land use, atmospheric CO2 concentrations) and implications (such as for land surface–climate feedbacks, carbon storage, and biodiversity) of vegetation change.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 51
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Applied Geophysics, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 75(1), pp. 87-98, ISSN: 0926-9851
    Publication Date: 2017-10-20
    Description: In this paper, the noise sources of an airborne electromagnetic frequency domain instrument used to measure sea-ice thickness are studied. The antennas are mounted on the wings of an aircraft. The paper presents real data examples showing that strong noise limited the accuracy of the thickness measurement to +/-0.5 m in the best case. Even drift correction and frequency filtering did not reduce the noise to a level necessary for sea ice thickness measurements with an accuracy of 0.1 m. We show results of 3D finite element modeling of the coupling between transmitter and receiver coils and the aircraft, which indicate that wing flexure is the primary cause of the strong noise. Wing deflection angles below 5° relative to the fuselage are large enough to cause changes higher than the wanted signal from the seawater under the ice. Wing flexure noise can be divided into an inductive and geometric contribution, both of the same order. Most of the wing flexure signal appears on the inphase component only, hence the quadrature component should be taken for sea ice thickness retrievals when wing flexure is present even when the inphase produces a larger ocean signal. Results also show that pitch and roll movements of the aircraft and electromagnetic coupling between seawater and aircraft can contribute significantly to the total noise. For flight heights of 30 m over the ocean these effects can change the signal by about 10% or more. For highly quantitative measurements like sea-ice thickness all these effects must be taken into account. We conclude that a fixed wing electromagnetic instrument for the purpose of measurements in a centimeter scale must include instrumentation to measure the relative position of the antenna coils with an accuracy of 1/10 mm. Furthermore the antenna separation distance should be as large as possible in order to increase the measured ratio of secondary to primary magnetic field strength.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: Stromboli is known for its persistent degassing and rhythmic strombolian activity occasionally punctuated by paroxysmal eruptions. The basaltic pumice and scoria emitted during paroxysms and strombolian activity, respectively, differ in their textures, crystal contents and glass matrix compositions, which testify to distinct conditions of crystallization, degassing and magma ascent. We present here an extensive dataset on major elements and volatiles (CO2, H2O, S and Cl) in olivine-hosted melt inclusions and embayments from pyroclasts emplaced during explosive eruptions of variable magnitude. Magma saturation pressures were assessed from the dissolved amounts of H2O and CO2 taking into account the melt composition evolution. Both pressures and melt inclusion compositions indicate that (1) Ca-basaltic melts entrapped in high-Mg olivines (Fo89–90) generate Stromboli basalts through crystal fractionation, and (2) the Stromboli plumbing system can be imaged as a succession of magma ponding zones connected by dikes. The 7–10 km interval, where magmas are stored and differentiate, is periodically recharged by new magma batches, possibly ranging from Ca-basalts to basalts, with a CO2-rich gas phase. These deep recharges promote the formation of bubbly basalt blobs, which are able to intrude the shallow plumbing system (2–4 km), where CO2 gas fluxing enhances H2O loss, crystallization and generation of crystal-rich, dense, degassed magma. Chlorine partitioning into the H2O–CO2-bearing gas phase accounts for its efficient degassing (≥69%) under the open-system conditions of strombolian activity. Paroxysms, however, are generated through predominantly closed-system ascent of basaltic magma batches from the deep storage zone. In this situation crystallization is negligible and sulfur exsolution starts at ≤170 MPa. Chlorine remains dissolved in the melt until lower pressures, only 16% being lost upon eruption. Finally, we propose a continuum in explosive eruption energy, from strombolian activity to large paroxysmal events, ultimately controlled by variable pressurization of the deep feeding system associated with magma and gas recharges.
    Description: Published
    Description: 603-626
    Description: 2.3. TTC - Laboratori di chimica e fisica delle rocce
    Description: 3.5. Geologia e storia dei vulcani ed evoluzione dei magmi
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: Stromboli ; melt inclusions ; magmatic volatiles ; CO2 fluxing ; magma degassing ; 04. Solid Earth::04.04. Geology::04.04.05. Mineralogy and petrology ; 04. Solid Earth::04.08. Volcanology::04.08.03. Magmas
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The Eirik Drift lies on the continental slope south of Greenland, where it has been formed under the influence of Northern Component Water (NCW). NCW flow is an essential part of the global Thermohaline Circulation (THC), which is closely connected to the world's climate. Changes in pathways and intensity of NCW flow bear information about modifications of the North Atlantic THC in a changing climate. There is some disagreement about when deep-current controlled sedimentation at the Eirik Drift started. While the onset of drift building was previously dated as early Pliocene or late Miocene in age we suggest that the effect of large-scale current deposition had been initiated by at least 19-17 Ma based on the seismostratigraphic analysis of sedimentary structures identified in a set of high-resolution seismic reflection data. This assumption of an early Miocene onset of NCW flow is supported by regional evidence regarding the breaching of the Greenland-Scotland Ridge, which is documented in several erosional unconformities within the North Atlantic. After the onset of deep-current controlled sedimentation at the Eirik Drift, two major changes in the deep-current system are revealed during the Miocene: At the mid- to late Miocene boundary (12-10 Ma) and at 7.5 Ma.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Dinoflagellates of the Alexandrium ostenfeldii complex (A. ostenfeldii, A. peruvianum) are capable of producing different types of neurotoxins: paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs), spirolides and gymnodimines, depending on the strain and its geographic origin. While Atlantic and Mediterranean strains have been reported to produce spirolides, strains originating from the brackish Baltic Sea produce PSTs. Some North Sea, USA and New Zealand strains contain both toxins. Causes for such intraspecific variability in toxin production are unknown. We investigated whether salinity affects toxin production and growth rate of 5 A. ostenfeldii/peruvianum strains with brackish water (Baltic Sea) or oceanic (NE Atlantic) origin. The strains were grown until stationary phase at 7 salinities (6–35), and their growth and toxin production was monitored. Presence of saxitoxin (STX) genes (sxtA1 and sxtA4 motifs) in each strain was also analyzed. Salinity significantly affected both growth rate and toxicity of the individual strains but did not change their major toxin profile. The two Baltic Sea strains exhibited growth at salinities 6–25 and consistently produced gonyautoxin (GTX) 2, GTX3 and STX. The two North Sea strains grew at salinities 20–35 and produced mainly 20-methyl spirolide G (20mG), whereas the strain originating from the northern coast of Ireland was able to grow at salinities 15–35, only producing 13-desmethyl spirolide C (13dmC). The effects of salinity on total cellular toxin concentration and distribution of toxin analogs were strain-specific. Both saxitoxin gene motifs were present in the Baltic Sea strains, whereas the 2 North Sea strains lacked sxtA4, and the Irish strain lacked both motifs. Thus sxtA4 only seems to be specific for PST producing strains. The results show that toxin profiles of A. ostenfeldii/peruvianum strains are predetermined and the production of either spirolides or PSTs cannot be induced by salinity changes. However, changes in salinity may lead to changed growth rates, total cellular toxin concentrations as well as relative distribution of the different PST and spirolide analogs, thus affecting the actual toxicity of A. ostenfeldii/peruvianum populations.
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  • 55
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    In:  EPIC3Cold Regions Science and Technology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 103, pp. 31-40, ISSN: 0165-232X
    Publication Date: 2014-05-06
    Description: Forecasting snow avalanche danger in mountainous regions is of major importance for the protection of infrastructure in avalanche run-out zones. Inexpensive measurement devices capable of measuring snow height and layer properties in avalanche starting zones may help to improve the quality of risk assessment. We present a low-cost L-band frequency modulated continuous wave radar system (FMCW) in upward-looking configuration. To monitor the snowpack evolution, the radar system was deployed in fall and subsequently was covered by snowfalls. During two winter seasons we recorded reflections from the overlying snowpack. The influence of reflection magnitude and phase to the measured frequency spectra, as well as the influence of signal processing were investigated. We present a method to extract the phase of the reflection coefficients from the phase response of the frequency spectra and their integration into the presentation of the measurement data. The phase information significantly improved the detectability of the temporal evolution of the snow surface reflection. We developed an automated and a semi-automated snow surface tracking algorithm. Results were compared with independently measured snow height from a laser snow-depth sensor and results derived from an upward-looking impulse radar system (upGPR). The semi-automated tracking used the phase information and had an accuracy of about 6 to 8 cm for dry-snow conditions, similar to the accuracy of the upGPR, compared to measurements from the laser snow-depth sensor. The percolation of water was observable in the radargrams. Results suggest that the upward-looking FMCW system may be a valuable alternative to conventional snow-depth sensors for locations, where fixed installations above ground are not feasible.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 56
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 369-37, pp. 86-97, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Boundary scavenging, or the enhanced removal of adsorption-prone elements from the ocean in areas of high particle flux, is an often cited, though not well-quantified, concept used to understand the oceanic distribution of many trace metals. Because 230Th and 231Pa are produced uniformly from uranium decay and removed differentially by scavenging, the process of boundary scavenging can bee lucidated by a more detailed knowledge of their water column distributions. To this end, filtered seawater was collected across the gradients in particle flux which span the subarctic Pacific: in the west during the Innovative North Pacific Experiment (INOPEX) and in the east along LineP. Lateral concentration gradients of dissolved 230Th are small throughout the subarcticPacific at 12 sites of variable particle flux. This contradicts the prediction of the traditional boundary scavenging model. A compilation of water column data from throughout the North Pacific reveals much larger lateral concentration gradients for 230Th between the subarctic North Pacific and subtropical gyre, over lateral gradients in scavenging intensity similar to those found within the subarctic. This reflects a biogeochemical-province aspect to scavenging. Upper water column distributions of 231Pa and 231Pa/230Th ratio are consistent with the influence of scavenging by biogenic opal, while deep waters (〉2.5 km) reveal an additional 231Pa sink possibly related to manganese oxides produced at continental margins or ridge crests.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The continental margin of Mozambique formed during the initial dispersal of Gondwana about 180 Ma. Due to the lack of deep seismic and dense potential field data, many details of the timing and geometry of the early breakup in this region remained unknown to date. To close this gap, a research project (MoBaMaSis (“Mozambique Basin Marine Seismic Survey”) with the French research vessel R/V Marion Dufresne II was conducted in 2007. This paper presents the results of P-wave, magnetic and 2D-gravity modelling along two parallel seismic refraction profiles between 37° and 41° E, crossing the Mozambique rifted margin. The crust shows the characteristics of normal to slightly thickened oceanic crust. A lower crustal highvelocity- body with P-wave-velocities of 7.0–7.5 km/s is observed along both profiles. Its origin is discussed in the context of upper mantle convection and thermal properties. The existing magnetic anomaly identifications have been extended to older ages. We postulate that the oldest oceanic crust near the Central Mozambique continental margin has been formed around M41n (166 Ma). Closer to the coast a pronounced negative magnetic anomaly exists that we interpret to coincide with the continent–ocean-transition. This implies that the position of the continent–ocean-transition is located significantly closer to the shoreline than proposed before.
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  • 59
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    In:  EPIC3Precambrian Research, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 234, pp. 279-287, ISSN: 0301-9268
    Publication Date: 2017-10-20
    Description: The area around Syowa Station, the Japanese Antarctic wintering station in Lützow-Holm Bay, is widely considered to a junction of the continents of Africa, India, Madagascar, and Antarctica, according to a reconstruction model of Gondwana that considers the suture between East and West Gondwana. This area is therefore key investigating the formation of Gondwana. To reveal the tectonic evolution that contributed to Gondwana's formation in this area, joint Japanese-German airborne geophysical surveys were conducted around Syowa Station in January 2006 during the 47th Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition, from 67°S to 73°S latitude and from 35°E to 45°E longitude. Ice radar, magnetic, and gravity data were obtained from onshore areas. Several characteristic features that are possibly related to the tectonic evolution of Gondwana were inferred, primarily from magnetic anomalies, as well as from gravity anomalies and bedrock topography. The boundaries of the Lützow- Holm Complex, the Yamato-Belgica Complex, and the Western Rayner Complex are defined, but the inland extension of the boundary between the Lützow-Holm and the Yamato-Belgica Complexes is unknown south of 71°S. The main geological structural trends of the Lützow-Holm Complex derived from magnetic anomalies are NW-SE and are concordant with the geological results in the coastal region. However, nearly NE-SW-trending magnetic anomalies cut across the NW-SW magnetic anomaly trends, and NE-SW right lateral strike-slip faults were deduced from the magnetic and the gravity anomaly data of the Lützow-Holm Complex. The Lützow-Holm Complex was sub-divided into four blocks based on the estimated strike-slip faults. These strike-slip faults may have been generated during a younger stage of Pan-African orogeny, after the formation of NW-SE-striking geological structures. Cape Hinode, which is considered an allochthonous unit in the Lützow-Holm Complex according to its surface geology, may have originated from the Rayner Complex and been transported by right lateral strike-slip motions. These results provide new constraints on the tectonic evolution of Gondwana during the Pan-African orogeny.
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  • 60
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 448(1), pp. 162-170, ISSN: 0022-0981
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Barnacles are dominant sessile invertebrates on many rocky shores worldwide. Hence, investigating the factors that affect their recruitment is important. Through field experiments done on the Atlantic coast of Canada, we investigated interspecific and intraspecific relationships affecting intertidal barnacle recruitment. Specifically, we evaluated the effects of seaweed canopies (Ascophyllum nodosum) and adult barnacles (Semibalanus balanoides) on the density of barnacle recruits at the end of the recruitment season. The effects of three canopy treatments on barnacle recruitment and understory environmental conditions allowed us to identify positive and negative effects of canopies. At mid-intertidal elevations subjected to a moderate wave action, we found that, during high tides, the flexible algal fronds damage wire sensors established on the substrate (whiplash effect) and limit barnacle recruitment. However, at low tide, algal canopies limit water loss and temperature extremes and enhance barnacle recruitment in understory habitats. The net effects of algal canopies on barnacle recruitment, however, were neutral, as the positive and negative influences balanced out. By manipulating the abundance of adult barnacles under the seaweed canopies, we found that adult barnacles enhance barnacle recruitment, likely due to the known attraction that adults exert on larvae seeking settlement and to the absence of post-settlement events that could otherwise have blurred such effects by the adults. The presence of adult barnacles, however, did not protect developing recruits from canopy whiplash effects. By understanding the contrasting influences that intertidal algal canopies have on understory abiotic conditions and barnacle recruitment, our ability to predict net canopy effects depending on the relative degree of physiological (e.g., high vs. low intertidal zone) and physical (e.g., sheltered vs. exposed shores) stresses should increase. This study also suggests that recruitment, considered as an important external factor in environmental models of community organization, can also be affected by components of the community itself, potentially triggering local feedbacks.
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  • 61
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    In:  EPIC3Physica A-Statistical Mechanics and Its Applications, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 392, pp. 3891-3902, ISSN: 0378-4371
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: We introduce a technique of time series analysis, potential forecasting, which is based on dynamical propagation of the probability density of time series. We employ polynomial coefficients of the orthogonal approximation of the empirical probability distribution and extrapolate them in order to forecast the future probability distribution of data. The method is tested on artificial data, used for hindcasting observed climate data, and then applied to forecast Arctic sea-ice time series. The proposed methodology completes a framework for ‘potential analysis’ of tipping points which altogether serves anticipating, detecting and forecasting nonlinear changes including bifurcations using several independent techniques of time series analysis. Although being applied to climatological series in the present paper, the method is very general and can be used to forecast dynamics in time series of any origin.
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  • 62
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    In:  EPIC3Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 194, pp. 21-37, ISSN: 0034-6667
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: A total of 271 pollen records were selected from a large collection of both raw and digitized pollen spectra from eastern continental Asia (70°−135°E and 18°−55°N). Following pollen percentage recalculations, taxonomic homogenization, and age–depth model revision, the pollen spectra were interpolated at a 500-year resolution and a taxonomically harmonized and temporally standardized fossil pollen dataset established with 226 pollen taxa, covering the last 22 cal ka. Of the 271 pollen records, 85% were published since 1990, with reliable chronologies and high temporal resolutions; of these, 50% have raw data with complete pollen assemblages, ensuring the quality of this dataset. The pollen records available for each 500-year time slice are well distributed over all main vegetation types and climatic zones of the study area, making their pollen spectra suitable for paleovegetation and paleoclimate research. Such a dataset can be used as an example for the development of similar datasets for other regions of the world.
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  • 63
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    Oxford University Press
    In:  EPIC3Ocean Acidification, Oxford, Oxford University Press, pp. 291-311, ISBN: 978-0-19-959109-1
    Publication Date: 2014-04-15
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: Species of the PST producing planktonic marine dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium have been intensively scrutinised, and it is therefore surprising that new taxa can still be found. Here we report a new species, Alexandrium diversaporum nov. sp., isolated from spherical cysts found at two sites in Tasmania, Australia. This species differs in its morphology from all previously reported Alexandrium species, possessing a unique combination of morphological features: the presence of 2 size classes of thecal pores on the cell surface, a medium cell size, the size and shape of the 600 , 10 , 20000 and Sp plates, the lack of a ventral pore, a lack of anterior and posterior connecting pores, and a lack of chain formation. We determined the relationship of the two strains to other species of Alexandrium based on an alignment of concatenated SSU-ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2 and partial LSU ribosomal RNA sequences, and found A. diversaporum to be a sister group to Alexandrium leei with high support. A. leei shares several morphological features, including the relative size and shapes of the 600 , 10 , 20000 and Sp plates and the fact that some strains of A. leei have two size classes of thecal pores. We examined A. diversaporum strains for saxitoxin production and found them to be non-toxic. The species lacked sequences for the domain A4 of sxtA, as has been previously found for non-saxitoxin producing species of Alexandrium.
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  • 65
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    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 383, pp. 16-25, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
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  • 66
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Sea Research, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 85, pp. 18-28, ISSN: 1385-1101
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The trophic structure of the German Bight soft-bottom benthic community was evaluated for potential changes after cessation of bottom trawling. Species were collected with van-Veen grabs and beam trawls. Trophic position (i.e. nitrogen stable isotope ratios, δ15N) and energy flow (i.e. species metabolism approximated by body mass scaled abundance) of dominant species were compared in trawled areas and an area protected from fisheries for 14 months in order to detect trawling cessation effects by trophic characteristics. At the community level, energy flow was lower in the protected area, but we were unable to detect significant changes in trophic position. At the species level energy flow in the protected area was lower for predating/scavenging species but higher for interface feeders. Species trophic positions of small predators/scavengers were lower and of deposit feeders higher in the protected area. Major reasons for trophic changes after trawling cessation may be the absence of artificial and additional food sources from trawling likely to attract predators and scavengers, and the absence of physical sediment disturbance impacting settlement/survival of less mobile species and causing a gradual shift in food availability and quality. Our results provide evidence that species or community energy flow is a good indicator to detect trawling induced energy-flow alterations in the benthic system, and that in particular species trophic properties are suitable to capture subtle and short-term changes in the benthos following trawling cessation.
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  • 67
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    In:  EPIC3Global and Planetary Change, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 111, pp. 77-87, ISSN: 0921-8181
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Subtropical Gyres are an important constituent of the ocean–atmosphere system due to their capacity to store vast amounts of warm and saline waters. Here we decipher the sensitivity of the (sub)surface North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre with respect to orbital and millennial scale climate variability between ~ 140 and 70 ka, Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5. Using (isotope) geochemical proxy data from surface and thermocline dwelling foraminifers from Blake Ridge off the west coast of North America (ODP Site 1058) we show that the oceanographic development at subsurface (thermocline) level is substantially different from the surface ocean. Most notably, surface temperatures and salinities peak during the penultimate deglaciation (Termination II) and early MIS 5e, implying that subtropical surface ocean heat and salt accumulation might have resulted from a sluggish northward heat transport. In contrast, maximum thermocline temperatures are reached during late MIS 5e when surface temperatures are already declining. We argue that the subsurface warming originated from intensified Ekman downwelling in the Subtropical Gyre due to enhanced wind stress. During MIS 5a-d a tight interplay of the subtropical upper ocean hydrography to high latitude millennial-scale cold events can be observed. At Blake Ridge, the most pronounced of these high latitude cold events are related to surface warming and salt accumulation in the (sub)surface. Similar to Termination II, heat accumulated in the Subtropical Gyre probably due to a reduced Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. Additionally, a southward shift and intensification of the subtropical wind belts lead to a decrease of on-site precipitation and enhanced evaporation, coupled to intensified gyre circulation. Subsequently, the northward advection of this warm and saline water likely contributed to the fast resumption of the overturning circulation at the end of these high latitude cold events.
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  • 68
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Hydrology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 454-45(0), pp. 173-186, ISSN: 0022-1694
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Freshwater lenses below barrier islands are dynamic systems affected by changes in morphodynamic patterns, groundwater recharge and discharge. They are also vulnerable to pollution and overabstraction of groundwater. Basic knowledge on hydrogeological and hydrochemical processes of freshwater lenses is important to ensure a sustainable water management, especially when taking into account possible effects of climate change. This is the first study which gives a compact overview on the age distribution, recharge conditions and hydrochemical evolution of a barrier island freshwater lens in the southern North Sea (Spiekeroog Island, Eastfrisian Wadden Sea). Two ground- and surface water sampling campaigns were carried out in May and July 2011, supplemented by monthly precipitation sampling from July to October. 3H–3He ages, stable oxygen and hydrogen isotopes and major ion concentrations show that the freshwater lens reaches a depth of 44 mbsl, where an aquitard constrains further expansion in vertical direction. Groundwater ages are increasing from 4.4 years in 12 mbsl up to 〉70 years at the freshwater– saltwater interface. Stable isotope signatures reflect average local precipitation signatures. An annual recharge rate of 300–400 mm was calculated with 3H–3He data. Freshwater is primarily of Na–Ca–Mg–HCO3– and Ca–Na–HCO3–Cl type, while lowly mineralized precipitation and saltwater are of Na–Cl types. A trend towards heavier stable isotope signatures and higher electric conductivities in the shallower, younger groundwater within the freshwater lens may indicate increasing atmospheric temperatures in the last 30 years.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: 87Sr/86Sr reference maps (isoscapes) are a key tool for investigating past human and animal migrations. However, there is little understanding of which biosphere samples are best proxies for local bioavailable Sr when dealing with movements of past populations. In this study, biological and geological samples (ground vegetation, tree leaves, rock leachates, water, soil extracts, as well as modern and archeological animal teeth and snail shells) were collected in the vicinity of two early medieval cemeteries (“Thuringians”, 5–6th century AD) in central Germany, in order to characterize 87Sr/86Sr of the local biosphere. Animal tooth enamel is not appropriate in this specific context to provide a reliable 87Sr/86Sr baseline for investigating past human migration. Archeological faunal teeth data (pig, sheep/goat, and cattle) indicates a different feeding area compared to that of the human population and modern deer teeth 87Sr/86Sr suggest the influence of chemical fertilizers. Soil leachates do not yield consistent 87Sr/86Sr, and 87Sr/86Sr of snail shells are biased towards values for soil carbonates. In contrast, water and vegetation samples seem to provide the most accurate estimates of bioavailable 87Sr/86Sr to generate Sr isoscapes in the study area. Long-term environmental archives of bioavailable 87Sr/86Sr such as freshwater bivalve shells and tree cores were examined in order to track potential historic anthropogenic contamination of the water and the vegetation. The data obtained from the archeological bivalve shells show that the modern rivers yield 87Sr/86Sr ratios which are similar to those of the past. However, the tree cores registered decreasing 87Sr/86Sr values over time towards present day likely mirroring anthropogenic activities such as forest liming, coal mining and/or soil acidification. The comparison of 87Sr/86Sr of the Thuringian skeletons excavated in the same area also shows that the vegetation samples are very likely anthropogenically influenced to some extent, affecting especially 87Sr/86Sr of the shallow rooted plants.
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  • 70
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    In:  EPIC3Aquatic Botany, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, ISSN: 0304-3770
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The monitoring of emersed and submersed aquatic macrophytes using airborne hyperspectral remote sensing is an innovative method to identify and quantify algal populations at a landscape scale. In general, a high spectral resolution means that one has to accept a lower spatial resolution. This is often considered problematic for the mapping of patchily distributed intertidal macroalgal vegetation. Analysis of sub-pixel information of visually dominant algal species and vegetation units and their respective coverage is therefore of great interest. In this context, it is necessary to analyse the spectral and spatial mixture of macroalgae. This paper presents an experimental laboratory approach to analyse the spectral reflectance characteristics as well as the spectral mixture behaviour of common biomass dominant macroalgae growing at the intertidal rocky shores of Helgoland (North Sea,Germany). It became evident that unmixing of spectral signatures can hardly be performed between species of the same genus or family due to their strong spectral analogies. At a higher taxonomic level, however, red-, green- and brown algae can be distinguished as groups via derivative analysis as well as with spectral slope calculation between specific wavelengths in the 400 nm to 680 nm spectral region. Both methods described the spectral mixing behaviour with high accuracy (Pearson’s R² 〉 0.8). The newly introduced linear slope unmixing achieved best unmixing results in comparison to two state-of-the-art unmixing aproaches.
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  • 71
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 446, pp. 262-272, ISSN: 0022-0981
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: It has been postulated that mound-building callianassid shrimp and seagrass have mutually negative effects on each other. On reef flats in the Spermonde Archipelago, Indonesia, sediment mounds of callianassid shrimp are rare in wave exposed seagrass meadows, occur frequently in sheltered seagrass meadows, and reach their highest densities (4.2 mounds m− 2) in unvegetated subtidal areas. There sediment turnover is high at an estimated 3408 g DW m− 2 ∗ d− 1. Based on collected specimens and burrow casts, the most important bioturbators are Glypturus armatus within seagrass beds and Neocallichirus vigilax in unvegetated subtidal areas. Six shrimp exclusion, six control and six zero treatment plots were set up in an unvegetated subtidal N. vigilax bed. Half of the plots for each treatment were ca. 1.5 m (“shallow”) and the other half ca. 2 m or slightly more (“deep”) below spring low tide level. The survival of transplanted shoots of the six seagrass species Enhalus acoroides, Thalassia hemprichii, Cymodocea rotundata, Halodule uninervis, Syringodium isoetifolium and Halophila ovalis was monitored over 27 months. At the end, E. acoroides had survived in about half of the plots with no obvious relation to either treatment or water depth. C. rotundata and H. uninervis had successfully established themselves on the shallowest exclusion plot only, and had disappeared from all other plots. T. hemprichii and S. isoetifolium had disappeared from all plots. H. ovalis expanded rapidly in the dry seasons, but wet seasons caused a temporary decline in shoot numbers. At the end, the highest shoot numbers were counted in shallow exclusion plots, some shoots survived in deep exclusion plots and the species disappeared from all deep control and zero treatment plots. H. ovalis shoot numbers were significantly influenced by water depth (ANOVA p 〈 0.01) and, to a lesser extent, by treatment (ANOVA p 〈 0.05) but there was no interaction between the two factors. It is concluded that seagrasses are only controlled by shrimp bioturbation at the lower limit of their distribution in sheltered subtidal areas. Here they are already under considerable stress from a combination of factors such as light limitation and sedimentation. However, the distribution pattern of seagrasses vs. shrimp elsewhere on the islands suggests that seagrasses are equal competitors in sheltered intertidal areas, where they may even profit from the abundant small tidal pools between mounds created by the shrimp, and dominant competitors in exposed intertidal and subtidal areas.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: A data assimilation (DA) system has been developed for the operational circulation model of the German Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency (BSH) in order to improve the forecast of hydrographic characteristics in the North and Baltic Seas. It is based on the local Singular Evolutive Interpolated Kalman (SEIK) filter algorithm and assimilation of the NOAA AVHRR-derived sea surface temperature (SST). The DA system allows one to improve the agreement of the SST forecast with the satellite observations by 27% on average over the period of October 2007–September 2008. However, a sensitivity analysis of the forecasting system performance shows a significant impact of initial model error statistics on ice fields and bottom temperature. A reinitialisation of model error covariances in accordance with seasonality of the model error statistics was required in order to maintain the predictive skill with respect to these variables. The success of the DA system is quantified by the comparison with independent data from MARNET stations as well as sea ice concentration measurements. In addition, the Maximum Entropy approach is used to assess the system performance and the prior and posterior model error statistics.
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  • 73
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Sea Research, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 82, pp. 80-85, ISSN: 1385-1101
    Publication Date: 2018-02-15
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: This study investigated the incorporation of DOM from seawater into 〉2 day-old sea ice in tanks filled with seawater alone or amended with DOM extracted from the microalga, Chlorella vulgaris. Optical properties, including chromophoric DOM (CDOM) absorption and fluorescence, as well as concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), dissolved carbohydrates (dCHOs) and dissolved uronic acids (dUAs) were measured. Enrichment factors (EFs), calculated from salinity-normalized concentrations of DOM in bulk ice, brine and frost flowers relative to under-ice water, were generally 〉1. The enrichment factors varied for different DOM fractions: EFs were the lowest for humic-like DOM (1.0–1.39) and highest for amino acid-like DOM (1.10–3.94). Enrichment was generally highest in frost flowers with there being less enrichment in bulk ice and brine. Size exclusion chromatography indicated that there was a shift towards smaller molecules in the molecular size distribution of DOM in the samples collected from newly formed ice compared to seawater. Spectral slope coefficients did not reveal any consistent differences between seawater and ice samples. We conclude that DOM is incorporated to sea ice relatively more than inorganic solutes during initial formation of sea ice and the degree of the enrichment depends on the chemical composition of DOM
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  • 75
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 451, pp. 44-54, ISSN: 0022-0981
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: tFatty acids of microalgae have been studied as potential chemotaxonomic markers, to reveal plausi-ble lipid phycotoxins or in the context of mass production of algal biofuels. The planctonic microalgaeAlexandrium tamarense (Dinophyceae) is a common harmful algal bloom species that often proliferatesin eutrophic costal waters. Alexandrium blooms are the proximal source of toxins associated with par-alytic shellfish poisoning (PSP), a neurological affliction that has caused human illness for centuries viaconsumption of contaminated shellfish. However, data on the fatty acid composition of A. tamarense iscurrently limited. For this reason, we cultivated a well-defined strain of A. tamarense (Alex2, group I, NorthAmerican clade) in order to study both its major and minor fatty acids. The harvested microalgae weretransesterified and the fatty acid methyl esters were fractionated by means of high-speed counter-currentchromatography (HSCCC). The resulting 31 HSCCC fractions were analyzed by gas chromatography withmass spectrometry (GC/MS). Unknown substances were identified by transferring assorted HSCCC frac-tions into picolinyl or pyrrolidide derivatives. Twenty fatty acids (range 0.2–22.9% contribution to totalfatty acids) were identified in the unfractionated sample with 14:0, 16:0, 18:1n-9, 18:4n-3, 18:5n-3 and22:6n-3 representing 〉 80% of the total fatty acids. HSCCC fractionation enabled the identification of fur-ther 22 trace fatty acids contributing between ∼0.01 and 0.2% to total fatty acids. The fatty acids includedseveral branched-chain fatty acids as well as scarcely reported fatty acids like 11-methyl-18:1n-6tr or18:2�4,9. In order to enable a better comparability and repeatability of HSCCC fractionations, we calcu-lated for each HSCCC fraction the total volume of mobile phase, which had passed the HSCCC. From thisvolume we subtracted the volume of extruded stationary phase and divided the corrected volume by thetotal coil volume. These elution values were in good agreement with the partition ratios of randomlychosen fatty acid methyl esters obtained in shake flask tests, which allows the prediction of the elutionfrom the HSCCC system when the partition ratio is known.
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  • 77
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 424-42, pp. 53-58, ISSN: 0022-0981
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Calcareous foraminifera are well known for their CaCO3 shells. Yet, CaCO3 precipitation acidifies the calcifying fluid. Calcification without pH regulation would therefore rapidly create a negative feedback for CaCO3 precipitation. In unicellular organisms, like foraminifera, an effective mechanism to counteract this acidification could be the externalization of H+ from the site of calcification. In this study we showthat a benthic symbiont-free foraminifer Ammonia sp. actively decreases pH within its extracellular microenvironment only while precipitating calcite. During chamber formation events the strongest pH decreases occurred in the vicinity of a newly forming chamber (range of gradient ~100 μm) with a recorded minimum of 6.31 (b10 μm from the shell) and a maximumduration of 7 h. The acidification was actively regulated by the foraminifera and correlatedwith shell diameters, indicating that the amount of protons removed during calcification is directly related to the volume of calcite precipitated. The here presented findings imply that H+ expulsion as a result of calcification may be a wider strategy for maintaining pH homeostasis in unicellular calcifying organisms.
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  • 78
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    In:  EPIC3Tectonophysics, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 585, pp. 172-184, ISSN: 0040-1951
    Publication Date: 2017-10-17
    Description: Over the past decade, Australian, Norwegian and Russian marine surveys have collected integrated seismic, gravity and magnetic data in the southern Indian Ocean. The more than 350,000 line-km of new airborne and marine magnetic observations for the East Antarctic continental margin have been compiled into an improved definition of crustal magnetic anomaly patterns. This compilation provides important new constraints on the breakup processes and igneous activity related to the formation of the passive margin of East Antarctica. The eastern sector of the map from Bruce Rise in the west to the D'Urville Sea in the east is largely dominated by seafloor spreading magnetic anomalies. The ‘Adélie Rift Block’ of highly stretched and extensively faulted continental crust is associated with a smooth anomaly fabric. Abrupt magnetic anomaly changes along the oceanic-continent transition in the Cooperation Sea including the Enderby Basin Anomaly extend for more than 1680 km from the Kerguelen Plateau towards the Cosmonaut Sea. Three sectors of the East Antarctic continental margin exhibit pronounced disparities in the anomaly patterns that strongly suggest different modes of seafloor formation. Strong positive seafloor magnetic anomalies mark the southern margin of the Kerguelen Plateau, the Maud Rise and adjacent areas in the Riiser-Larsen Sea. The new compilation suggests that at least 300 km of the Enderby Basin and Shackleton Basin may be part of the Cretaceous Kerguelen Volcanic Province and possibly maps an abandoned ‘fossil’ spreading center in the central Enderby Basin. The majority of the published age models for the Enderby Basin and “Australian sector” of the East Antarctic margin are not in agreement with the structural grain of magnetic anomalies in the newly compiled map.
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  • 79
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    In:  EPIC3Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 187, pp. 66-94, ISSN: 0034-6667
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 80
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    In:  EPIC3Tectonophysics, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 585, pp. 161-171, ISSN: 0040-1951
    Publication Date: 2017-10-17
    Description: The geology of Dronning Maud Land (East Antarctica) is so far deduced from isolated outcrops along the coast and from a major coast parallel escarpment surmounting the thick ice sheet. Large parts of Dronning Maud Land are, however, hidden underneath thick ice. In this study we attempt to connect geological information with aeromagnetic data in order to unveil the sub-glacial geology of this part of East Antarctica. During four austral summer campaigns (2001–2005) in Dronning Maud Land, new aeromagnetic data were gathered across an area of 1.2 million square kilometers of which a portion of 65% was previously unexplored. In total 100,000 line kilometers were flown over Dronning Maud Land between 14°W/20° E and 70°S/78.5°S. A striking result was the discovery of a pronounced magnetic anomaly, named here Forster Magnetic Anomaly, east of the Jutulstraumen. It starts at approximately 72°S/007°E and strikes in southwesterly direction as far south as 75°S/1°W. The Forster Magnetic Anomaly likely forms a major tectonic block boundary and/or a suture zone within the East African–Antarctic Orogen (EAAO). The shape and distribution of other magnetic anomalies are discussed in the context of the Proterozoic to Mesozoic geological history of this part of Antarctica.
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  • 81
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    In:  EPIC3Marine Micropaleontology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 101, pp. 49-67, ISSN: 0377-8398
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Sea-surface microlayers and the corresponding underlying waters of the karstic Krka Estuary (Croatia) were studied with respect to optical and molecular properties of dissolved organic matter (DOM). Solid-phase extracted DOMwas separated by reversed-phase chromatography and analyzedwith ultra-high resolution Fourier transformion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICRMS). The number and summedmagnitudes of FT-ICR MS peaks, enriched in themicrolayer, increased with increasing salinity along the estuary. The molecular hydrogen to carbon ratio (as ameasure of polarity) of enriched compounds was higher for the low salinity samples than for a high salinity marine station, which we propose is a consequence of a salt-mediated separation mechanism. Absorption and fluorescence of all samples decreased along the estuarywith themicrolayer samples showing higher absorption than the underlying water. Chromatographic and FT-ICR MS data revealed a distinct shift towards a smaller molecular size in the microlayer compared to the underlyingwater. The redistribution of dissolved organic carbonwithin chromatographic fractions and the decrease inmolecular sizewas interpreted to result from photo-degradation and/or microbial reprocessing. Collision induced dissociation of selected FT-ICR MS mass peaks revealed the presence of sulfur containing anthropogenic surfactants enriched in themicrolayer. Molecular level investigation of estuarine surfacemicrolayers will help to better understand the highly dynamic character of these systems, the accumulation of natural organicmatter and anthropogenic pollutants and the role of surface microlayers for the sea-air energy exchange.
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  • 83
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    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 351-35, pp. 123-133, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    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 150m and 1550m 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 theBølling/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 fresh water 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/meltwaterpulse in the YermakPlateau/ 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 theYoungerDryas 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.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Detection of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins in scallops from the west coast of Greenland exceeding the 800 μg toxin/kg shellfish limit led to an investigation with the aim of finding the responsible organism(s). Three strains of Alexandrium Halim were established from single cell isolations. Morphological identification of the strains and determination of their position within the genus by LSU rDNA sequences was carried out. Light microscopy revealed that the three strains was of the Alexandrium tamarense morphotype, and bayesian and neighbor-joining analyses of the LSU rDNA sequences placed them within Group I of the A. tamarense species complex. The toxicity and toxin profiles of the strains were measured by liquid chromatography fluorescence detection (LC-FD) and their identity was confirmed by liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). The three strains all turned out to be toxic and all produced large proportions (>60% total mol) of gonyautoxins 1 and 4 (GTX1/GTX4). This is the first record of saxitoxin producers from western Greenland. The toxin profiles were atypical for A. tamarense in their absence of N-sulfocarbanoyl C1/C2 or B1/B2 toxins. Rather the high molar percentage of GTX1/GTX4, the lesser amounts of only carbamoyl toxins and the absence of decarbamoyl derivatives are more characteristic features of A. minutum strains. This may indicate that the genetically determined toxin profiles in Alexandrium species are more complex than previously appreciated.
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  • 85
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Marine Systems, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 105-08, pp. 152-162, ISSN: 0924-7963
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The operational ocean prediction model for the North and Baltic Seas of the German Maritime and Hydrographic Agency (BSH)is augmented with a multivariate data assimilation (DA) system. We report on the implementation and performance of the scheme which is based on ensemble forecasting.Here we apply the localised Singular Evolutive Interpolated Kalman (SEIK)filter for assimilating the NOAA AVHRR-derived sea surface temperature (SST)data. Results are presented for two periods: October 2007 is used for calibration and March 2011 for the analysis of the performance in a pre-operational phase. The major forecast improvement is found to be a reduction in the local temperature bias.As compared with the regular BSH forecast without assimilation, the root mean square difference between the predicted SST and satellite observations is reduced on average from 0.87 degC to 0.53 degC for March 2011. The quality of the predicted fields that were not assimilated (velocities, sea level and salinity) is preserved as is confirmed by independent data. The results have required adjustment of the conditional data error statistics. The experiments conducted with different timing and frequency of data assimilation and variable forecasting periods show that the DA system corrects systematic model uncertainties and , due to memory to the corrections, improves prediction over periods of up to 5 days. The results also explicitly illustrate a lower quality of the AVHRR daytime product and reveal low informative influence of the data on the forecasting system when daytime SSYs are assimilated additionally to midnight observations.
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  • 86
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, ISSN: 0031-0182
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
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  • 87
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    In:  EPIC3Aquaculture, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 400-40, pp. 53-60, ISSN: 0044-8486
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
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  • 88
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Marine Systems, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 105-10, pp. 20-29, ISSN: 0924-7963
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The continuous release of organic C-rich material by reef-building corals can contribute substantially to biogeochemical processes and concomitant rapid nutrient recycling in coral reef ecosystems. However, our current understanding of these processes is limited to platform reefs exhibiting a high degree of ecosystem closure compared to the globally most common fringing reef type. This study carried out in the northern Gulf of Aqaba (Red Sea) presents the first quantitative budget for coral-derived organic carbon (COC) in a fringing reef and highlights the importance of local hydrodynamics. Diel reef-wide COC release amounted to 1.1±0.2kmol total organic carbon (TOC) representing 1–3% of gross benthic primary production. Most COC (73%) was released as particulate organic C (POC), the bulk of which (34–63%) rapidly settled as mucus string aggregates accounting for approximately 28% of total POC sedimentation. Sedimentation ofmucus strings, but also dilution of suspended and dissolved COC in reef waters retained 82% of diel COC release in the fringing reef, providing a potentially important organic source for a COC-based foodweb. Pelagic COC degradation represented 0.1–1.6% of pelagicmicrobial respiration recycling 32% of diel retained COC. Benthic COC degradation contributed substantially (29–47%) to reef-wide microbial respiration in reef sands, including 20–38% by mucus string POC, and consumed approximately 52% of all retained COC. These findings point out the importance of COC as a C carrier for different reef types. COC may further represent a source of organic carbon for faunal communities colonising reef framework cavities complementing the efficient retention and recycling of COC within fringing reef environments.
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  • 89
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    In:  EPIC3Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 365-36, pp. 192-208, ISSN: 0031-0182
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Changes in intensity and composition of bioturbation and trace fossils in deep-sea settings are directly related to changes in environmental parameters such as food availability, bottom water oxygenation, or substrate consistency. Because trace fossils are practically always preserved in situ, and are often present in environments where other environmental indicators are scarce or may have been compromised or removed by diagenetic processes, the trace fossils provide an important source of paleoenvironmental information in regions such as the deep Arctic Ocean. Detailed analysis of X-ray radiographs from 12 piston and gravity cores from a transect spanning from the Makarov Basin to the Yermak Plateau via the Lomonosov Ridge, the Morris Jesup Rise, and the Gakkel Ridge reveal both spatial and temporal variations in an ichnofauna consisting of Chondrites, Nereites, Phycosiphon, Planolites, Scolicia, Trichichnus, Zoophycos, as well as deformational biogenic structures. The spatial variability in abundance and diversity is in close correspondence to observed patterns in the distribution of modern benthos, suggesting that food availability and food flux to the sea floor are the most important parameters controlling variations in bioturbation in the Arctic Ocean. The most diverse ichnofaunas were observed at sites on the central Lomonosov Ridge that today have partially ice free conditions and relatively high summer productivity. In contrast, the most sparse ichnofauna was observed in the ice-infested region on the Lomonosov Ridge north of Greenland. Since primary productivity, and therefore also the food flux at a certain location, is ultimately controlled by the geographical position in relation to ice margin and the continental shelves, temporal variations in abundance and diversity of trace fossils have the potential to reveal changes in food flux, and consequently sea ice conditions on glacial–interglacial time scales. Down core analysis reveal clearly increased abundance and diversity during interglacial/ interstadial intervals that were identified through strongly enhanced Mn levels and the presence of microand nannofossils. Warm stages are characterized by larger trace fossils such as Scolicia, Planolites or Nereites, while cold stages typically display an ichnofauna dominated by small deep penetrating trace fossils such as Chondrites or Trichichnus. The presence of biogenic structures in glacial intervals clearly show that the Arctic deep waters must have remained fairly well ventilated also during glacials, thereby lending support to the hypothesis that the conspicuous brown layers rich in Mn which are found ubiquitously over the Arctic basins are related to input from rivers and coastal erosion during sea level high-stands rather than redox processes in the water column and on the sea floor. However, the X-ray radiograph study also revealed the presence of apparently post-sedimentary, diagenetically formed Mn-layers which are not directly related to Mn input from rivers and shelves. These observations thus bolster the hypothesis that the bioturbated, brownish Mn-rich layers can be used for stratigraphic correlation over large distances in the Arctic Ocean, but only if post sedimentary diagenetic layers can be identified and accounted for in the Mn-cycle stratigraphy.
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  • 90
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    In:  EPIC3Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 190, pp. 48-65, ISSN: 0034-6667
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: We re-examined sixteen pollen records from non-volcanic areas in the Kamchatka Peninsula to reconstruct vegetation and climate changes during the Holocene. Pollen recordswere first summarized and evaluated for each of three main physiographic regions: (1)Western Lowland(WL), open to the Sea of Okhotsk (6 records); (2) Central Kamchatka Depression (CKD), bordered by mountains (4 records); and (3) Eastern Coast (EC), facing the Pacific Ocean (6 records), and then compared over the peninsula. The synthesized data suggest that the climate over Kamchatka was generally wet and mild before ca. 5.8 ka (1 ka=1000 cal. yrs BP) due to strong and prolonged maritime influence. The first forest maximumin the CKD started at ca. 8.9, indicating awarmer climate; however, forest spread along the both coasts was delayed until ca. 7 ka, suggesting a possible modulation of greater effective moisture on the coastal sites. Thewarmest period at ca. 7–5.8 ka is defined by the evidence of maximal forest extension overall the peninsula. During that time, birch (Betula) prevailed over alder (Alnus) in forest everywhere except in the EC. Since ca. 5.8 ka, divergent vegetation patterns became evident in northern vs. southern and coastal vs. interior sites that correspondwith a shift fromwarmer/maritime climate to cooler/continental climate. Also, greater climate variability accompanied the Neoglacial cooling since 5.8 ka. This climate cooling, indicated by drastic shrub expansion, advanced southward from the northern coasts (ca. 5.8 ka) to the central interior and coastal areas (ca. 5 ka) and then to the south (ca. 3.5 ka). Subsequent warming, suggested by the evidence of a second forest maximum, advanced westward from the EC (ca. 5.2 ka) to the CKD (ca. 3.2 ka) and then to the WL (ca. 1.9 ka). An advance of larch (Larix) in the CKD since ca. 3.2 ka points to increased climate continentality and larger seasonal variations. In contrast, alder forest spread after ca. 1.7 ka, reported only from the southern EC and CKD sites, indicates a mild, maritime-like climate that also agrees with the first apparent advance of spruce (Picea) in the interior. The latest cooling event, indicated by another shrub expansion, shows eastward trend: it occurred much earlier at the WL (ca. 2.4–1.6 ka) then at the EC (ca. 900–350 cal. yrs BP), and was less evident in the CKD. Instead, therewas a remarkable coniferous expansion during the last millennium when both larch and spruce invaded and replaced deciduous forests so that by ca. 450–320 cal. yrs BP, an extensive coniferous forest (“Coniferous Island”) appeared in the interior of Kamchatka. Since ca. 300 cal. yrs BP, spruce expanded most rapidly what broadly coincides with the beginning of the Little Ice Age.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Although commonly reported in marine and freshwater environments, little is known about the biological sources of long chain alkyl 1,13- and 1,15-diols, and factors controlling their distributions. Here we analyzed the occurrence and distribution of these lipids in a comprehensive set of marine surface sediments and compare their distributions with environmental conditions like sea surface temperature (SST), salinity and nutrient concentrations. Fractional abundances of the C28 1,13-, C30 1,13- and C30 1,15-diols show a strong correlation with SST and based on these results, we propose the Long chain Diol Index (LDI), which expresses the C30 1,15-diol abundance relative to those of C28 1,13-, C30 1,13- and C30 1,15-diols. The LDI shows a strong linear correlation with SST (LDI = 0.033 � SST + 0.095; R2 = 0.969, n = 162) over a temperature range of �3 to 27 �C. Long chain diol distributions in sediments from the South Atlantic close to the Congo River outflow (West Africa) provided a 43 kyr LDI SST record. This record reflects several known climatic events and shows similarities with an alkenone- derived SST record obtained using the same suite of sediments, both in trend and in terms of absolute SST. This confirms the potential of the LDI as a proxy for palaeo-SST reconstruction.
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: Studies of the sedimentary architecture and characteristics of the Antarctic continental margin provide clues about past ice sheet advance-retreat cycles and help improve constraints for paleo-ice dynamic models since early glacial periods. A first seismostratigraphic analysis of the Amundsen Sea Embayment shelf and slope of West Antarctica reveals insights into the structural architecture of the continental margin and shows stages of sediment deposition, erosion and transport reflecting the history from pre-glacial times to early glaciation and to the late Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles. The shelf geometry consists of a large pre- and syn-rift basin in the middle shelf region between basement cropping out on the inner shelf and buried basement ridge and highs on the outer shelf. A subordinate basin within the large basin on the mid-shelf may be associated with motion along an early West Antarctic Rift System branch. At least 4 km of pre-glacial strata have been eroded from the present inner shelf and coastal hinterland by glacial processes. Six major sedimentary units (ASS-1 to ASS-6) separated by five major erosional unconformities (ASS-u1 to ASS-u5) are distinguished from bottom to top. Unconformity ASS-u4 results from a major truncational event by glacial advance to the middle and outer shelf, which was followed by several episodes of glacial advance and retreat as observed from smaller-scale truncational unconformities within the units above ASS-u4. Some of the eroded sediments were deposited as a progradional wedge that extends the outer shelf by 25 to 65 km oceanward of the pre-glacial shelf-break. We compare the observed seismic characteristics with those of other Antarctic shelf sequences and assign an Early Cretaceous age to bottom sedimentary unit ASS-1, a Late Cretaceous to Oligocene age to unit ASS-2, an Early to Mid-Miocene age to unit ASS-3, a Mid-Miocene age to unit ASS-4, a Late Miocene to Early Pliocene age to unit ASS-5, and a Pliocene to Pleistocene age to the top unit ASS-6. Buried grounding zone wedges in the upper part of unit ASS-5 on the outer shelf suggest pronounced warming phases and ice sheet retreats during the early Pliocene as observed for the Ross Sea shelf and predicted by paleo-ice sheet models. Our data also reveal that on the middle and outer shelf the flow-path of the Pine Island-Thwaites paleo-ice stream system has remained stationary in the central Pine Island Trough since the earliest glacial advances, which is different from the Ross Sea shelf where glacial troughs shifted more dynamically. This study and its stratigraphic constraints will serve as a basis for future drilling operations required for an improved understanding of processes and mechanisms leading to change in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, such as the contemporary thinning and grounding line retreat in the Amundsen Sea drainage sector.
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  • 93
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    In:  EPIC3Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 402, pp. 81-103, ISSN: 0031-0182
    Publication Date: 2014-05-08
    Description: In order to map the modern distribution of diatoms and to establish a reliable reference data set for paleoenvironmental reconstruction in the northern North Pacific, a new data set including the relative abundance of diatom species preserved in a total of 422 surface sediments was generated, which covers a broad range of environmental variables characteristic of the subarctic North Pacific, the Sea of Okhotsk and the Bering Sea between 30° and 70°N. The biogeographic distribution patterns as well as the preferences in sea surface temperature of 38 diatom species and species groups are documented. A Q-mode factor analysis yields a three-factor model representing assemblages associated with the Arctic, Subarctic and Subtropical water mass, indicating a close relationship between the diatom composition and the sea surface temperatures. The relative abundance pattern of 38 diatom species and species groups was statistically compared with nine environmental variables, i.e. the summer sea surface temperature and salinity, annual surface nutrient concentration (nitrate, phosphate, silicate), summer and winter mixed layer depth and summer and winter sea ice concentrations. Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA) and other analyses indicate 32 species and species groups have strong correspondence with the pattern of summer sea surface temperature. In addition, the total diatom flux data compiled from ten sediment traps reveal that the seasonal signals preserved in the surface sediments are mostly from spring through autumn. This close relationship between diatom composition and the summer sea surface temperature will be useful in deriving a transfer function in the subarctic North Pacific for the quantitative paleoceanographic and paleoenvironmental studies. The relative abundance of the sea ice indicator diatoms Fragilariopsis cylindrus and F. oceanica of 〉 20% in the diatom composition is used to represent the winter sea ice edge in the Bering Sea. The northern boundary of the distribution of F. doliolus in the open ocean is suggested to be an indicator of the Subarctic Front, while the abundance of Chaetoceros resting spores may indicate iron input from nearby continents and shelves and induced productivity events in the study area.
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  • 94
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    In:  EPIC3Global and Planetary Change, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 118, pp. 25-41, ISSN: 0921-8181
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The Weddell Sea basin is of particular significance for understanding climate processes, including the generation of ocean water masses and their influence on ocean circulation as well as the dynamics of the Antarctic ice sheets. The sedimentary record, preserved below the basin floor, serves as an archive of the pre-glacial to glacial development of these processes, which were accompanied by tectonic processes in its early glacial phase. Three multichannel seismic reflection transects, in total nearly 5000 km long, are used to interpret horizons and define a seismostratigraphic model for the basin. We expand this initial stratigraphic model to the greater Weddell Sea region through a network of more than 200 additional seismic lines. Information from few boreholes is used to constrain sediment ages in this stratigraphy, supported by magnetic anomalies indicating decreasing oceanic basement ages from southeast to northwest. Using these constraints, we calculate grids to depict the depths, thicknesses and sedimentation rates of pre-glacial (145–34 Ma), transitional (34–15 Ma) and full-glacial (15 Ma to present) units. These grids allow us to compare the sedimentary regimes of the pre-glacially dominated and glacially dominated stages of Weddell Sea history. The pre-glacial deposition with thicknesses of up to 5 km was controlled by the tectonic evolution and sea-floor spreading history interacting with terrigenous sediment supply. The transitional unit shows a relatively high sedimentation rate and has thicknesses of up to 3 km, which may attribute to an early formation of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, which was partly advanced to the coast or even inner shelf. The main deposition center of the full-glacial unit lies in front of the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf and has sedimentation rates of up to 140–200 m/Myr, which infers that ice sheets grounded on the middle to the outer shelf and that bottom-water currents strongly impacted the sedimentation. We further calculate paleobathymetric grids at 15 Ma, 34 Ma, and 120 Ma by using a backstripping technique. Our results provide constraints for an improved understanding of the paleo-ice sheet dynamics and paleoclimate conditions of the Weddell Sea region.
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  • 95
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 458, pp. 57-63, ISSN: 0022-0981
    Publication Date: 2014-05-30
    Description: The Western Antarctic Peninsula is strongly affected by stratospheric ozone depletion, leading to higher UVB radiation (UVBR) on the Earth surface. It is furthermore experiencing the fastest rates of global warming worldwide, resulting in an increased sediment run-off from glacial melting, altering the underwater light climate. Very little is known of how Antarctic organisms can cope with this rapidly changing environment. Seaweeds play an essential role within the Antarctic coastal ecosystems, building highly complex and productive underwater communities. The unicellular spores are the most sensitive stage in their life-cycle, forming the bottle-neck for successful recruitment. To supplement the very rare field experiments on seaweed propagules, three ecologically important Antarctic seaweeds (Adenocystis utricularis, Himantothallus grandifolius, Iridaea cordata) were investigated. The germination of spores after exposure in the field to different water depths to three light treatments (PAR; PAR + UVA; PAR + UVA + UVB) was recorded. In parallel, spores were exposed to the same treatments under artificial radiation in the laboratory for different periods. Germination of the intertidal species A. utricularis was not affected by the treatments. In spores of I. cordata and H. grandifolius depth was a major factor for successful germination. High PAR fluxes at 1 and 2 m water depth inhibited germination significantly. UVR further lowered germination in H. grandifolius while in I. cordata UVBR had a negative impact only in the laboratory experiment. The results show that already the unicellular life stage expresses strong species-specific susceptibility to changes in the radiation climate. Not only UVR but also the high PAR fluxes in the field are important factors in determining the upper distribution limit of Antarctic seaweeds and laboratory experiments show stronger UVB effects as studies under natural radiation.
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2017-10-17
    Description: The Sør Rondane Mountains (SRM) in eastern Dronning Maud Land (DML) are located in an area, where two apparent Pan-African (650–520 Ma) orogenic mobile belts appear to intersect, the East African-Antarctic Orogen and the Kuunga Orogen. Hence, a better understanding of the tectonic structure of the Sør Rondane region is an important key for unravelling the complex geodynamic evolution of the eastern DML and adjacent regions of East Antarctica during the Late Neoproterozoic/Early Palaeozoic amalgamation of Gondwana. The SRM were recently (2011–2012) aerogeophysically investigated with a 5 km flight line spacing, covering a total area of ∼140,000 km2. The aeromagnetic data are correlated with ground-based magnetic susceptibility measurements and geological field data and allow to project tectonic terranes and individual structures into ice-covered areas. Magnetic anomalies and basement foliation trends are collinear in areas dominated by simple shear deformation, whereas an area of large-scale refolding correlates with a subdued small-scale broken magnetic anomaly pattern. The latter area can be regarded as a distinct tectonic domain, the central Sør Rondane corridor. It magnetically separates the SRM into an eastern, a central, and a western portion. This subdivision is presumably related to late Pan-African extensional tectonics and suggests that such a tectonic regime may play a larger role than previously assumed. Voluminous late Pan-African granitoids, which are mainly undeformed, correlate with positive magnetic anomalies between +30 and +80 nT, while a strong magnetic high (+680 nT) near the granitic intrusion at Dufekfjellet is caused by a highly magnetised enigmatic body. The recently discovered prominent magnetic anomaly province of southeastern DML continues into the southern part of the Sør Rondane region, where only a few outcrops are exposed. Findings at these westernmost nunataks of the SRM indicate that the subdued magnetic anomaly pattern of this southeastern DML province is most likely caused by the predominance of metasedimentary rocks of yet unknown age.
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  • 97
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    In:  EPIC3Global and Planetary Change, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 120, pp. 92-104, ISSN: 0921-8181
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The distribution and internal architecture of seismostratigraphic sequences observed on the Antarctic continental slope and rise are results of sediment transport and deposition by bottom currents and ice sheets. Analysis of seismic reflection data allows to reconstruct sediment input and sediment transport patterns and to infer past changes in climate and oceanography. We observe four seismostratigraphic units which show distinct differences in location and shape of their depocentres and which accumulated at variable sedimentation rates. We used an age-depth model based on DSDP Leg 35 Site 324 for the Plio/Pleistocene and a correlation with seismic reflection characteristics from the Ross and Bellingshausen Seas, which unfortunately has large uncertainties. For the period before 21 Ma, we interpret low energy input of detritus via a palaeo-delta originating in an area of the Amundsen Sea shelf, where a palaeo-ice stream trough (Pine Island Trough East, PITE) is located today, and deposition of this material on the continental rise under sea ice coverage. For the period 21-14.1 Ma we postulate glacial erosion for the hinterland of this part of West Antarctica, which resulted in a larger depocentre and an increase in mass transport deposits. Warming during the Mid Miocene Climatic Optimum resulted in a polythermal ice sheet and led to a higher sediment supply along a broad front but with a focus via two palaeo-ice stream troughs, PITE and Abbot Trough (AT). Most of the glaciogenic debris was transported onto the eastern Amundsen Sea rise where it was shaped into levee-drifts by a re-circulating bottom current. A reduced sediment accumulation in the deep-sea subsequent to the onset of climatic cooling after 14 Ma indicates a reduced sediment supply probably in response to a colder and drier ice sheet. A dynamic ice sheet since 4 Ma delivered material offshore mainly via AT and Pine Island Trough West (PITW). Interaction of this glaciogenic detritus with a west-setting bottom current resulted in the continued formation of levee-drifts in the eastern and central Amundsen Sea
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  • 98
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    In:  EPIC3Marine Micropaleontology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 109, pp. 1-20, ISSN: 0377-8398
    Publication Date: 2014-07-24
    Description: This paper adds to a series of studies addressing the distribution of living coccolithophores in the Southern Ocean(SO). We investigated plankton samples collected during RV Polarstern cruise ANT-XXVI/2 (from 27th November 2009 to 27th January 2010) along a broad E–W transect in the Pacific sector of the SO during austral summer. One hundred and fifty samples fromtwenty-nine stationswere collected fromthe upper 150mof the water column. Both coccoliths and coccospheres per samplewere counted separately using a scanning electronmicroscope (SEM). The highest abundances of 640 · 103 coccospheres/l were reached close to the Subtropical Front (STF) and increases in the numbers of coccospheres and coccoliths were found both at the Subantarctic Front (SAF) and the Polar Front (PF). However, the numbers decrease southward until almost a monospecific assemblage and sporadic record of Emiliania huxleyi (types B/C and C) south of the PF. Thirty-three coccolithophore species, including sixteen species found as isolated coccoliths, were identified of which E. huxleyi is clearly the most dominant coccolithophore taxon in the studied samples. Two main coccolithophore assemblages were established coincident with areas bounded by the oceanographic fronts: the Polar Front Zone (PFZ) and Subantarctic Zone (SAZ). In the upper photic zone of the SAZ, Acanthoica quattrospina, Calcidiscus leptoporus, Coccolithus pelagicus (sensu lato) HOL, E. huxleyi type A, Ophiaster spp. and Syracosphaera spp. among others were found. The PFZ was characterized by a reduced number of species, i.e., Calciopappus caudatus, E. huxleyi types B, B/C and C, as well as Pappomonas spp. and Papposphaera spp. The sea surface temperature measured in situ was the most prominent factor influencing coccolithophore diversity, distribution and assemblage compositions in the Pacific sector of the SO during austral summer. Coccolithophore biogeography in the study area showed marked differences with the northern high latitudes; the reduced presence of the cold water species Coccolithus pelagicus, abundant in the (sub) Arctic region, and the dominance of E. huxleyi type B/C and C in the SO contrasts with the dominance of E. huxleyi types A and B in the North Atlantic. Findings such as these cover existing gaps in an unexplored area of the SO as well as supporting previous research performed in neighboring areas. The current coccolithophore numbers and assemblage distribution in relation to the frontal dynamics of the SO provide valuable information for potential future paleoceanographic reconstructions.
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  • 99
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    In:  EPIC3Earth and Planetary Science Letters, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 391, pp. 307-318, ISSN: 0012-821X
    Publication Date: 2014-07-28
    Description: The ratio of unsupported protactinium-231 to thorium-230 in marine sediments, (Pa/Th)xs, is potentially sensitive to several processes of oceanographic and climatological interest: deep ocean circulation, marine biological productivity (as it relates to total particle flux) and particle composition (specifically, biogenic opal and authigenic Mn). In order to attribute variations in (Pa/Th)xs observed in sediment records to changes in specific processes through time, a better understanding of the chemical cycling of these elements in the modern ocean is necessary. To this end, a survey was undertaken of (Pa/Th)xs in surface sediments from the subarctic Pacific (SO202-INOPEX expedition) in combination with a Pacific-wide compilation of published data. Throughout the Pacific, (Pa/Th)xs is robustly correlated with the opal content of sediments. In the North and equatorial Pacific, simultaneous positive correlations with productivity indicators suggest that boundary scavenging and opal scavenging combine to enhance the removal of Pa in the eastern equatorial Pacific and subarctic Pacific. Deep ocean water mass ageing (〉3.5 km〉3.5 km) associated with the Pacific overturning appears to play a secondary role in determining the basin scale distribution of (Pa/Th)xs. A basin-wide extrapolation of Pa removal is performed which suggests that the Pacific Pa budget is nearly in balance. We hypothesize that through time (Pa/Th)xs distributions in the Pacific could define the evolving boundaries of contrasting biogeographic provinces in the North Pacific, while the influence of hydrothermal scavenging of Pa potentially confounds this approach in the South Pacific.
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  • 100
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 452, pp. 31-39, ISSN: 0022-0981
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
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