ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

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

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • 2020-2022  (1,241,797)
  • 2010-2014  (3,085,408)
  • 1990-1994  (1,577,774)
Collection
Years
Year
  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Marsaglia, Kathleen M; Ingersoll, Raymond V (1992): Compositional trends in arc-related, deep-marine sand and sandstone: A reassessment of magmatic-arc provenance. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 104(12), 1637-1649, https://doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1992)104%3C1637:CTIARD%3E2.3.CO;2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Detrital modes for 524 deep-marine sand and sandstone samples recovered on circum-Pacific, Caribbean, and Mediterranean legs of the Deep Sea Drilling Project and the Ocean Drilling Program form the basis for an actualistic model for arc-related provenance. This model refines the Dickinson and Suczek (1979) and Dickinson and others (1983) models and can be used to interpret the provenance/tectonic history of ancient arc-related sedimentary sequences. Four provenance groups are defined using QFL, QmKP, LmLvLs, and LvfLvmiLvl ternary plots of site means: (1) intraoceanic arc and remnant arc, (2) continental arc, (3) triple junction, and (4) strike-slip-continental arc. Intraoceanic- and remnant-arc sands are poor in quartz (mean QFL%Q 〈 5) and rich in lithics (QFL%L 〉 75); they are predominantly composed of plagioclase feldspar and volcanic lithic fragments. Continental-arc sand can be more quartzofeldspathic than the intraoceanic- and remnant-arc sand (mean QFL%Q values as much as 10, mean QFL%F values as much as 65, and mean QmKP%Qm as much as 20) and has more variable lithic populations, with minor metamorphic and sedimentary components. The triple-junction and strike-slip-continental groups compositionally overlap; both are more quartzofeldspathic than the other groups and show highly variable lithic proportions, but the strike-slip-continental group is more quartzose. Modal compositions of the triple junction group roughly correlate with the QFL transitional-arc field of Dickinson and others (1983), whereas the strike-slip-continental group approximately correlates with their dissected-arc field.
    Keywords: 110-671; 110-671B; 110-672; 110-672A; 110-674; 110-674A; 13-127; 13-128; 15-148; 15-154; 18-173; 18-174; 18-177; 18-178; 18-179; 18-180; 18-181; 18-182; 19-184; 19-185; 19-186; 19-188; 19-190; 19-191; 21-203; 30-286; 31-290; 31-293; 31-296; 31-297; 31-298; 31-299; 5-32; 5-34; 56-434; 56-435; 57-438; 57-439; 57-440; 58-442; 58-442A; 58-444; 58-444A; 58-445; 58-446; 59-447; 59-448; 59-450; 59-451; 60-453; 60-455; 60-457; 60-458; 60-459; 66-486; 66-488; 66-489; 66-489A; 66-490; 66-491; 66-492; 66-493; 67-494; 67-497; 67-498; 67-498A; 67-499; 67-500; 84-565; 84-566; 84-566C; 84-567; 84-568; 84-569; 84-570; 87-582; 87-583; 87-584; 90-593; Caribbean Sea/RIDGE; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Glomar Challenger; Joides Resolution; Leg110; Leg13; Leg15; Leg18; Leg19; Leg21; Leg30; Leg31; Leg5; Leg56; Leg57; Leg58; Leg59; Leg60; Leg66; Leg67; Leg84; Leg87; Leg90; Mediterranean Sea/TRENCH; North Pacific; North Pacific/BASIN; North Pacific/Bering Strait/BASIN; North Pacific/Bering Strait/PLATEAU; North Pacific/Bering Strait/RIDGE; North Pacific/Bering Strait/SPUR; North Pacific/CREST; North Pacific/FAN; North Pacific/Japan Sea; North Pacific/Philippine Sea/BASIN; North Pacific/Philippine Sea/RIDGE; North Pacific/Philippine Sea/TROUGH; North Pacific/PLAIN; North Pacific/RIDGE; North Pacific/SEDIMENT POND; North Pacific/SLOPE; North Pacific/TRANSITION ZONE; North Pacific/TRENCH; South Atlantic Ocean; South Pacific; South Pacific/BASIN; South Pacific/Tasman Sea/PLATEAU
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 39 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Eisenhauer, Anton; Spielhagen, Robert F; Frank, Martin; Hentzschel, Günter; Mangini, Augusto; Kubik, Peter W; Dittrich-Hannen, Beate; Billen, T (1994): 10Be records of sediment cores from high northern latitudes: Implications for environmental and climatic changes. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 124(1-4), 171-184, https://doi.org/10.1016/0012-821X(94)00069-7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The 10Be records of four sediment cores forming a transect from the Norwegian Sea at 70°N (core 23059) via the Fram Strait (core 23235) to the Arctic Ocean at 86°N (cores 1533 and 1524) were measured at a high depth resolution. Although the material in all the cores was controlled by different sedimentological regimes, the 10Be records of these cores were superimposed by glacial/interglacial changes in the sedimentary environment. Core sections with high 10Be concentrations ( 〉1 * 10**9 at/g) are related to interglacial stages and core sections with low10Be concentrations ( 〈0.5 * 10**9 at/g) are related to glacial stages. Climatic transitions (e.g., Termination II, 5/6) are marked by drastic changes in the 10Be concentrations of up to one order of magnitude. The average 10Be concentrations for each climatic stage show an inverse relationship to their corresponding sedimentation rates, indicating that the 10Be records are the result of dilution with more or less terrigenous ice-rafted material. However, there are strong changes in the 10Be fluxes (e.g., Termination II) into the sediments which may also account for the observed oscillations. Most likely, both processes affected the 10Be records equally, amplifying the contrast between lower (glacials) and higher (interglacials) 10Be concentrations. The sharp contrast of high and low 10Be concentrations at climatic stage boundaries are an independent proxy for climatic and sedimentary change in the Nordic Seas and can be applied for stratigraphic dating (10Be stratigraphy) of sediment cores from the northern North Atlantic and the Arctic Ocean.
    Keywords: Antarctic Ocean; ARK-II/4; ARK-IV/3; AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; Giant box corer; GIK21524-2 PS11/364-2; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK23059-1; GIK23235-1 PS05/422; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; M2/2; Meteor (1986); Norwegian Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS05; PS11; PS1235-1; PS1524-2; PS1533-3; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; SL; Svalbard
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Gutt, Julian; Barratt, Iain; Domack, Eugene W; d'Udekem d'Acoz, Cédric; Dimmler, Werner; Grémare, Antoine; Heilmayer, Olaf; Isla, Enrique; Janussen, Dorte; Jorgensen, Elaina; Kock, Karl-Hermann; Lehnert, Linn Sophia; López-González, Pablo José; Langner, Stephanie; Linse, Katrin; Manjón-Cabeza, Maria Eugenia; Meißner, Meike; Montiel, Américo; Raes, Maarten; Robert, Henri; Rose, Armin; Schepisi, Elisabet Sañé; Saucède, Thomas; Scheidat, Meike; Schenke, Hans Werner; Seiler, Jan; Smith, Craig (2011): Biodiversity change after climate-induced ice-shelf collapse in the Antarctic. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 58(1-2), 74-83, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2010.05.024
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The marine ecosystem on the eastern shelf of the Antarctic Peninsula was surveyed 5 and 12 years after the climate-induced collapse of the Larsen A and B ice shelves. An impoverished benthic fauna was discovered, that included deep-sea species presumed to be remnants from ice-covered conditions. The current structure of various ecosystem components appears to result from extremely different response rates to the change from an oligotrophic sub-ice-shelf ecosystem to a productive shelf ecosystem. Meiobenthic communities remained impoverished only inside the embayments. On local scales, macro- and mega-epibenthic diversity was generally low, with pioneer species and typical Antarctic megabenthic shelf species interspersed. Antarctic Minke whales and seals utilised the Larsen A/B area to feed on presumably newly established krill and pelagic fish biomass. Ecosystem impacts also extended well beyond the zone of ice-shelf collapse, with areas of high benthic disturbance resulting from scour by icebergs discharged from the Larsen embayments.
    Keywords: Agassiz Trawl; AGT; ANT-XXIII/8; Bottom trawl; BT; CAML; Census of Antarctic Marine Life; CT; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Drake Passage; Dundee Island; EBA; Evolution and Biodiversity in the Antarctic; Polarstern; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; PS69; PS69/602-1; PS69/603-1; PS69/605-2; PS69/609-2; PS69/614-2; PS69/619-2; PS69/622-2; PS69/624-2; PS69/629-2; PS69/631-2; PS69/634-2; PS69/638-2; PS69/643-2; PS69/648-2; PS69/651-2; PS69/654-2; PS69/656-2; PS69/659-2; PS69/661-1; PS69/664-2; PS69/667-2; PS69/671-2; PS69/674-2; PS69/675-1; PS69/680-2; PS69/682-2; PS69/686-2; PS69/689-2; PS69/691-2; PS69/693-2; PS69/695-2; PS69/697-2; PS69/699-1; PS69/699-2; PS69/700-2; PS69/700-4; PS69/700-5; PS69/702-1; PS69/702-5; PS69/702-9; PS69/703-1; PS69/703-2; PS69/703-3; PS69/703-5; PS69/706-1; PS69/706-2; PS69/709-1; PS69/709-2; PS69/710-1; PS69/710-5; PS69/710-6; PS69/711-7; PS69/714-1; PS69/714-2; PS69/715-1; PS69/716-1; PS69/717-1; PS69/718-8; PS69/719-1; PS69/720-2; PS69/721-2; PS69/722-1; PS69/722-4; PS69/722-5; PS69/724-1; PS69/725-1; PS69/725-3; PS69/725-6; PS69/726-2; PS69/726-3; PS69/726-4; PS69/726-5; PS69/727-1; PS69/728-1; PS69/728-2; PS69/728-3; PS69/8-track; Remote operated vehicle CHEROKEE; Remote operated vehicle SPRINT 103; ROVC; ROVS; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; Snow Hill Island; South Atlantic Ocean; SPP1158; Underway cruise track measurements; Weddell Sea; Weddell Sea, Larsen-A; Weddell Sea, Larsen-B
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 38 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Melles, Martin (1991): Paläoglaziologie und Paläozeanographie im Spätquartär am Kontinentalrand des südlichen Weddellmeeres, Antarktis (Late Quaternary paleoglaciology and paleoceanography at the continental margin of the southern Weddell Sea, Antarctica). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 81, 190 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0081_1991
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: During four expeditions with RV "Polarstern" at the continental margin of the southern Weddell Sea, profiling and geological sampling were carried out. A detailed bathymetric map was constructed from echo-sounding data. Sub-bottom profiles, classified into nine echotypes, have been mapped and interpreted. Sedimentological analyses were carried out on 32 undisturbed box grab surface samples, as well as on sediment cores from 9 sites. Apart from the description of the sediments and the investigation of sedimentary structures on X-radiographs the following characteristics were determined: grain-size distributions; carbonate and Corg content; component distibutions in different grain-size fractions; stable oxygen and carbon isotopes in planktic and, partly, in benthic foraminifers; and physical properties. The stratigraphy is based On 14C-dating, oxygen isotope Stages and, at one site, On paleomagnetic measurements and 230Th-analyses The sediments represent the period of deposition from the last glacial maximum until recent time. They are composed predominantly of terrigenous components. The formation of the sediments was controlled by glaciological, hydrographical and gravitational processes. Variations in the sea-ice coverage influenced biogenic production. The ice sheet and icebergs were important media for sediment transport; their grounding caused compaction and erosion of glacial marine sediments on the outer continental shelf. The circulation and the physical and chemical properties of the water masses controlled the transport of fine-grained material, biogenic production and its preservation. Gravitational transport processes were the inain mode of sediment movements on the continental slope. The continental ice sheet advanced to the shelf edge and grounded On the sea-floor, presumably later than 31,000 y.B.P. This ice movement was linked with erosion of shelf sediments and a very high sediment supply to the upper continental slope from the adiacent southern shelf. The erosional surface On the shelf is documented in the sub-bottom profiles as a regular, acoustically hard reflector. Dense sea-ice coverage above the lower and middle continental slope resulted in the almost total breakdown of biogenic production. Immediately in front of the ice sheet, above the upper continental slope, a 〈50 km broad coastal polynya existed at least periodically. Biogenic production was much higher in this polynya than elsewhere. Intense sea-ice formation in the polynya probably led to the development of a high salinity and, consequently, dense water mass, which flowed as a stream near bottom across the continental slope into the deep sea, possibly contributing to bottom water formation. The current velocities of this water mass presumably had seasonal variations. The near-bottom flow of the dense water mass, in combination with the gravity transport processes that arose from the high rates of sediment accumulation, probably led to erosion that progressed laterally from east to West along a SW to NE-trending, 200 to 400 m high morphological step at the continental slope. During the period 14,000 to 13,000 y.B.P., during the postglacial temperature and sea-level rise, intense changes in the environmental conditions occured. Primarily, the ice masses on the outer continental shelf started to float. Intense calving processes resulted in a rapid retreat of the ice edge to the south. A consequence of this retreat was, that the source area of the ice-rafted debris changed from the adjacent southern shelf to the eastern Weddell Sea. As the ice retreated, the gravitational transport processes On the continental slope ceased. Soon after the beginning of the ice retreat, the sea-ice coverage in the whole research area decreased. Simultaneously, the formation of the high salinity dense bottom water ceased, and the sediment composition at the continental slope then became influenced by the water masses of the Weddell Gyre. The formation of very cold Ice Shelf Water (ISW) started beneath the southward retreating Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf somewhat later than 12,000 y.B.P. The ISW streamed primarily with lower velocities than those of today across the continental slope, and was conducted along the erosional step on the slope into the deep sea. At 7,500 y.B.P., the grounding line of the ice masses had retreated 〉 400 km to the south. A progressive retreat by additional 200 to 300 km probably led to the development of an Open water column beneath the ice south of Berkner Island at about 4,000 y.B.P. This in turn may have led to an additional ISW, which had formed beneath the Ronne Ice Shelf, to flow towards the Filcher Ice Shelf. As a result, increased flow of ISW took place over the continental margin, possibly enabling the ISW to spill over the erosional step On the upper continental slope towards the West. Since that time, there is no longer any documentation of the ISW in the sedimentary Parameters on the lower continental slope. There, recent sediments reflect the lower water masses of the Weddell Gyre. The sea-ice coverage in early Holocene time was again so dense that biogenic production was significantly restricted.
    Keywords: ANT-I/2; ANT-II/4; ANT-III/3; ANT-IV/3; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; Atka Bay; AWI_Paleo; Camp Norway; Cape Fiske; Dredge; DRG; Eastern Weddell Sea, Southern Ocean; Filchner Shelf; Filchner Trough; Giant box corer; GKG; Gould Bay; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Kapp Norvegia; Lyddan Island; MG; Multiboxcorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS01; PS01/154; PS01/155; PS01/156; PS01/161; PS01/162; PS01/177; PS01/184; PS01/186; PS01/189; PS04; PS04/477; PS04/481; PS04/484; PS04/495; PS04/500; PS04/508; PS04/509; PS06/301; PS06/302; PS06/303; PS06/304; PS06/306; PS06 SIBEX; PS08; PS08/321; PS08/324; PS08/327; PS08/333; PS08/335; PS08/336; PS08/338; PS08/340; PS08/344; PS08/345; PS08/346; PS08/347; PS08/350; PS08/353; PS08/354; PS08/355; PS08/356; PS08/357; PS08/358; PS08/359; PS08/360; PS08/361; PS08/364; PS08/365; PS08/366; PS08/367; PS08/368; PS08/369; PS08/374; PS08/375; PS08/379; PS08/380; PS08/381; PS08/382; PS08/384; PS08/385; PS08/386; PS08/387; PS08/394; PS08/396; PS08/397; PS08/401; PS08/402; PS08/410; PS08/428; PS08/430; PS08/432; PS08/438; PS08/439; PS08/440; PS08/442; PS08/444; PS08/445; PS08/449; PS08/450; PS08/452; PS08/480; PS08/482; PS08/483; PS10; PS10/725; PS10/738; PS10/740; PS10/748; PS10/757; PS10/760; PS10/762; PS10/766; PS10/768; PS10/778; PS10/782; PS1010-1; PS1011-1; PS1012-1; PS1013-1; PS1014-1; PS1016-1; PS1017-1; PS1018-1; PS1019-1; PS12; PS12/336; PS12/338; PS12/340; PS12/342; PS12/344; PS12/346; PS12/348; PS12/350; PS12/352; PS12/354; PS12/356; PS12/382; PS12/384; PS1215-2; PS1216-1; PS1217-1; PS1219-1; PS1220-3; PS1222-1; PS1223-1; PS1275-1; PS1276-1; PS1277-1; PS1278-1; PS1279-1; PS1363-3; PS1364-1; PS1366-1; PS1367-1; PS1368-1; PS1369-1; PS1370-1; PS1371-1; PS1372-2; PS1373-2; PS1374-2; PS1375-2; PS1376-2; PS1377-1; PS1378-1; PS1379-1; PS1380-1; PS1381-1; PS1382-1; PS1383-1; PS1384-1; PS1385-1; PS1386-1; PS1387-1; PS1388-1; PS1389-1; PS1390-1; PS1391-1; PS1394-1; PS1395-1; PS1396-1; PS1397-1; PS1398-2; PS1399-1; PS1400-1; PS1400-4; PS1401-1; PS1401-2; PS1402-2; PS1403-1; PS1405-1; PS1406-1; PS1407-1; PS1410-1; PS1411-1; PS1412-1; PS1414-1; PS1415-1; PS1416-1; PS1417-1; PS1418-1; PS1419-1; PS1420-1; PS1420-2; PS1421-1; PS1422-1; PS1423-1; PS1424-1; PS1425-1; PS1427-1; PS1428-1; PS1489-3; PS1490-2; PS1491-3; PS1492-1; PS1493-2; PS1494-2; PS1494-3; PS1495-1; PS1496-2; PS1497-1; PS1498-1; PS1498-2; PS1499-2; PS1605-3; PS1606-1; PS1606-3; PS1607-1; PS1607-3; PS1608-1; PS1609-1; PS1609-2; PS1609-3; PS1610-3; PS1610-4; PS1611-1; PS1611-2; PS1611-3; PS1612-1; PS1612-2; PS1613-2; PS1613-4; PS1614-1; PS1615-2; PS1626-1; PS1627-1; SL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 209 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: McCorkle, Daniel C; Keigwin, Lloyd D (1994): Depth profiles of d13C in bottom water and core top C. wuellerstorfi on the Ontong Java Plateau and Emperor Seamounts. Paleoceanography, 9(2), 197-208, https://doi.org/10.1029/93PA03271
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: We have measured the carbon isotopic composition of dissolved inorganic carbon in bottom waters of the Ontong Java Plateau (western equatorial Pacific) and on the northern Emperor Seamounts (northwest Pacific). Each of these locations is several hundred miles from the nearest Geochemical Ocean Sections Study (GEOSECS) stations, and the observed delta13C values at each site differ substantially from regionally averaged GEOSECS delta13C profiles. We discuss the possible causes of these differences, including horizontal variability, near-bottom effects, and problems with the Pacific GEOSECS delta13C data. We also measured the isotopic composition (C and O) of core top C. wuellerstorfi from a depth transect of cores at each location. The delta18O data are used to verify that our samples are Holocene. Comparison of foraminiferal and bottom water delta13C values shows that this species faithfully records bottom water delta13C at both sites and demonstrates that there is no depth-related artifact in the dissolved inorganic carbon-C. wuellerstorfi delta13C relationship at these sites.
    Keywords: 6-TOW; 6-TOW-001GGC; 6-TOW-002GGC; 6-TOW-003GGC; 6-TOW-005GGC; 6-TOW-006GGC; 6-TOW-007GGC; 6-TOW-008GGC; 6-TOW-011GGC; 6-TOW-011PC; 6-TOW-012GGC; 6-TOW-013GGC; 6-TOW-014GGC; 6-TOW-015GGC; 6-TOW-016GGC; Akademik A. Vinogradov; AVI19-4; BC; Box corer; GGC; Giant gravity corer; Moana Wave; MW9109; MW9109-13BC; MW9109-16BC; MW9109-22BC; MW9109-33BC; MW9109-37BC; MW9109-3BC; MW9109-47BC; MW9109-53BC; MW9109-54BC; MW9109-58BC; MW9109-59BC; MW9109-63BC; MW9109-66BC; MW9109-70BC; MW9109-74BC; MW9109-7BC; Pacific; PC; Piston corer; RAMA; RAMA03WT; RAMA-44P; RNDB-11GGC; RNDB-11PC; RNDB-12GGC; RNDB-13GGC; RNDB-14GGC; RNDB-15GGC; RNDB-16GGC; RNDB-1GGC; RNDB-2GGC; RNDB-3GGC; RNDB-5GGC; RNDB-6GGC; RNDB-7GGC; RNDB-8GGC; Thomas Washington; Vi-26BC; Vi-35GC; Vi-37GC; VINO-26BC; VINO-35GGC; VINO-37GGC
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Anderson, Robert F; Rowe, Gilbert T; Kemp, P F; Trumbore, S; Biscaye, Pierre Eginton (1994): Carbon budget for the mid-slope depocenter of the Middle Atlantic Bight. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 41(2-3), 669-703, https://doi.org/10.1016/0967-0645(94)90040-X
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: A mass budget was constructed for organic carbon on the upper slope of the Middle Atlantic Bight, a region thought to serve as a depocenter for fine-grained material exported from the adjacent shelf. Various components of the budget are internally consistent, and observed differences can be attributed to natural spatial variability or to the different time scales over which measurements were made. The flux of organic carbon to the sediments in the core of the depocenter zone, at a water depth of 1000 m, was measured with sediment traps to be 65 mg C m**-2 day**-1, of which 6-24 mg C m**-2 day**-1 is buried. Oxygen fluxes into the sediments, measured with incubation chambers attached to a free vehicle lander, correspond to total carbon remineralization rates of 49-70 mg C m**-2 day**-1. Carbon remineralization rates estimated from gradients of Corg within the mixed layer, and from gradients of dissolved ammonia and phosphate in pore waters, sum to only 4-6 mg C m**-2 day**-1. Most of the Corg remineralization in slope sediments is mediated by bacteria and takes place within a few mm of the sediment-water interface. Most of the Corg deposited on the upper slope sediments is supplied by lateral transport from other regions, but even if all of this material were derived from the adjacent shelf, it represents 〈2% of the mean annual shelf productivity. This value is further lowered by recognizing that as much as half of the Corg deposited on the slope is refractory, having originated by reworking from older deposits. Refractory Corg arrives at the sea bed with an average 14C age 600-900 years older than the pre-bomb 14C age of DIC in seawater, and has a mean life in the sediments with respect to biological remineralization of at least 1000 years. Labile carbon supplied to the slope, on the other hand, is rapidly and (virtually) completely remineralized, with a mean life of 〈 1 year. Carbon-14 ages of fine-grained carbonate and organic carbon present within the interstices of shelf sands are consistent with this material acting as a source for the old carbon supplied to the slope. Winnowing and export of reworked carbon may contribute to the often-described relationship between organic carbon preservation and accumulation rate of marine sediments.
    Keywords: A_EN179-BC1; A_EN179-BC2; A_EN179-BC3; A_EN179-BC4; A_EN179-BC5; A_EN179-BC7; A_EN187-BC1; A_EN187-BC10; A_EN187-BC11; A_EN187-BC3; A_EN187-BC4; A_EN187-BC5; A_EN187-BC6; A_EN187-BC8; A_EN187-BC9; ADEPD; ADEPDCruises; Atlantic Data Base for Exchange Processes at the Deep Sea Floor; BC; Box corer
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 15 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hales, Burke; Emerson, Steven R; Archer, David E (1994): Respiration and dissolution in the sediments of the western North Atlantic: estimates from models of in situ microelectrode measurements of porewater oxygen and pH. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 41(4), 695-719, https://doi.org/10.1016/0967-0637(94)90050-7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: We present in situ microelectrode measurements of sediment formation factor and porewater oxygen and pH from six stations in the North Atlantic varying in depth from 2159 to 5380 m. A numerical model of the oxygen data indicates that fluxes of oxygen to the sediments are as much as an order of magnitude higher than benthic chamber flux measurements previously reported in the same area. Model results require dissolution driven by metabolic CO2 production within the sediments to explain the pH data; even at the station with the most undersaturated bottom waters 〉60% of the calcite dissolution occurs in response to metabolic CO2. Aragonite dissolution alone cannot provide the observed buffering of porewater pH, even at the shallowest station. A sensitivity test of the model that accounts for uncertainties in the bottom water saturation state and the stoichiometry between oxygen consumption and CO2 production during respiration constrains the dissolution rate constant for calcite to between 3 and 30% day**-1, in agreement with earlier in situ determinations of the rate constant. Model results predict that over 35% of the calcium carbonate rain to these sediments dissolves at all stations, confirmed by sediment trap and CaCO3 accumulation data.
    Keywords: ADEPD; ADEPDCruises; ADEPDCruises_H_11_BOTTLE; ADEPDCruises_H_11_SC; ADEPDCruises_H_5_BOTTLE; ADEPDCruises_H_5_SC; ADEPDCruises_H_6_BOTTLE; ADEPDCruises_H_7_BOTTLE; ADEPDCruises_H_7_SC; ADEPDCruises_H_8_BOTTLE; ADEPDCruises_H_8_SC; ADEPDCruises_H_9_BOTTLE; ADEPDCruises_H_9_SC; Atlantic Data Base for Exchange Processes at the Deep Sea Floor; BC; Bottle, Niskin; Box corer; H_11_BOTTLE; H_11_SC; H_11BC-no3; H_11BC-o2; H_11-me; H_5_BOTTLE; H_5_SC; H_5BC-no3; H_5BC-o2; H_5BC-s; H_5-me; H_6_BOTTLE; H_6BC-no3; H_6BC-o2; H_6BC-s; H_7_BOTTLE; H_7_SC; H_7BC-o2; H_7BC-s; H_7-me; H_8_BOTTLE; H_8_SC; H_8BC-no3; H_8BC-o2; H_8BC-s; H_8-me; H_9_BOTTLE; H_9_SC; H_9BC-no3; H_9BC-o2; H_9BC-s; H_9-me; NIS; SC; Soil combustion
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 33 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: McGregor, Helen V; Dima, Mihai; Fischer, Helmut W; Mulitza, Stefan (2007): Rapid 20th-Century Increase in Coastal Upwelling off Northwest Africa. Science, 315(5812), 637-639, https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1134839
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: Near-shore waters along the northwest African margin are characterized by coastal upwelling and represent one of the world's major upwelling regions. Sea surface temperature (SST) records from Moroccan sediment cores, extending back 2500 years, reveal anomalous and unprecedented cooling during the 20th century, which is consistent with increased upwelling. Upwelling-driven SSTs also vary out of phase with millennial-scale changes in Northern Hemisphere temperature anomalies (NHTAs) and show relatively warm conditions during the Little Ice Age and relatively cool conditions during the Medieval Warm Period. Together, these results suggest that coastal upwelling varies with NHTAs and that upwelling off northwest Africa may continue to intensify as global warming and atmospheric CO2 levels increase.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB6008-1; GeoB6008-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M45/5a; MARUM; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; PACLIVA; Patterns of Climate Variability in the North Atlantic; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mohtadi, Mahyar; Rossel, Pamela E; Lange, Carina Beatriz; Pantoja, Silvio; Böning, Philipp; Repeta, Daniel J; Grunwald, Maik; Lamy, Frank; Hebbeln, Dierk; Brumsack, Hans-Jürgen (2008): Deglacial pattern of circulation and marine productivity in the upwelling region off central-south Chile. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 272, 221-230, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2008.04.043
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: A high-resolution sea surface temperature and paleoproductivity reconstruction on a sedimentary record collected at 36°S off central-south Chile (GeoB 7165-1, 36°33'S, 73°40'W, 797 m water depth, core length 750 cm) indicates that paleoceanographic conditions changed abruptly between 18 and 17 ka. Comparative analysis of several cores along the Chilean continental margin (30°-41°S) suggests that the onset and the pattern of deglacial warming was not uniform off central-south Chile due to the progressive southward migration of the Southern Westerlies and local variations in upwelling. Marine productivity augmented rather abruptly at 13-14 ka, well after the oceanographic changes.We suggest that the late deglacial increase in paleoproductivity off central-south Chile reflects the onset of an active upwelling system bringing nutrient-rich, oxygen-poor Equatorial SubsurfaceWater to the euphotic zone, and a relatively higher nutrient load of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. During the Last Glacial Maximum, when the Southern Westerlies were located further north, productivity off central-south Chile, in contrast to off northern Chile, was reduced due to direct onshore-blowing winds that prevented coastal upwelling and export production.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CHIPAL; CONDOR-Ia; East Pacific; GeoB3302-1; GeoB3359-3; GeoB7139-2; GeoB7165-1; GIK17748-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); HOTLINE, HYGAPE; MARUM; off Chile; PUCK; SL; SO101; SO101/3_2-1; SO102/1; SO156/2; SO156/3; SO80_4; SO80a; Sonne; South-East Pacific
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Franke, Christine; von Dobeneck, Tilo; Drury, Martyn R; Meeldijk, Johannes D; Dekkers, Mark J (2007): Magnetic petrology of equatorial Atlantic sediments: Electron microscopy results and their implications for environmental magnetic interpretation. Paleoceanography, 22, PA4207, https://doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001442
    Publication Date: 2024-06-26
    Description: The magnetic microparticle and nanoparticle inventories of marine sediments from equatorial Atlantic sites were investigated by scanning and transmission electron microscopy to classify all present detrital and authigenic magnetic mineral species and to investigate their regional distribution, origin, transport, and preservation. This information is used to establish source-to-sink relations and to constrain environmental magnetic proxy interpretations for this area. Magnetic extracts were prepared from sediments of three supralysoclinal open ocean gravity cores located at the Ceará Rise (GeoB 1523-1; 3°49.9'N/41°37.3'W), the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (GeoB 4313-2; 4°02.8'N/33°26.3'W), and the Sierra Leone Rise (GeoB 2910-1; 4°50.7'N/21°03.2'W). Sediments from two depths corresponding to marine isotope stages 4 and 5.5 were processed. This selection represents glacial and interglacial conditions of sedimentation for the western, central, and eastern equatorial Atlantic and avoids interferences from subsurface and anoxic processes. Crystallographic, elemental, morphological, and granulometric data of more than 2000 magnetic particles were collected by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. On basis of these properties, nine particle classes could be defined: detrital magnetite, titanomagnetite (fragmental and euhedral), titanomagnetite-hemoilmentite intergrowths, silicates with magnetic inclusions, microcrystalline hematite, magnetite spherules, bacterial magnetite, goethite needles, and nanoparticle clusters. Each class can be associated with fluvial, eolian, subaeric, and submarine volcanic, biogenic, or chemogenic sources. Large-scale sedimentation patterns are delineated as well: detrital magnetite is typical of Amazon discharge, fragmental titanomagnetite is a submarine weathering product of mid-ocean ridge basalts, and titanomagnetite-hemoilmenite intergrowths are common magnetic particles in West African dust. This clear regionalization underlines that magnetic petrology is an excellent indicator of source-to-sink relations. Hematite encrustations, magnetic spherules, and nanoparticle clusters were found at all investigated sites, while bacterial magnetite and authigenic hematite were only detected at the more oxic western site. At the eastern site, surface pits and crevices were seen on the crystal faces indicating subtle early diagenetic reductive dissolution. It was observed that paleoclimatic signatures of magnetogranulometric parameters such as the ratio of anhysteretic and isothermal remanent magnetizations can be formed either by mixing of multiple sources with separate, relatively narrow grain size ranges (western site) or by variable sorting of a single source with a broad grain size distribution (eastern site). Hematite, goethite, and possibly ferrihydrite nanoparticles occur in all sediment cores studied and have either high-coercive or superparamagnetic properties depending on their partly ultrafine grain sizes. These two magnetic fractions are generally discussed as separate fractions, but we suggest that they could actually be genetically linked.
    Keywords: Amazon Fan; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB1523-1; GeoB2910-1; GeoB4313-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M16/2; M29/3; M38/1; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Midatlantic Ridge; Sierra Leone Rise; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...