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  • Other Sources  (122)
  • 551  (93)
  • 551.48  (26)
  • Meteorology and Climatology
  • 2020-2022  (122)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-01-24
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Meteorology and Climatology
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN76613 , American Meteorological Society (AMS) Annual Meeting; Jan 12, 2020 - Jan 16, 2020; Boston, MA; United States
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-01-24
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Meteorology and Climatology
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN76760 , AMS Annual Meeting; Jan 12, 2020 - Jan 16, 2020; Boston, MA; United States
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-01-23
    Description: Atmospheric Rivers (ARs) are responsible for much of the precipitation along the west coast of the United States. In order to accurately predict AR events in numerical weather prediction, subseasonal and seasonal timescales, it is important to understand the large-scale meteorological influence on extreme AR events.Here, characteristics of ARs that result in an extreme precipitation event are compared to typical ARs on the coast of WashingtonState. In addition to more intense water vapor transport, notable differences in the synoptic forcing are present during extreme precipitation events that are not present during typical AR events.In particular, a negatively tilted low pressure system is positioned to the west in the Gulf of Alaska, alongside an upper level jet streak. Subseasonal and seasonal teleconnection patterns are known to influence the weather in the Pacific Northwest. The Madden JulianOscillation (MJO) is shown to be particularly important in determining the strength of precipitation associated with in AR ont he Washington coast.
    Keywords: Meteorology and Climatology
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN76948
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Der Konferenzbeitrag gibt einen Einblick in das Forschungsdatenmanagement in den Geowissenschaften und spannt den Bogen vom Geowissenschaftlichen Zentrum in Göttingen über nationale bis zu internationalen Strukturen und Herangehensweisen.
    Description: Der Konferenzbeitrag gibt einen Einblick in das Forschungsdatenmanagement in den Geowissenschaften und nennt Bedarf, Herangehensweisen und Entwicklungspotentiale sowie Infrastrukturlösungen und Projekte. Der Bandbreite reicht vom Geowissenschaftlichen Zentrum der Universität Göttingen über nationale bis zu internationalen Forschungsstrukturen.
    Description: conference
    Keywords: 551 ; Geowissenschaften, Forschungsdatenmanagement
    Language: German
    Type: conferencePaper
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  • 5
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    Verlag von Gebrüder Borntraeger, Berlin
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 4 MIN II, 91
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Es wird hier der Versuch gemacht, die wesentlichen neuen Erfahrungen über den Bau und Entstehung der Alpen zusammenzufassen. Im Laufe von 12 Sommern habe ich Gelegenheit gehabt, die Alpen vom Simplon bis in die Karpathen, bis in die Dinariden Bosniens kennen zu lernen und habe in den verschiedenen Zonen der Ostalpen und Dinariden lange Zeit gearbeitet. So ist mir kein wichtiger Bestandteil der Alpen vom Simplon bis an die ungarische Ebene unbekannt. Darum glaube ich auch an die schwierige Aufgabe einer Synthese der Alpen auf Grund der modernen Erfahrungen schreiten zu können und hoffe damit einen Beitrag zur Aufklärung des Deckenhaues der Alpen zu liefern, der allen denen willkommen sein dürfte, die sich einen Einblick, eine Übersicht über den Stand der heutigen Kenntnis verschaffen wollen.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551 ; Alpidische Orogene {Tektonik} ; Alpensystem {Geologie} ; Alpen ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 283
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  • 6
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    Verlag von Gebrüder Borntraeger, Berlin
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 4 MIN II, 92
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Zweck des vorliegenden kleinen Werkes ist es, auf Grundlage des heute vorhandenen Tatsachenmaterials, die alpine Faltung nach Raum und Zeit zu gliedern.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551 ; Alpidische Orogene {Tektonik} ; Tektogenese {Geodynamik} ; Alpensystem {Geologie} ; Faltung ; Alpen ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
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  • 7
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    E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung (Erwin Nägele), Stuttgart
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 8 MIN II, 4734
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Dieses Buch soll keine fertige Ansicht, sondern die Grundlagen liefern, um sich eine solche zu bilden. Neben der Schilderung der Deckenlehre steht hier daher die Zusammenfassung der Kritik und die Darstellung der Methoden im Vordergrund des Interesses. Und wenn es dem Verfasser gelungen sein sollte, das zu liefern, ein möglichst objektives Bild vom gegenwärtigen Stand der Deckenlehre zu entwerfen und dadurch das Interesse an diesem wichtigen Kapitel der Geologie zu fördern, so ist der Zweck dieses Buches erreicht.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551.8 ; 554.3 ; 551 ; Alpidische Orogene {Tektonik} ; Tektonik ; Geologie ; Alpen ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 149
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  • 8
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    Selbstverlag der Bundesanstalt für Landeskunde
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 8 Z GEOGR 53:87
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: In dieser Arbeit wird der Fragestellung nachgegangen, ob die zahlreichen Karnischen des Nordschwarzwalds echte Kare sind und die Schneegrenze hier besonders tief gelegen hat oder die Schneegrenze wie im übrigen Deutschland über 900 m hoch lag und es sich dann kaum um echte Kare handelt. Der Autor untersuchte dazu Kare und Quelltrichter besonders im badischen Teil des Nordschwarzwalds, weil dort die Kare meist nicht auf den geologischen Karten verzeichnet sind. Reisen in den Südschwarzwald, in die Vogesen und in den Bayrischen Wald dienten dem Vergleich. Im Verlauf der weiteren Untersuchungen stieß er auf zahlreiche Wirkungen des Eiszeitklimas. Vor allem interessierte ihn der Gehängeschutt, da über ihn bis dahin fast gar nichts bekannt war.
    Description: thesis
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 910 ; 551 ; VAR 400 ; VAR 800 ; VAR 910 ; VEB 143 ; Glazialmorphologie ; Periglazialerscheinungen ; Europa {Glazialgeologie} ; Oberrheinische Massen {Geologie} ; Nordschwarzwald ; Glaziallandschaft ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 86
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  • 9
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    Kaufmann, Leipzig
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 8 HLL III, 1234/c
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Die vorliegende Literaturzusammenstellung schließt an die im Jahre 1874 erschienene Zusammenstellung der "Geologischen und mineralogischen Literatur des Königreichs Sachsen und der angrenzenden Ländertheile von 1835 bis 1873" von ALFRED JENTZSCH an. Aus verschiedenen praktischen Gründen wurde die Literatur nochmals von 1870 ab berücksichtigt. Andererseits liegt diejenige des Jahres 1921 bis heute noch nicht mit wünschenswerter Vollständigkeit vor und wurde deshalb weggelassen, selbst diejenige des Jahres 1920 dürfte noch Lücken aufweisen.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 554.3 ; 551 ; Sachsen {Geologie} ; Geologie ; Sachsen ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 232
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  • 10
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    Amt für Bodenforschung, Hannover
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 8 U 60.7041
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Im südöstlichen Niederbayern wurden das Positionsblatt Simbach a. Inn und angrenzende Teile der umliegenden Positionsblätter kartiert. Neben pleistozänen und holozänen Bildungen erfasst die Kartierung jüngste Schichten der Oberen Meeresmolasse, die Süßbrackwassermolasse und Schichtglieder der Oberen Süßwassermolasse. Das Tertiärprofil reicht vom mittleren Helvet bis zum tiefsten Pont. 〈br〉 Tektonische Bewegungen nachhelvetischen Alters sind einwandfrei festzustellen; sie führen entgegen älteren Anschauungen nicht zu Verbiegungen oder sogar zu Verfaltungen der Schichten, sondern zu Bruchbildung und Aufteilung des Gebietes in Kleinschollen. Aufschlüsse mit Anzeichen lokaler Zerrungstektonik sind nicht nur im engeren Kartierungsgebiet, sondern auch im ganzen Raum zwischen Inn und Vils mehrfach anzutreffen. Für die Entstehung der Zerrungsformen können pseudotektonische Ursachen größtenteils ausgeschlossen werden. 〈br〉 Die in der Kleintektonik auftretenden Richtungen stimmen im Wesentlichen mit den Streichrichtungen größerer Strukturelemente überein. Zerrungsformen treten im bearbeiteten Gebiet nicht nur in der Kleintektonik auf, sondern sind nach neueren Arbeiten auch aus der Großtektonik bekanntgeworden. Damit kann zumindest das Gebiet zwischen Inn und Vils als ein Raum reiner tektonischer Zerrung gelten, soweit man sich auf die hier erfassten, posthelvetischen Bewegungen bezieht. Diese jungen Bewegungen verteilen sich auf jüngstes Miozän und auf Pliozän.
    Description: thesis
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551 ; Alpenvorland {Geologie} ; Molasse ; Simbach am Inn ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 69
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  • 11
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    Wittwer, Stuttgart
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 4 MIN II, 5393/m
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: In der geologischen Kritik der bestehenden Erdsynthesen nehmen die Probleme des Zusammenhanges von Horizontal- und Vertikal-Tektonik einen breiten Raum ein…〈br〉 Das „Für“ und „Wider“ der Wegenersche Verschiebungstheorie konnte naturgemäß keine Lösung im Sinne einer weitgehenden Übereinstimmung erbringen. Aber es sind doch den von A. Wegener angenommenen, riesenhaften Horizontalverfrachtungen ernste Hindernisse in den Weg gestellt worden. Dies kommt in der wenig später erschienenen Arbeit von H. Cloos , „Hebung -Spaltung - Vulkanismus“, besonders deutlich zum Ausdruck…〈br〉 Da die Spaltenbildung auch in der Gegenwart andauert, wird die geodätische Feinmessung einen wesentlichen Beitrag zur Lösung der offenstehenden Probleme liefern können. Denn selbst wenn ein noch so träges Auseinanderfließen der jungvulkanischen Innenzone in Betracht zu ziehen wäre, muss das Verhalten der beiderseitigen tertiären, starren Basaltmassive den Prüfstein für die vermuteten waagerechten Verschiebungen abgeben. In diesem Zusammenhang interessiert aber auch die Beschaffenheit des Untergrundes. Je nachdem, ob die Innenzone als breiter und tiefer Graben, oder als Zerrungszone mit plastischem Untergrund aufzufassen ist, bestehen zwei Möglichkeiten: starke und sehr tief reichende Vertikalbewegungen ohne messtechnisch erfassbare waagerechte Verschiebungen, oder fühlbare Horizontalwanderungen mit schwachen Auswirkungen in der Vertikalkomponente als Folge geringerer Tiefenwirkung. Es liegt daher nahe, durch Schweremessungen über den Aufbau des Untergrundes Anhaltspunkte zu gewinnen. Insbesondere erhebt sich die Frage, ob und inwieweit mit Hilfe der geophysikalischen Messung größere Unterschiede in den Schwerestrukturen der rezenten Innenzone und der angrenzenden Massive feststellbar sind. 〈br〉 Diese Gesichtspunkte sind es im Wesentlichen, denen die Arbeitsgemeinschaft der wissenschaftlichen Island-Expedition des Jahres 1938 ihren Zusammenschluss verdankte. Es ist wohl auch das erste Mal, dass ein jungvulkanisches Gebiet mit einem geodätisch—geophysikalischen Versuchsfeld überdeckt wurde, ferner, dass die Zusammenarbeit geologischer, geodätischer und geophysikalischer Wissenschaftler sozusagen in einem Guss gesichert und durch rasche Entschlüsse gefördert werden konnte.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551 ; 551 ; VAE 000 ; TSD 500 ; VED 500 ; Tektonik {Geologie} ; Island {Geophysik} ; Island {Geologie} ; Spalten ; Island ; Verschiebungstheorie ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: anthology_digi
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  • 12
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    Kaufmann, Leipzig [u.a.]
    In:  Fakultät Geowissenschaften/Universität Göttingen | Serie
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Bei den geologischen Arbeiten des Verfassers über die obere Kreide zwischen der Elbe bei Schandau und dem Jeschken wurde auch das sächsische Elbsandsteingebirge in den Kreis der Betrachtungen gezogen. Die Durcharbeitung brachte einige neue wichtige Ergebnisse für die Kreidestratigraphie des Elbtales, die hier behandelt werden: Das Turon des sächsischen Elbtales schließt sich in Bezug auf Mächtigkeit und Führung wichtiger Leitfossilien an das des Harzrandes, Nordwestdeutschlands, Böhmens und Schlesiens an. Ebenso lassen sich auch in der englischen und französischen Kreide dieselben wichtigen Fossilien zur vergleichsweise Horizontierung benützen.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 554.3 ; 551.77 ; 551 ; Oberkreide ; Sachsen {Geologie} ; Dresdner Elbtal ; Turonium ; Stratigraphie ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 41
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Geological evidence indicates large continental‐scale Antarctic ice volume variations during the early and mid‐Miocene. On million‐year timescales, these variations can largely be explained by equilibrium Antarctic ice sheet (AIS) simulations. In contrast, on shorter orbital timescales, the AIS needs not be in equilibrium with the forcing and ice volume variations may be substantially different. Here, we introduce a conceptual model, based on ice dynamical model results, to investigate the difference between transient variability and equilibrium differences of the Miocene AIS. In our model, an ice sheet will grow (shrink) by a specific rate when it is smaller (larger) than its equilibrium size. We show that phases of concurrent ice volume increase and rising CO2 levels are possible, even though the equilibrium ice volume decreases monotonically with CO2. When the AIS volume is out of equilibrium with the forcing climate, the ice sheet can still be adapting to a relatively large equilibrium size, although CO2 is rising after a phase of decrease. A delayed response of Antarctic ice volume to (covarying) solar insolation and CO2 concentrations can cause discrepancies between Miocene solar insolation and benthic δ18O variability. Increasing forcing frequency leads to a larger disequilibrium and consequently larger CO2‐ice volume phase differences. Furthermore, an amplified forcing amplitude causes larger amplitude ice volume variability, because the growth and decay rates depend on the forcing. It also leads to a reduced average ice volume, resulting from the growth rates generally being smaller than the decay rates.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The early and mid‐Miocene (23–14 Myr ago) was the last period in Earth's history when the Antarctic ice sheet (AIS) size changed between being almost completely vanished and its current magnitude. So far, ice modelers have tried explaining this large‐scale AIS variability using steady‐state experiments, in which the final ice volume is in equilibrium with the forcing climate. In these simulations, phases of simultaneous ice sheet growth and CO2 increase have to be caused by increased precipitation outweighing increased melt in a warmer climate. Conversely, simultaneous ice sheet decay and CO2 decrease must be due to decreased precipitation exceeding decreased melt. Here, we provide an alternative explanation for these phases, based on the notion that the slowly evolving AIS is not in equilibrium with the forcing climate. In our model, an ice sheet will grow (shrink) by a specific rate when it is smaller (larger) than its equilibrium size. The AIS can then still be adapting to a relatively large equilibrium size, when CO2 is already increasing again after an initial drop. It can also continue decaying after a reversal from rising to sinking CO2 levels. Our results serve to aid the interpretation of Miocene geological oxygen isotope data.
    Description: Key Points: Concurrent Antarctic ice sheet growth and CO2 level rise can occur because of disequilibrium between ice volume and climate. The disequilibrium and CO2‐ice volume phase differences grow with increasing frequency of the forcing. Larger amplitude CO2 variability causes larger amplitude ice volume variability and a smaller average ice sheet.
    Keywords: 551 ; Miocene ; Antarctica ; ice sheet ; sea level ; carbon dioxide
    Type: article
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: Defining effective measures to reduce nitrate pollution in heterogeneous mesoscale catchments remains challenging when based on concentration measurements at the outlet only. One reason for this is our limited understanding of the subcatchment contributions to nitrate export and their importance at different time scales. While upstream subcatchments often disproportionally contribute to runoff generation and in turn to nutrient export, agricultural areas (which are typically found in downstream lowlands) are known to be a major source of nitrate pollution. To examine the interplay of different subcatchments, we analyzed seasonal long‐term trends and event dynamics of nitrate concentrations, loads, and the concentration–discharge relationship in three nested catchments within the Selke catchment (456 km2), Germany. The upstream subcatchments (40.4% of total catchment area, 34.5% of N input) had short transit times and dynamic concentration–discharge relationships with elevated nitrate concentrations during wet seasons and events. Consequently, the upstream subcatchments dominated nitrate export during high flow and disproportionally contributed to overall annual nitrate loads at the outlet (64.2%). The downstream subcatchment was characterized by higher N input, longer transit times, and relatively constant nitrate concentrations between seasons, dominating nitrate export during low‐flow periods. Neglecting the disproportional role of upstream subcatchments for temporally elevated nitrate concentrations and net annual loads can lead to an overestimation of the role of agricultural lowlands. Nonetheless, constantly high concentrations from nitrate legacies pose a long‐term threat to water quality in agricultural lowlands. This knowledge is crucial for an effective and site‐specific water quality management.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: To efficiently remove nitrate pollution, we need to understand how it is transported, mobilized, and stored within large and heterogeneous catchments. Previous studies have shown that upstream catchments often have a disproportional impact on nutrient export, while agriculture (a major nitrate source) is often located in downstream lowlands. To understand which parts of a catchment contribute most to nitrate export and when, we analyzed long‐term (1983–2016) and high‐frequency (2010–2016) data in the Selke catchment (Germany) at three locations. The mountainous upstream part dominated nitrate transport during winter, spring, and rain events. It had a surprisingly high contribution to annual nitrate loads. The agricultural downstream part of the catchment dominated nitrate export during summer and autumn, with relatively constant concentrations between seasons. Here, nitrogen inputs needed more than a decade to travel through the subsurface of the catchment, which causes a time lag between measures to reduce nitrate pollution and their measurable effect. The resulting storage of nitrate in the groundwater threatens drinking water quality for decades to come. While the role of agricultural lowlands for nitrate export can be overestimated if neglecting the disproportional role of upstream subcatchments, their impact poses a long‐term threat to water quality.
    Description: Key Points: Analyzing the CQ relationship across time scales allows the disentanglement of the impact of catchment heterogeneity on nitrate export. Mountainous upstream subcatchments can dominate nitrate export during high flows and disproportionally contribute to nitrate loads. Agricultural downstream subcatchments can dominate nitrate export during low flow and pose a long‐term threat to water quality.
    Description: DFG collaborative research center (SFB) 1253 “CAMPOS”
    Description: Helmholtz Research Program, Integrated Project “Water and Matter Flux Dynamics in Catchments”
    Description: Initiative and Networking Fund of the Helmholtz Association through the project Advanced Earth System Modelling Capacity (ESM)
    Keywords: 551 ; concentration–discharge relationships ; event dynamics ; long‐term trends ; nitrate ; nutrient export ; water quality
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Description: The ~0.2 km3 Eibsee rock avalanche impacted Paleolake Eibsee and completely displaced its waters. This study analyses the lake impact and the consequences, and the catchment response to the landslide. A quasi‐3D seismic reflection survey, four sediment cores from modern Lake Eibsee, reaching far down into the rock avalanche mass, nine radiocarbon ages, and geomorphic analysis allow us to distinguish the main rock avalanche event from a secondary debris avalanche and debris flow. The highly fluidized debris avalanche formed a megaturbidite and multiple swashes that are recorded in the lake sediments. The new calibrated age for the Eibsee rock avalanche of ~4080–3970 cal yr BP indicates a coincidence with rockslides in the Fernpass cluster and subaquatic landslides in Lake Piburg and Lake Plansee, and raises the possibility that a large regional earthquake triggered these events. We document a complex history of erosion and sedimentation in Lake Eibsee, and demonstrate how the catchment response and rebirth of the lake are revealed through the complementary application of geophysics, sedimentology, radiocarbon dating, and geomorphology. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
    Description: Sedimentological, geophysical and geomorphological investigation in and around Lake Eibsee allows to decipher three rock‐slope failures from Mount Zugspitze: (i) the Eibsee rock avalanche ~4000 cal yr BP; (ii) a debris avalanche in the aftermath; and (iii) a large debris flow ~3740 cal yr BP. The Eibsee rock avalanche was re‐dated to a refined age of 4089–3876 cal yr BP. The coincidence with major events in the Fernpass rockslide cluster increases the likelihood of a prehistoric earthquake trigger.
    Description: Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes e.V. (German National Academic Foundation): http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004350
    Description: British Society for Geomorphology http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010165
    Keywords: 551 ; rock avalanche ; lake impact ; lake sediments ; catchment response ; progressive slope failure ; recurrence rates ; prehistoric earthquake ; Fernpass rockslide cluster
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2021-04-14
    Description: The continuing development of analytical methods for investigating sedimentary records calls for iterative re‐examination of existing data sets obtained on loess‐palaeosol sequences (LPS) as archives of palaeoenvironmental change. Here, we re‐investigate two LPS (Hecklingen, Zilly) in the northern Harz foreland, Germany, being of interest due to their proximity to the Scandinavian Ice Sheet (SIS) and the position between oceanic climatic influence further west and continental influence towards the east. First, we established new quartz OSL and polymineral IRSL chronologies. Both methods show concordant ages in the upper part of the Hecklingen profile (~20–40 ka), but in the lower part IRSL underestimates OSL ages by up to ~15 ka for the period 40–60 ka. Interpretations hence refer to the OSL data set. Second, we applied Bayesian age‐depth modelling to data sets from Hecklingen to resolve inversions in the original ages, also reducing averaged 1σ uncertainty by ~19% (OSL) and ~12% (IRSL). Modelled chronologies point out phases of increased (MIS 2, early MIS 3) and reduced (middle and late MIS 3) sedimentation, but interpretation of numerical rates is problematic because of intense erosion and slope wash particularly during MIS 3. Finally, previously obtained grain‐size data were re‐investigated by end member modelling analyses. Three fundamental grain‐size distributions (loadings) explain the measured data sets and offer information on intensity and – combined with modelled OSL ages – timing of geomorphic processes. We interpret the loadings to represent (i) primary loess accumulation, (ii) postdepositional pedogenesis and/or input of aeolian fine fractions, and (iii) input of coarse aeolian material and/or slope wash. The applied modelling tools facilitate detailed understanding of site‐formation through time, allowing us to correlate a strong peak in mean grain size at ~26–24 ka to the maximum extent of the SIS and increased influence of easterly winds.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; Harz foreland ; loess-palaeosol sequences ; luminescence ages ; Bayesian age-depth modelling ; sedimentation rates
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2021-04-21
    Description: Ice shelves around Antarctica can provide back stress for outlet glaciers and control ice sheet mass loss. They often contain narrow bands of thin ice termed ice shelf channels. Ice shelf channel morphology can be interpreted through surface depressions and exhibits junctions and deflections from flowlines. Using ice flow modeling and radar, we investigate ice shelf channels in the Roi Baudouin Ice Shelf. These are aligned obliquely to the prevailing easterly winds. In the shallow radar stratigraphy, syncline and anticline stacks occur beneath the upwind and downwind side, respectively. The structures are horizontally and vertically coherent, except near an ice shelf channel junction where patterns change structurally with depth. Deeper layers truncate near basal incisions. Using ice flow modeling, we show that the stratigraphy is ∼9 times more sensitive to atmospheric variability than to oceanic variability. This is due to the continual adjustment toward flotation. We propose that syncline‐anticline pairs in the shallow stratigraphy are caused by preferential snow deposition on the windward side and wind erosion at the downwind side. This drives downwind deflection of ice shelf channels of several meters per year. The depth variable structures indicate formation of an ice shelf channel junction by basal melting. We conclude that many ice shelf channels are seeded at the grounding line. Their morphology farther seaward is shaped on different length scales by ice dynamics, the ocean, and the atmosphere. These processes act on finer (subkilometer) scales than are captured by most ice, atmosphere, and ocean models, yet the dynamics of ice shelf channels may have broader implications for ice shelf stability.
    Description: Plain Language Summary Ice flows from Antarctica's interior toward the coast. At the contact point between ice and ocean, the ice becomes afloat and forms fast‐flowing ice shelves. Snowfall continuously accumulates at the ice shelf surface, and at the ice shelf bottom the relatively warm ocean water can melt ice from below. Ice shelves sometimes exhibit a network of surface depressions resembling a river network. At the base, the depressions are accompanied by large incisions termed ice shelf channels. Using radar as a tool for echolocation, we investigate how the shape of this network is formed. We find that snow preferentially collects in the upwind side of the surface depressions. This makes ice shelf channels move to the downwind side. We also find that ice shelf channels can form junctions through localized ocean melting. This is important because it helps us to better understand how the Antarctic ice sheet interacts with the surrounding ocean.
    Description: Key Points The radar stratigraphy in ice shelves is 9 times more sensitive to variability in snow deposition than to variability in basal melting Some ice shelf channels at Roi Baudouin Ice Shelf deflect from flowlines; the radar stratigraphy reflects related processes Variable snow deposition causes slow deflection, and basal melting can form ice shelf channel junctions far from the grounding line
    Description: InBev Baillet Latour Antarctica Fellowship
    Description: Belgian Science Policy Office http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002749
    Description: DFG Emmy Noether
    Description: Academy of Finland http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002341
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: “Antarctic Research with comparative investigations in Arctic ice areas”
    Description: Academy of Finnland
    Description: Belgium Science Policy Office
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: InBev Baillet Latour Antarctica Fellowship
    Keywords: 551 ; glaciology ; geophysics ; Antarctica ; ice shelves ; ice‐ocean interaction ; ice shelf channels
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Sediment budgeting concepts serve as quantification tools to decipher the erosion and accumulation processes within a catchment and help to understand these relocation processes through time. While sediment budgets are widely used in geomorphological catchment‐based studies, such quantification approaches are rarely applied in geoarchaeological studies. The case of Charlemagne's summit canal (also known as Fossa Carolina) and its erosional collapse provides an example for which we can use this geomorphological concept and understand the abandonment of the Carolingian construction site. The Fossa Carolina is one of the largest hydro‐engineering projects in Medieval Europe. It is situated in Southern Franconia (48.9876°N, 10.9267°E; Bavaria, southern Germany) between the Altmühl and Swabian Rezat rivers. It should have bridged the Central European watershed and connected the Rhine–Main and Danube river systems. According to our dendrochronological analyses and historical sources, the excavation and construction of the Carolingian canal took place in AD 792 and 793. Contemporary written sources describe an intense backfill of excavated sediment in autumn AD 793. This short‐term erosion event has been proposed as the principal reason for the collapse and abandonment of the hydro‐engineering project. We use subsurface data (drillings, archaeological excavations, and direct‐push sensing) and geospatial data (a LiDAR digital terrain model (DTM), a pre‐modern DTM, and a 3D model of the Fossa Carolina] for the identification and sediment budgeting of the backfills. Dendrochronological findings and radiocarbon ages of macro remains within the backfills give clear evidence for the erosional collapse of the canal project during or directly after the construction period. Moreover, our quantification approach allows the detection of the major sedimentary collapse zone. The exceedance of the manpower tipping point may have caused the abandonment of the entire construction site. The spatial distribution of the dendrochronological results indicates a north–south direction of the early medieval construction progress. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
    Description: The sediment budgeting concept as erosion and accumulation quantification tool helps in understanding the abrupt backfilling of excavated material in the construction pit, which may have forced the abandonment of the Carolingian canal in southern Germany at the end of the year AD 793. The backfill sediments could be dated precisely through radiocarbon dating of macro remains and dendrochronology of excavated timbers. These timbers recovered in three different archaeological excavation trenches reveal a Carolingian construction progress from North to South.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; Sediment budgeting ; Geomorphological modelling ; Backfill processes ; Geoarchaeology ; Fossa Carolina ; Early Middle Ages ; South Germany
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: This study suggests a stochastic Bayesian approach for calibrating and validating morphodynamic sediment transport models and for quantifying parametric uncertainties in order to alleviate limitations of conventional (manual, deterministic) calibration procedures. The applicability of our method is shown for a large‐scale (11.0 km) and time‐demanding (9.14 hr for the period 2002–2013) 2‐D morphodynamic sediment transport model of the Lower River Salzach and for three most sensitive input parameters (critical Shields parameter, grain roughness, and grain size distribution). Since Bayesian methods require a significant number of simulation runs, this work proposes to construct a surrogate model, here with the arbitrary polynomial chaos technique. The surrogate model is constructed from a limited set of runs (n=20) of the full complex sediment transport model. Then, Monte Carlo‐based techniques for Bayesian calibration are used with the surrogate model (105 realizations in 4 hr). The results demonstrate that following Bayesian principles and iterative Bayesian updating of the surrogate model (10 iterations) enables to identify the most probable ranges of the three calibration parameters. Model verification based on the maximum a posteriori parameter combination indicates that the surrogate model accurately replicates the morphodynamic behavior of the sediment transport model for both calibration (RMSE = 0.31 m) and validation (RMSE = 0.42 m). Furthermore, it is shown that the surrogate model is highly effective in lowering the total computational time for Bayesian calibration, validation, and uncertainty analysis. As a whole, this provides more realistic calibration and validation of morphodynamic sediment transport models with quantified uncertainty in less time compared to conventional calibration procedures.
    Description: Key Points: We reduce a time‐demanding sediment transport model with a surrogate technique based on the arbitrary polynomial chaos expansion (aPC). Bayesian model calibration and validation in a fraction of computational time compared to conventional (manual, deterministic) methods. We achieve a more realistic calibration, a more successful validation, and valuable information in the form of uncertainty intervals.
    Description: German Research Foundation (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; sediment transport modeling ; Lower River Salzach ; surrogate model ; arbitrary polynomial chaos expansion ; uncertainty analysis ; Bayesian updating
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: The ecosystem function of vegetation to attenuate export of nutrients is of substantial importance for securing water quality. This ecosystem function is at risk of deterioration due to an increasing risk of large‐scale forest dieback under climate change. The present study explores the response of the nitrogen (N) cycle of a forest catchment in the Bavarian Forest National Park, Germany, in the face of a severe bark beetle (Ips typographus Linnaeus) outbreak and resulting large‐scale forest dieback using top‐down statistical‐mechanistic modeling. Outbreaks of bark beetle killed the dominant tree species Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H.Karst.) in stands accounting for 55% of the catchment area. A Bayesian hierarchical model that predicts daily stream NO3 concentration (C) over three decades with discharge (Q) and temperature (T) (C‐Q‐T relationship) outperformed alternative statistical models. A catchment model was subsequently developed to explain the C‐Q‐T relationship in top‐down fashion. Annually varying parameter estimates provide mechanistic interpretations of the catchment processes. Release of NO3 from decaying litter after the dieback was tracked by an increase of the nutrient input parameter cs0. The slope of C‐T relation was near zero during this period, suggesting that the nutrient release was beyond the regulating capacity of the vegetation and soils. Within a decade after the dieback, the released N was flushed out and nutrient retention capacity was restored with the regrowth of the vegetation.
    Description: Key Points: Pulse of nitrate export from a forest catchment in response to bark beetle infestation followed by recovery of nutrient retention capacity Top‐down, data‐driven Bayesian hierarchical model assists mechanistic interpretation of hydrochemical processes Concentration‐discharge‐temperature relationship is shaped by spatial heterogeneity of nutrient and seasonality of biogeochemical reactions
    Keywords: 551.48 ; Bark beetle ; Bayesian hierarchical modeling ; forest dieback ; nitrate
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2021-06-22
    Description: The contribution of sediments to nutrient cycling of the coastal North Sea is strongly controlled by the intensity of fluxes across the sediment water interface. Pore‐water advection is one major exchange mechanism that is well described by models, as it is determined by physical parameters. In contrast, biotransport (i.e., bioirrigation, bioturbation) as the other major transport mechanism is much more complex. Observational data reflecting biotransport, from the German Bight for example, is scarce. We sampled the major sediment provinces of the German Bight repeatedly over the years from 2013 to 2019. By employing ex situ whole core incubations, we established the seasonal and spatial variability of macrofauna‐sustained benthic fluxes of oxygen and nutrients. A multivariate, partial least squares analysis identified faunal activity, in specifically bioturbation and bioirrigation, alongside temperature, as the most important drivers of oxygen and nutrient fluxes. Their combined effect explained 63% of the observed variability in oxygen fluxes, and 36–48% of variability in nutrient fluxes. Additional 10% of the observed variability of fluxes were explained by sediment type and the availability of plankton biomass. Based on our extrapolation by sediment provinces, we conclude that pore‐water advection and macrofaunal activity contributed equally to the total benthic oxygen uptake in the German Bight.
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
    Keywords: 551 ; southern North Sea ; coastal sediments ; macrofauna ; bioturbation ; bioirrigation ; organic matter turnover
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Ultraslow spreading ridges form the slowest divergent plate boundaries and exhibit distinct spreading processes in volcanically active magmatic sections and intervening amagmatic sections. Local seismicity studies of ultraslow spreading ridges until now cover only parts of segments and give insight into spreading processes at confined locations. Here, we present a microseismicity data set that allows to study spreading processes on the scale of entire segments. Our network of 26 ocean bottom seismometers covered around 160 km along axis of the ultraslow spreading Knipovich Ridge in the Greenland Sea and recorded earthquakes for a period of about 1 year. We find seismicity varying distinctly along‐axis. The maximum earthquake depths shallow over distances of 70 km toward the Logachev volcanic center. Here, swarm activity occurs in an otherwise aseismic zone. Melts may thus be guided along the subparallel topography of the lithosphere‐asthenosphere boundary toward major volcanic centers explaining the uneven along‐axis melt distribution typical for ultraslow ridges. Absence of shallow seismicity in the upper 8 km of the lithosphere with a band of deep seismicity underneath offsets presumably melt‐poor regions from magma richer sections. Aseismic deformation in these regions may indicate weakening of mantle rocks by alteration. We do not find obvious indications for major detachment faulting that characterizes magma‐poor spreading at some ultraslow spreading segments. The highly oblique spreading of Knipovich Ridge may be the reason for a fine‐scale segmentation of the seismic activity with zones of weak seismicity possibly indicating transform motion on short obliquely oriented faults.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: At mid‐ocean spreading ridges, tectonic plates drift apart and new seafloor is built by upwelling magma. The slowest spreading ridges do not receive enough magma to build new seafloor along the entire ridge. Rather, they show widely spaced volcanic centers with magma‐poor areas in‐between. The study of small earthquakes with seismometers placed on the seafloor has greatly helped to understand how new seafloor forms. Since such studies require substantial logistic effort, only confined ridge sections have been studied and spreading processes operating at segment‐scale remain poorly understood. In this study, we present for the first time observations of earthquakes covering several segments and one major volcanic center along the Knipovich Ridge in the Greenland Sea. Underneath the volcano, earthquake swarms and a gap in seismicity indicate recent magmatic activity. The maximum depth of earthquakes marks the thickness of the mechanically strong lithosphere. It shallows over 70 km toward the volcano such that melts can be channeled over large distances to the prominent volcanoes. Magma‐poor regions have deep earthquakes but do not show earthquake activity in the upper 8 km. We suppose that water reacts with the mantle rocks that become too weak to break in earthquakes.
    Description: Key Points: Magma‐poor sections are distinguished from magma‐rich sections by deeper hypocenters and an absence of shallow seismicity. Shallowing maximum earthquake depths over distances of 70 km suggest along‐axis melt focusing toward major volcanic centers. Major detachment faults on the highly oblique spreading Knipovich Ridge were not obvious in the observed seismicity.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Helmholtz Excellence Network POSY at the Alfred Wegener Institute
    Description: Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Poland
    Keywords: 551 ; amagmatic ; Knipovich Ridge ; mid‐ocean ridge ; segmentation ; seismicity ; ultraslow spreading
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  • 23
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    Unknown
    Akademie-Verlag, Berlin
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 8 NAT 1887
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Als vertiefende Fortführung des von H. STILLES 25 Jahre zuvor geschriebenen Werks „Grundfragen der vergleichenden Tektonik“ werden die Ergebnisse wohlbegründeter Einzelanalysen von Gebirgen oder besser von deren baugeschichtlicher Entwicklung miteinander in verständliche Beziehung zu gebracht. 0rogene Entwicklungsstadien werden für die Einzelgebirge herausgearbeitet. Da aus solchen Entwicklungsstadien sehr verschiedenen Alters die Kontinente zusammengewachsen sind, werden dazu auch die allgemeinen Strukturtypen der Festländer daraufhin untersucht, wie sie sich fort— und umbildeten, welche verschiedenen Stadien oder „Altersstufen ihres Lebens“ sie in ungeheueren Zeitspannen durchmessen haben. Weil aus dem Stoff der Ozeanuntergründe die Geosynklinalen hinabbauend Orogene schaffen und den Kontinenten anschmieden, bieten auch die Ozeanfluren einst und jetzt wichtige Hinweise auf Keimanlagen dar. Es wird eine Ontogenie der Erdrindenstrukturen angestrebt.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551.8 ; 551 ; Orogene als festländische Erdkrustentypen {Tektonik} ; Erdkruste {Geophysik} ; Orogenese ; Geologie ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 587
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  • 24
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Reimer, Berlin
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 64 A 3198
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Das vorliegende Werk ist das Ergebnis einer mehr als sechsmonatigen bodenkundlichen Erkundungsreise durch fast alle zugänglichen Teile von Südwestafrika (SWA) und analytischer Auswertung der mitgebrachten Bodenproben. Das vorliegende kleine Werk soll über die örtlichen Belange SWA's hinaus Erkenntnisse über Bodenbildung, Bodeneigenschaften und die Möglichkeiten der Bodennutzung auch in anderen ariden Gebieten mit ähnlichen Böden wie in SWA vermitteln. Nur durch ein gründliches Verständnis der Bodenbildung und Bodennutzung aus der besonderen geographischen Situation SWA's und anderer Trockengebiete heraus können schwere Schäden in der Bodennutzung und Bodenkultur vermieden werden. Ein eingehendes Studium des Wesens der betreffenden Böden verhindert, auch Illusionen über Intensivierung der Bodennutzung für SWA und andere Trockengebiete, etwa durch uferlose Bewässerungsprojekte, wie sie in populären Darstellungen und Presseartikeln ohne jede Kenntnis der notwendigen naturwissenschaftlichen Grundlagen propagiert und vielfach ohne Rücksicht auf die verheerenden Folgen in vielen Ländern auch in der Tat umgesetzt worden sind. Mit der Darstellung der Genetik, Beschreibung und Analytik der Hauptböden in SWA soll zum Vergleich mit Böden in Mitteleuropa angeregt werden und damit auch zum Verständnis der besonderen Eigenart der Böden eines Trockengebietes.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551 ; Südliches Afrika {Bodenkunde} ; Klimatische Geomorphologie ; Bodenkunde ; Namibia ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 168
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  • 25
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Schulz, Freiburg im Breisgau
    In:  SUB Göttingen | 8 Z GEN 177:26
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Zwischen dem Bau eines Gebirgslandes und seiner Morphogenese, d. h. der Entwicklung seiner Reliefeigentümlichkeiten, seines Formenstils, bestehen enge Beziehungen. Man kann keine morphologische Forschung betreiben, ohne den Gebirgsbau seines Arbeitsgebietes zu kennen. Bei den Untersuchungen auf der Insel Kreta, die 925/26 begonnen und 1956/57 weitergeführt wurden und die - nach der Problemseite hin - letztlich morphogenetischen Zielen gelten, war es mehr, als es in einem geologisch besser bekannten Gebiet nötig gewesen wäre, erforderlich, auch den geologischen Bau der Insel selbst zu untersuchen. Das gleichzeitige Angehen stratigraphischer bzw. tektonischer und morphogenetischer Fragen hat sich sogar nach beiden Richtungen hin als vorteilhaft erwiesen. Selbst die Erkenntnis des tektonischen Baues kann durch die Verwertung des morphologischen Beobaditungsbefundes wesentlich gefördert werden. Über einen Teil der Ergebnisse berichtet diese erweiterte Form eines in der Jahressitzung der Wissenschafilidıen Gesellschaft Freiburg am 6. Dezember 1957 gehaltenen Vortrages.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 551 ; Griechenland und griechische Inseln {Geologie} ; Gebirge ; Geologie ; Kreta ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: monograph_digi
    Format: 47
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Das Natürlich Geschlossene System (NGS) ist die Abstraktion der Geologie auf ein mathematisches Objekt, das ein lineares Kontinuum der Geologie vollständig durch zwei geometrische Relationen und die arithmetische Relation beschreibt.
    Description: research
    Keywords: 551 ; NGS mathematisches Objekt ; NGS, mathematisches Objekt,Geologie, geometrische Relation, arithmetische Relation, Proportionalität, proportional
    Language: German
    Type: article_first
    Format: 4
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: First reported in the 1960s, offshore freshened groundwater (OFG) has now been documented in most continental margins around the world. In this review we compile a database documenting OFG occurrences and analyze it to establish the general characteristics and controlling factors. We also assess methods used to map and characterize OFG, identify major knowledge gaps, and propose strategies to address them. OFG has a global volume of 1 × 106 km3; it predominantly occurs within 55 km of the coast and down to a water depth of 100 m. OFG is mainly hosted within siliciclastic aquifers on passive margins and recharged by meteoric water during Pleistocene sea level lowstands. Key factors influencing OFG distribution are topography‐driven flow, salinization via haline convection, permeability contrasts, and the continuity/connectivity of permeable and confining strata. Geochemical and stable isotope measurements of pore waters from boreholes have provided insights into OFG emplacement mechanisms, while recent advances in seismic reflection profiling, electromagnetic surveying, and numerical models have improved our understanding of OFG geometry and controls. Key knowledge gaps, such as the extent and function of OFG, and the timing of their emplacement, can be addressed by the application of isotopic age tracers, joint inversion of electromagnetic and seismic reflection data, and development of three‐dimensional hydrological models. We show that such advances, combined with site‐specific modeling, are necessary to assess the potential use of OFG as an unconventional source of water and its role in sub‐seafloor geomicrobiology.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: This review paper considers offshore freshened groundwater (OFG), which is water hosted in sediments and rocks below the seafloor, with a total dissolved solid concentration lower than seawater. We have compiled 〉300 records to demonstrate that freshened groundwater occurs offshore on most continents around the world and has a global volume of 1 × 106 km3. The majority of OFG was deposited when sea level was lower than today and is hosted in sandy sub‐seafloor layers that are located within 55 km of coasts in water depths less than 100 m. We present a range of geochemical, geophysical, and modeling approaches that have successfully been used to investigate OFG systems. We also propose approaches to address key scientific questions related to OFG, including whether it may be used as an unconventional source of potable water in coastal areas.
    Description: Key Points: Most known OFG is located at water depths of 〈100 m within 55 km of the coast, hosted in siliciclastic aquifers in passive margins. Key gaps in knowledge include the extent and function of OFG systems, as well as the mechanism and timing of emplacement. Isotopic tracers, jointly inverted geophysical data and 3‐D hydrological models can help address these knowledge gaps.
    Description: EC | H2020 | H2020 Priority Excellent Science | H2020 European Research Council (ERC) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010663
    Description: National Science Foundation (NSF) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001
    Keywords: 551 ; offshore freshened groundwater ; continental margin ; marine hydrogeology ; geochemistry ; geophysics ; modeling
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Description: Rock avalanches destroy and reshape landscapes in only a few minutes and are among the most hazardous processes on Earth. The surface morphology of rock avalanche deposits and the interaction with the underlying material are crucial for runout properties and reach. Water within the travel path is displaced, producing large impact waves and reducing friction, leading to long runouts. We hypothesize that the 0.2 km3 Holocene Eibsee rock avalanche from Mount Zugspitze in the Bavarian Alps overran and destroyed Paleolake Eibsee and left a unique sedimentological legacy of processes active during the landslide. We captured 9.5 km of electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) profiles across the rock avalanche deposits, with up to 120 m penetration depth and more than 34 000 datum points. The ERT profiles reveal up to ~50 m thick landslide debris, locally covering up to ~30 m of rock debris with entrained fine‐grained sediments on top of isolated remnants of decametre‐wide paleolake sediments. The ERT profiles allow us to infer processes involved in the interaction of the rock avalanche with bedrock, lake sediments, and morainal sediments, including shearing, bulging, and bulldozing. Complementary data from drilling, a gravel pit exposure, laboratory tests, and geomorphic features were used for ERT calibration. Sediments overrun by the rock avalanche show water‐escape structures. Based on all of these datasets, we reconstructed both position and size of the paleolake prior to the catastrophic event. Our reconstruction of the event contributes to process an understanding of the rock avalanche and future modelling and hazard assessment. Here we show how integrated geomorphic, geophysical, and sedimentological approaches can provide detailed insights into the impact of a rock avalanche on a lake. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
    Description: The Eibsee rock avalanche detached from Mount Zugspitze and impacted and destroyed Paleolake Eibsee. Paleolake Eibsee was larger than modern Lake Eibsee; the rock avalanche deposit covers the northern half of the paleolake. The complementary application of geomorphology, electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) and sedimentology allows for ERT calibration at seven different sites, where materials (rock avalanche, bedrock, lake clay, mixed sediments) and effects of the impact (bulldozing, bulging, overriding of secondary lobes, splashing of boulders) can be distinguished.
    Description: Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes e.V. (German National Academic Foundation): http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004350
    Keywords: 551 ; rock avalanche ; runout ; lake impact ; paleolake reconstruction ; ERT calibration ; water‐escape structures ; Northern Calcareous Alps ; Eibsee ; Zugspitze
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: Storm events lead to agricultural and urban runoff, to mobilization of contaminated particulate matter, and to input from combined sewer overflows into rivers. We conducted time‐resolved sampling during a storm event at the Ammer River, southwest Germany, which is representative of small river systems in densely populated areas with a temperate climate. Suspended particulate matter (SPM) and water from 2 sampling sites were separately analyzed by a multi‐analyte liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) method for 97 environmentally relevant organic micropollutants and with 2 in vitro bioassays. Oxidative stress response (AREc32) may become activated by various stressors covering a broad range of physicochemical properties and induction of aryl hydrocarbon receptor–chemical‐activated luciferase gene expression (AhR‐CALUX) by hydrophobic compounds such as dioxins and dioxin‐like molecules. Compound numbers, concentrations, their mass fluxes, and associated effect fluxes increased substantially during the storm event. Micropollutants detected in water and on SPM pointed toward inputs from combined sewer overflow (e.g., caffeine, paracetamol), urban runoff (e.g., mecoprop, terbutryn), and agricultural areas (e.g., azoxystrobin, bentazone). Particle‐facilitated transport of triphenylphosphate and tris(1‐chloro‐2‐propyl) phosphate accounted for up to 34 and 33% of the total mass flux even though SPM concentrations were 〈1 g L–1. Effect fluxes attributed to SPM were similar or higher than in the water phase. The important role of SPM‐bound transport emphasizes the need to consider not only concentrations but also mass and effect fluxes for surface water quality assessment and wastewater/stormwater treatment options. Environ Toxicol Chem 2021;40:88–99. © 2020 The Authors. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of SETAC.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; Storm event ; Organic micropollutants ; Chemical analysis ; In vitro bioassays ; Water quality
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Description: Strain localization in the lithosphere and the formation, evolution, and maintenance of resulting plate boundaries play a crucial role in plate tectonics and thermo‐chemical mantle convection. Previously activated lithospheric deformation zones often appear to maintain a “memory” of weakening, leading to tectonic inheritance within plate reorganizations including the Wilson cycle. Different mechanisms have been proposed to explain such strain localization, but it remains unclear which operates on what spatio‐temporal scales, and how to best incorporate them in large‐scale mantle convection models. Here, we analyze two candidates, (1), grain‐size sensitive rheology and, (2), damage‐style parameterizations of yield, stress which are sometimes used to approximate the former. Grain‐size reduction due to dynamic recrystallization can drive localization in the ductile domain, and grain growth provides a time‐dependent rheological hardening component potentially enabling the preservation of rheological heterogeneities. We compare the dynamic weakening and hardening effects as well as the timescales of strength evolution for a composite rheology including grain‐size dynamics with a pseudo‐plastic rheology including damage‐ (or “strain”‐) dependent weakening. We explore the implications of different proposed grain‐size evolution laws, and test to which extent strain‐dependent rheologies can mimic the weakening and hardening effects of the more complex micro‐physical behavior. Such an analysis helps to better understand the parallels and differences between various strain‐localization modeling approaches used in different tectonics and geodynamics communities. More importantly, our results contribute to efforts to identify the key ingredients of strain‐localization and damage hysteresis within plate tectonics and how to represent those in planetary‐scale modeling.
    Description: Key Points: Comparative analysis of strain localization and damage memory for grain‐size dependent and strain/damage parameterized rheologies. Identification of key ingredients of strain localization and damage hysteresis and how to represent those in planetary‐scale modeling. Plastic strain softening enables hysteresis with a memory duration similar to grain growth at lithospheric temperature conditions.
    Keywords: 551 ; damage memory ; grain‐size evolution ; strain‐dependent weakening ; strain localization
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: This paper investigates different methods for quantifying thaw subsidence using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) point clouds. Thaw subsidence is a slow (millimetre to centimetre per year) vertical displacement of the ground surface common in ice‐rich permafrost‐underlain landscapes. It is difficult to quantify thaw subsidence in tundra areas as they often lack stable reference frames. Also, there is no solid ground surface to serve as a basis for elevation measurements, due to a continuous moss–lichen cover. We investigate how an expert‐driven method improves the accuracy of benchmark measurements at discrete locations within two sites using multitemporal TLS data of a 1‐year period. Our method aggregates multiple experts’ determination of the ground surface in 3D point clouds, collected in a web‐based tool. We then compare this to the performance of a fully automated ground surface determination method. Lastly, we quantify ground surface displacement by directly computing multitemporal point cloud distances, thereby extending thaw subsidence observation to an area‐based assessment. Using the expert‐driven quantification as reference, we validate the other methods, including in‐situ benchmark measurements from a conventional field survey. This study demonstrates that quantifying the ground surface using 3D point clouds is more accurate than the field survey method. The expert‐driven method achieves an accuracy of 0.1 ± 0.1 cm. Compared to this, in‐situ benchmark measurements by single surveyors yield an accuracy of 0.4 ± 1.5 cm. This difference between the two methods is important, considering an observed displacement of 1.4 cm at the sites. Thaw subsidence quantification with the fully automatic benchmark‐based method achieves an accuracy of 0.2 ± 0.5 cm and direct point cloud distance computation an accuracy of 0.2 ± 0.9 cm. The range in accuracy is largely influenced by properties of vegetation structure at locations within the sites. The developed methods enable a link of automated quantification and expert judgement for transparent long‐term monitoring of permafrost subsidence. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
    Description: This paper investigates methods using terrestrial laser scanning point clouds for quantifying thaw subsidence in permafrost‐underlain tundra fully automatically and by including information collected from expert analysts. Results of the developed methods achieve higher accuracies compared to manual in‐situ measurements, which are found to vary from reference measurements in the magnitude of the actual ground surface displacement observed in a 1‐year period. A link of automated quantification and expert judgement can enable transparent long‐term monitoring of thaw subsidence.
    Description: German Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology (BMWi) and German Aerospace Center (DLR)
    Description: Heidelberg Graduate School of Mathematical and Computational Methods for the Sciences, University of Heidelberg http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003801
    Description: Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology (BMWi) and the German Aerospace Centre (DLR), Germany http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002765
    Keywords: 551 ; change analysis ; 3D geoinformation ; ground surface displacement ; permafrost monitoring ; multitemporal LiDAR
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The continental expression of global cooling during the Miocene Climate Transition in Central Asia is poorly documented, as the tectonically active setting complicates the correlation of Neogene regional and global climatic developments. This study presents new geochemical data (CaSO4 content, carbonate δ13C and δ18O) from the endorheic alluvial‐lacustrine Aktau succession (Ili Basin, south‐east Kazakhstan) combined with findings from the previously published facies evolution. Time series analysis revealed long‐eccentricity forcing of the paleohydrology throughout the entire succession, split into several facies‐dependent segments. Orbital tuning, constrained by new laser ablation U‐Pb dates and a preexisting magnetostratigraphy, places the succession in a 5.0 Ma long interval in the middle to late Miocene (15.6 to 10.6 Ma). The long‐term water accumulation in the Ili Basin followed the timing of the Miocene Climate Transition, suggesting increased precipitation in the catchment area in response to climate cooling and stronger westerly winds. This was paced by minima of the 2.4 Ma eccentricity cycle, which favored the establishment of a discharge playa (~14.3 Ma) and a perennial lake (12.6 to 11.8 Ma). Furthermore, low obliquity amplitudes (nodes) caused a transient weakening of the westerlies at ~13.7 to 13.5 Ma and at ~12.7 Ma, resulting in negative hydrological budgets and salinization. Flooding of the windward Ili Basin coeval with aridification in the leeward basins suggests that the Tian Shan was a climate boundary already in the middle Miocene. Our results emphasize the impact of climate fluctuations on the westerlies' strength and thus on Central Asian hydrology.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The global climate changed from an exceptional warm to a colder state in the middle Miocene epoch, representing a milestone in the evolution of today's climate. This study focuses on the, so far fragmentary, understanding of the Central Asian climate response to this global climate transition by investigating deposits of a former (salt) lake in the Ili Basin, southeast Kazakhstan. Regular sediment alternations represent cycles of low and high water level, overprinted by a long‐term lake expansion. Time series analysis of climate sensitive geochemical and environmental parameters, together with the determination of absolute rock ages, enabled the identification of sedimentary cycles (405 ka and 1.2 Ma long), which are equivalent to climate influencing variations of the Earth's orbit and tilt angle. We conclude that water level maxima are linked to periods of low seasonal climate differences reoccurring every 405 ka. The lake expansion is caused by more precipitation due to strengthened westerly winds, in response to global cooling. Westerly winds were transiently weakened during periods of low variability of the Earth's tilt angle, promoting high evaporation and salinization. Our results emphasize the impact of climate change on the westerlies' strength and thus on Central Asian moisture supply.
    Description: Key Points: The endorheic Miocene Ili Basin features orbital control of its hydrological budget by long eccentricity and obliquity amplitude modulation. Obliquity amplitude modulation affected the westerlies' strength during the Miocene Climate Transition. The Miocene global cooling led to strengthening of the westerlies reflected by groundwater accumulation and lake expansion in the Ili Basin.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; orbital forcing ; continental climate ; Central Asia ; Miocene cooling ; integrated stratigraphy
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: Large urban areas are typically characterized by a mosaic of different land uses, with contrasting mixes of impermeable and permeable surfaces that alter “green” and “blue” water flux partitioning. Understanding water partitioning in such heterogeneous environments is challenging but crucial for maintaining a sustainable water management during future challenges of increasing urbanization and climate warming. Stable isotopes in water have outstanding potential to trace the partitioning of rainfall along different flow paths and identify surface water sources. While isotope studies are an established method in many experimental catchments, surprisingly few studies have been conducted in urban environments. Here, we performed synoptic sampling of isotopes in precipitation, surface water and groundwater across the complex city landscape of Berlin, Germany, for a large ‐scale overview of the spatio‐temporal dynamics of urban water cycling. By integrating stable isotopes of water with other hydrogeochemical tracers we were able to identify contributions of groundwater, surface runoff during storm events and effluent discharge on streams with variable degrees of urbanization. We could also assess the influence of summer evaporation on the larger Spree and Havel rivers and local wetlands during the exceptionally warm and dry summers of 2018 and 2019. Our results demonstrate that using stable isotopes and hydrogeochemical data in urban areas has great potential to improve our understanding of water partitioning in complex, anthropogenically‐affected landscapes. This can help to address research priorities needed to tackle future challenges in cities, including the deterioration of water quality and increasing water scarcity driven by climate warming, by improving the understanding of time‐variant rainfall‐runoff behaviour of urban streams, incorporating field data into ecohydrological models, and better quantifying urban evapotranspiration and groundwater recharge.
    Description: Seasonal isotope and hydrogeochemical dynamics of surface‐ and groundwater in a large urban area following the dry summer of 2018, which was characterized by a temperature anomaly and precipitation deficit.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; ecohydrology ; hydrogeochemistry ; isotopes ; tracers ; urban green spaces ; urban hydrology
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2021-07-03
    Description: Soil loss caused by erosion has enormous economic and social impacts. Splash effects of rainfall are an important driver of erosion processes; however, effects of vegetation on splash erosion are still not fully understood. Splash erosion processes under vegetation are investigated by means of throughfall kinetic energy (TKE). Previous studies on TKE utilized a heterogeneous set of plant and canopy parameters to assess vegetation's influence on erosion by rain splash but remained on individual plant‐ or plot‐levels. In the present study we developed a method for the area‐wide estimation of the influence of vegetation on TKE using remote sensing methods. In a literature review we identified key vegetation variables influencing splash erosion and developed a conceptual model to describe the interaction of vegetation and raindrops. Our model considers both amplifying and protecting effect of vegetation layers according to their height above the ground and aggregates them into a new indicator: the Vegetation Splash Factor (VSF). It is based on the proportional contribution of drips per layer, which can be calculated via the vegetation cover profile from airborne LiDAR datasets. In a case study, we calculated the VSF using a LiDAR dataset for La Campana National Park in central Chile. The studied catchment comprises a heterogeneous mosaic of vegetation layer combinations and types and is hence well suited to test the approach. We calculated a VSF map showing the relation between vegetation structure and its expected influence on TKE. Mean VSF was 1.42, indicating amplifying overall effect of vegetation on TKE that was present in 81% of the area. Values below 1 indicating a protective effect were calculated for 19% of the area. For future work, we recommend refining the weighting factor by calibration to local conditions using field‐reference data and comparing the VSF with TKE field measurements. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
    Description: The Vegetation Splash Factor maps the amplification or reduction of rain‐fall kinetic energy based on the three‐dimensional vegetation structure. The presented approach allows the area‐wide application based on aerial lidar point clouds and can improve the representation of vegetation in erosion models. This study features a literature review and a case study documenting the development of the new approach.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; splash erosion ; throughfall kinetic energy ; remote sensing ; LiDAR ; Vegetation Splash Factor
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Riverine species have adapted to their environment, particularly to the hydrological regime. Hydrological models and the knowledge of species preferences are used to predict the impact of hydrological changes on species. Inevitably, hydrological model performance impacts how species are simulated. From the example of macroinvertebrates in a lowland and a mountainous catchment, we investigate the impact of hydrological model performance and the choice of the objective function based on a set of 36 performance metrics for predicting species occurrences. Besides species abundance, we use the simulated community structure for an ecological assessment as applied for the Water Framework Directive. We investigate when a hydrological model is sufficiently calibrated to depict species abundance. For this, we postulate that performance is not sufficient when ecological assessments based on the simulated hydrology are significantly different (analysis of variance, p 〈 .05) from the ecological assessments based on observations. The investigated range of hydrological model performance leads to considerable variability in species abundance in the two catchments. In the mountainous catchment, links between objective functions and the ecological assessment reveal a stronger dependency of the species on the discharge regime. In the lowland catchment, multiple stressors seem to mask the dependence of the species on discharge. The most suitable objective functions to calibrate the model for species assessments are the ones that incorporate hydrological indicators used for the species prediction.
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Horizon 2020 Framework Programme http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010661
    Keywords: 551.48 ; ecological assessment ; hydrological modelling ; model optimization ; species abundance ; species preferences
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2021-07-20
    Description: We present an Arctic ocean–sea ice reanalysis covering the period 2007–2016 based on the adjoint approach of the Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean (ECCO) consortium. The spatiotemporal variation of Arctic sea surface temperature (SST), sea ice concentration (SIC), and sea ice thickness (SIT) is substantially improved after the assimilation of ocean and sea ice observations. By assimilating additional World Ocean Atlas 2018 (WOA18) hydrographic data, the freshwater content of the Canadian Basin becomes closer to the observations and translates into changes of the ocean circulation and of transports through the Fram and Davis straits. This new reanalysis compares well with previous filter‐based (TOPAZ4) and nudging‐based (PIOMAS) reanalyses regarding SIC and SST. Benefiting from using the adjoint of the sea ice model, our reanalysis is superior to the ECCOv4r4 product considering sea ice parameters. However, the mean state and variability of the freshwater content and the transport properties of our reanalysis remain different from TOPAZ4 and ECCOv4r4, likely because of a lack of hydrographic observations.
    Description: Arctic sea ice has declined rapidly and reached a record minimum in September, 2012. Arctic ocean–sea ice reanalyses are invaluable sources for understanding the Arctic sea ice changes. We produce an Arctic ocean–sea ice reanalysis of the years 2007–2016 using the adjoint method. The reanalysis is dynamically consistent without introducing unphysical mass and energy discontinuities as in filter‐based data assimilation methods.
    Keywords: 551 ; adjoint method ; data assimilation ; ocean–sea ice reanalysis
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Die Relativierung des mathematischen Begriffs der direkten Proportionalität führt in der Geologie zur Darstellung der geometrischen und der arithmetischen Relation und zur Begründung des geologischen Binärsystems. Die mathematischen Sonderfälle des geologischen Binärsystems stellen das Wesen räumlicher Zusammenhänge in der Geologie dar. Die Anwendung der linearen Regression verifiziert die theoretischen Erkenntnisse durch die Berechnung faktischer Daten im geologischen Bau der Altmark.
    Description: research
    Keywords: 551 ; Mathematische und statitische Geologie ; Proportionalität ; proportional, geologisches Binärsystem ; arithmetische Relation ; geometrische Relation
    Language: German
    Type: article_first
    Format: 4
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Narrow baroclinic fronts are observed in the surface mixed layer (SML) of the Baltic Sea following an autumn storm. The fronts are subjected to hydrodynamic instabilities that lead to submesoscale and turbulent motions while restratifying the SML. We describe observations from an ocean glider that combines currents, stratification, and turbulence microstructure in a high horizontal resolution (150–300 m) to analyze such fronts. The observations show that SML turbulence is strongly modulated by frontal activity, acting as both source and sink for turbulent kinetic energy. In particular, a direct route to turbulent dissipation within the front is linked to shear instability caused by elevated nongeostrophic shear. The turbulent dissipation of frontal kinetic energy is large enough that it could be a significant influence in the evolution of the front and demonstrates that small‐scale turbulence can act as a significant sink of submesoscale kinetic energy.
    Description: Key Points: An autonomous ocean glider observed turbulence, currents, and stratification in surface mixed layer submesoscale fronts following a storm. Submesoscale fronts provide both a damping and generation of surface mixed layer turbulence. Shear instability within the front could represent a significant energy transfer in frontal evolution.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Helmholtz Association http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001656
    Keywords: 551 ; ocean turbulence ; submesoscales ; physical oceanography ; ocean mixing
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: This study presents a meta‐analysis of radiocarbon ages for the environs of Göbekli Tepe – one of the oldest monumental structures worldwide – using cumulative probability functions to diachronically assess phases of geomorphodynamic activity as controlled by natural or anthropogenic drivers. We employ sediment cascades as a heuristic framework to study the complex responses of the geomorphological system to various triggers at local to supra‐regional scales. Possible triggers include climatic variability as documented by supra‐regional hydroclimatic proxy data, regional demographic trends, and local to regional socioeconomic developments such as the emergence of sedentism or the introduction and dispersal of livestock herding. Our results show that phases of intensified geomorphodynamic activity occurred between ca. 7.4–7.0 and 5.8–3.3 ka BP. These phases roughly coincide with phases of population growth in southern Turkey and climatic variations in Turkey and the Levant. The phase between ca. 5.8–3.3 ka BP also corresponds to the time when organized agriculture and the seeder plough were introduced. Also, the identified phases are in agreement with the general trend of varying geomorphodynamic activity in the Eastern Mediterranean as driven by human impact and climatic change. However, neither the Younger Dryas–Holocene transition nor the development of herding during the Pre‐Pottery Neolithic left a clear signature. We demonstrate how the different depositional environments in the studied landscape compartments vary with respect to their spatiotemporal coverage and discuss challenges when trying to understand processes that once shaped landscapes of past societies. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
    Description: Geomorphodynamic activity in the surroundings of the Early Neolithic hilltop site Göbekli Tepe is significantly intensified between ca. 7.4–7.0 and 5.8–3.3 ka BP, reflecting demographic, sociocultural, and climatic variations. The studied landscape compartments form a sediment cascade whose different depositional environments vary with respect to their spatiotemporal coverage. Preservation of colluvial deposits in upland catchments represents a key challenge when studying ancient hilltop sites such as Göbekli Tepe in semi‐arid environments like southeastern Anatolia.
    Keywords: 551 ; Holocene geomorphodynamic activity ; cumulative probability functions of 14C ages ; human–environment interactions ; geoarchaeology ; sediment connectivity
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Large rock slope failures play a pivotal role in long‐term landscape evolution and are a major concern in land use planning and hazard aspects. While the failure phase and the time immediately prior to failure are increasingly well studied, the nature of the preparation phase remains enigmatic. This knowledge gap is due, to a large degree, to difficulties associated with instrumenting high mountain terrain and the local nature of classic monitoring methods, which does not allow integral observation of large rock volumes. Here, we analyse data from a small network of up to seven seismic sensors installed during July–October 2018 (with 43 days of data loss) at the summit of the Hochvogel, a 2592 m high Alpine peak. We develop proxy time series indicative of cyclic and progressive changes of the summit. Modal analysis, horizontal‐to‐vertical spectral ratio data and end‐member modelling analysis reveal diurnal cycles of increasing and decreasing coupling stiffness of a 260,000 m3 large, instable rock volume, due to thermal forcing. Relative seismic wave velocity changes also indicate diurnal accumulation and release of stress within the rock mass. At longer time scales, there is a systematic superimposed pattern of stress increased over multiple days and episodic stress release within a few days, expressed in an increased emission of short seismic pulses indicative of rock cracking. Our data provide essential first order information on the development of large‐scale slope instabilities towards catastrophic failure. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
    Description: We use a small seismic networks on the summit of the Hochvogel to record continuous and discrete failure preparation signals of a large‐scale slope instability. Reversible and irreversible mechanisms at the diurnal, multi‐day and seasonal scale are quantified. We infer an early stage of stick slip motion and thermally forced diurnal stress release and rock mass stiffness changes.
    Keywords: 551 ; environmental seismology ; fatigue ; fundamental frequency ; HVSR ; mass wasting ; mountain geomorphology ; natural hazard ; noise cross correlation ; seismic monitoring ; slope failure
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: Chronological uncertainty complicates attempts to use radiocarbon dates as proxies for processes such as human population growth/decline, forest fires and marine ingression. Established approaches involve turning databases of radiocarbon‐date densities into single summary proxies that cannot fully account for chronological uncertainty. Here, I use simulated data to explore an alternative Bayesian approach that instead models the data as what they are, namely radiocarbon‐dated event counts. The approach involves assessing possible event‐count sequences by sampling radiocarbon date densities and then applying a Markov Chain Monte Carlo method to estimate the parameters of an appropriate count‐based regression model. The regressions based on individual sampled sequences were placed in a multilevel framework, which allowed for the estimation of hyperparameters that account for chronological uncertainty in individual event times. Two processes were used to produce simulated data. One represented a simple monotonic change in event‐counts and the other was based on a real palaeoclimate proxy record. In both cases, the method produced estimates that had the correct sign and were consistently biased towards zero. These results indicate that the approach is widely applicable and could form the basis of a new class of quantitative models for use in exploring long‐term human and environmental processes.
    Keywords: 551 ; archaeology ; Bayesian regression ; palaeoclimatology ; radiocarbon dating ; radiocarbon‐dated event count (REC) model
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Understanding the hydrologic connectivity between kettle holes and shallow groundwater, particularly in reaction to the highly variable local meteorological conditions, is of paramount importance for tracing water in a hydro(geo)logically complex landscape and thus for integrated water resource management. This article is aimed at identifying the dominant hydrological processes affecting the kettle holes' water balance and their interactions with the shallow groundwater domain in the Uckermark region, located in the north‐east of Germany. For this reason, based on the stable isotopes of oxygen (δ18O) and hydrogen (δ2H), an isotopic mass balance model was employed to compute the evaporative loss of water from the kettle holes from February to August 2017. Results demonstrated that shallow groundwater inflow may play the pivotal role in the processes taking part in the hydrology of the kettle holes in the Uckermark region. Based on the calculated evaporation/inflow (E/I) ratios, most of the kettle holes (86.7%) were ascertained to have a partially open, flow‐through‐dominated system. Moreover, we identified an inverse correlation between E/I ratios and the altitudes of the kettle holes. The same holds for electrical conductivity (EC) and the altitudes of the kettle holes. In accordance with the findings obtained from this study, a conceptual model explaining the interaction between the shallow groundwater and the kettle holes of Uckermark was developed. The model exhibited that across the highest altitudes, the recharge kettle holes are dominant, where a lower ratio of E/I and a lower EC was detected. By contrast, the lowest topographical depressions represent the discharge kettle holes, where a higher ratio of E/I and EC could be identified. The kettle holes existing in between were categorized as flow‐through kettle holes through which the recharge takes place from one side and discharge from the other side.
    Description: The prevailing hydrological processes influencing the kettle holes in the Uckermark region in the north‐east of Germany were investigated using the stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen. The possible contribution of the groundwater inflow into the kettle holes was characterized via evaporation/inflow (E/I) ratios. A conceptual model portraying hydrologic connectivity between different types of kettle holes and in relation their adjacent shallow groundwater domain was provided. image
    Keywords: 551.48 ; evaporation ; groundwater inflow ; kettle hole ; stable water isotope ; surface–groundwater interactions ; Uckermark region ; kettle holes ; hydrological processes
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Evaporation experiments are frequently used to determine soil hydraulic properties. We simulated laboratory evaporation experiments with a coupled water, vapor, and heat flow model which includes the surface energy balance. The simulations are performed with different parametrizations of soil hydraulic properties with a focus on soil hydraulic conductivity in medium to dry soil. In previous studies, conductivity in this moisture range has been shown to be influenced not only by water flow in completely filled capillaries (“capillary flow”) but also by film and corner flow (“film flow”). Our forward simulations highlight the strong influence of an increased conductivity caused by film flow on evaporation rate, cumulative water loss, soil temperature, and soil water pressure head during evaporation. Film flow extends the duration of stage‐1 evaporation and increases the evaporation rate during stage‐2 even if all other physical material properties are the same. The simulated data were used in inverse simulations with the Richards equation to test whether soil hydraulic properties can be identified without bias. This is a priori questionable because the Richards equation is an isothermal flow model and simplifies the true physics considerably, by ignoring thermal liquid and thermal vapor fluxes, as well as temperature effects on the hydraulic properties. Our results show that the identification of the water retention and hydraulic conductivity curves is bias‐free for media with and without film flow. We conclude that the Richards equation can be safely used to identify hydraulic properties from evaporation experiments by inverse modeling.
    Description: Key Points: Coupled modeling of water, vapor, and heat flow shows that film‐flow extends stage‐1 and changes the evaporation dynamics during stage‐2. Soil hydraulic properties identified by inverse modeling with the Richards equation are unbiased despite strong temperature dynamics. Inadequate models for soil hydraulic properties lead to a grossly wrong prediction of the pressure head in medium to dry soils.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; evaporation ; hydraulic conductivity ; film flow ; soil hydraulic properties ; vapor flow ; water retention curve
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: The Laacher See volcano (LSV) is located at the western margin of the Neuwied Basin, the central part of the Middle Rhine Basin of Germany. Its paroxysmal Plinian eruption c. 13 ka ago (Laacher See event; LSE) deposited a complex tephra sequence in the Neuwied Basin, whilst the distal ashes became one of the most important chronostratigraphic markers in Central Europe. However, some other impacts on landscape formation have thus far been largely neglected, such as buried gully structures in the proximity of the LSV. In this contribution, we map and discuss the spatial extent of these landforms at the site Lungenkärchen c. 4 km south of the LSV based on geophysical prospection as well as contrasting pedo‐sedimentary characteristics of the gully infill (particle‐size distribution, bulk‐sediment density, thin‐section analysis, saturated hydraulic conductivity) and the surrounding soils and tephra layers. These data are combined with a luminescence‐ and carbon‐14 (14C)‐based age model that relates them to the LSE. It is demonstrated how these gullies seem to have been formed and rapidly infilled by rainfall and surface discharge both during and subsequent to the eruptive phase, with modern analog processes documented for the 1980 Mount St Helens eruption (Washington State, USA). Given the density of the gullies at the site and their deviating pedo‐sedimentary properties compared to the surrounding soils, we propose a significant influence on agricultural production in the proximity of the LSV, which remains to be tested in future studies. Finally, in contrast, gullies of similar lateral and vertical dimensions identified in post‐LSE reworked loess and tephra deposits of the Wingertsbergwand (close to the main study site and proximal to the LSV) have shown to be unrelated to the LSE and can either be attributed to periglacial processes at the Younger Dryas‐Preboreal transition or to linear incision during the early Holocene.
    Description: Linear subsurface gullies were identified close to the Laacher See volcano in magnetometer and ground‐penetrating radar prospection. Optically stimulated luminescence data indicate they incised during or shortly after the Laacher See event 13 ka ago. Pedo‐sedimentary characteristics of the gully infill differs from the surrounding regosols and brown earths, possibly influencing regional agricultural land use. image
    Description: University of Cologne http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100008001
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; 554.3 ; Eifel ; ground‐penetrating radar (GPR) ; gully erosion ; Laacher See event (LSE) ; luminescence dating ; magnetometer prospection ; micromorphology ; tephra ; Wingertsbergwand
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: To evaluate the present sea ice changes in a longer‐term perspective, the knowledge of sea ice variability on preindustrial and geological time scales is essential. For the interpretation of proxy reconstructions it is necessary to understand the recent signals of different sea ice proxies from various regions. We present 260 new sediment surface samples collected in the (sub‐)Arctic Oceans that were analyzed for specific sea ice (IP25) and open‐water phytoplankton biomarkers (brassicasterol, dinosterol, and highly branched isoprenoid [HBI] III). This new biomarker data set was combined with 615 previously published biomarker surface samples into a pan‐Arctic database. The resulting pan‐Arctic biomarker and sea ice index (PIP25) database shows a spatial distribution correlating well with the diverse modern sea ice concentrations. We find correlations of PBIP25, PDIP25, and PIIIIP25 with spring and autumn sea ice concentrations. Similar correlations with modern sea ice concentrations are observed in Baffin Bay. However, the correlations of the PIP25 indices with modern sea ice concentrations differ in Fram Strait from those of the (sub‐)Arctic data set, which is likely caused by region‐specific differences in sea ice variability, nutrient availability, and other environmental conditions. The extended (sea ice) biomarker database strengthens the validity of biomarker sea ice reconstructions in different Arctic regions and shows how different sea ice proxies combined may resolve specific seasonal sea ice conditions.
    Description: Key Points: IP25 provides information about modern sea ice cover on a (sub‐)Arctic‐wide scale. All PIP25 indices correlate well with spring and autumn sea ice concentrations on a (sub‐)Arctic‐wide scale. The combination of biomarker data and dinoflagellate cysts may yield an approach to reconstruct sea ice conditions during different seasons.
    Description: EC | Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100011102
    Description: European Research Council http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000781
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; biomarker ; IP25 ; PIP25 ; sea ice ; Baffin Bay ; Fram Strait
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Predictions of floods, droughts, and fast drought‐flood transitions are required at different time scales to develop management strategies targeted at minimizing negative societal and economic impacts. Forecasts at daily and seasonal scale are vital for early warning, estimation of event frequency for hydraulic design, and long‐term projections for developing adaptation strategies to future conditions. All three types of predictions—forecasts, frequency estimates, and projections—typically treat droughts and floods independently, even though both types of extremes can be studied using related approaches and have similar challenges. In this review, we (a) identify challenges common to drought and flood prediction and their joint assessment and (b) discuss tractable approaches to tackle these challenges. We group challenges related to flood and drought prediction into four interrelated categories: data, process understanding, modeling and prediction, and human–water interactions. Data‐related challenges include data availability and event definition. Process‐related challenges include the multivariate and spatial characteristics of extremes, non‐stationarities, and future changes in extremes. Modeling challenges arise in frequency analysis, stochastic, hydrological, earth system, and hydraulic modeling. Challenges with respect to human–water interactions lie in establishing links to impacts, representing human–water interactions, and science communication. We discuss potential ways of tackling these challenges including exploiting new data sources, studying droughts and floods in a joint framework, studying societal influences and compounding drivers, developing continuous stochastic models or non‐stationary models, and obtaining stakeholder feedback. Tackling one or several of these challenges will improve flood and drought predictions and help to minimize the negative impacts of extreme events. This article is categorized under: Science of Water 〉 Science of Water
    Description: Drought and flood modeling and prediction challenges related to (a) data, (b) process understanding, (c) modeling and prediction, and (d) human–water interactions. image
    Description: Swiss National Science Foundation http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001711
    Keywords: 551.48 ; droughts ; floods ; forecasting ; hydrologic extremes ; prediction
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: The warming of rock permafrost affects mechanical stability and hydro‐cryostatic pressures in rock walls. The coincident decrease in slope stability frequently affects infrastructure by creep and subsidence and promotes the generation of rockfalls and rockslides. The increasing hazard posed by warming permafrost rock walls and the growing exposure of infrastructure and individuals create a demand for quantitative monitoring methods. Laboratory‐calibrated electrical resistivity tomography provides a sensitive record for frozen versus unfrozen bedrock, presumably being the most accurate quantitative monitoring technique in permafrost areas where boreholes are not available. The data presented here are obtained at the permafrost‐affected and unstable Steintaelli Ridge at 3100 m a.s.l. and allow the quantification of permafrost changes in the longest electrical resistivity tomography time series in steep bedrock. Five parallel transects across the rock ridge have been measured five times each, between 2006 and 2019, with similar hardware. Field measurements were calibrated using temperature‐resistivity laboratory measurements of water‐saturated rock samples from the site. A 3D time‐lapse inversion scheme is applied in the boundless electrical resistivity tomography (BERT) software for the inversion of the data. To assess the initial data quality, we compare the effect of data filtering and the robustness of final results with three different filters and two time‐lapse models. We quantify the volumetric permafrost distribution in the bedrock and its degradation in the last decades. Our data show mean monthly air temperatures to increase from −3.4°C to −2.6°C between 2005‒2009 and 2015‒2019, respectively, while simultaneously permafrost volume degraded on average from 6790 m3 (±640 m3 rock in phase‐transition range) in 2006 to 3880 m3 (±1000 m3) in 2019. For the first time, we provide a quantitative measure of permafrost degradation in unstable bedrock by using a temperature‐calibrated 4D electrical resistivity tomography. Our approach represents a fundamental benchmark for the evaluation of climate change effects on bedrock permafrost.
    Keywords: 622.15 ; 551 ; Climate change ; ERT ; Geohazard ; 3D
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: The sediment succession of Lake Emanda in the Yana Highlands was investigated to reconstruct the regional late Quaternary climate and environmental history. Hydro‐acoustic data obtained during a field campaign in 2017 show laminated sediments in the north‐western and deepest (up to ̃15 m) part of the lake, where a ̃6‐m‐long sediment core (Co1412) was retrieved. The sediment core was studied with a multi‐proxy approach including sedimentological and geochemical analyses. The chronology of Co1412 is based on 14C AMS dating on plant fragments from the upper 4.65 m and by extrapolation suggests a basal age of c. 57 cal. ka BP. Pronounced changes in the proxy data indicate that early Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 was characterized by unstable environmental conditions associated with short‐term temperature and/or precipitation variations. This interval was followed by progressively colder and likely drier conditions during mid‐MIS 3. A lake‐level decline between 32.0 and 19.1 cal. ka BP was presumably related to increased continentality and dry conditions peaking during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). A subsequent rise in lake level could accordingly have been the result of increased rainfall, probably in combination with seasonally high meltwater input. A milder or wetter Lateglacial climate increased lake productivity and vegetation growth, the latter stabilizing the catchment and reducing clastic input into the lake. The Bølling‐Allerød warming, Younger Dryas cooling and Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM) are indicated by distinct changes in the environment around Lake Emanda. Unstable, but similar‐to‐present‐day climatic and environmental conditions have persisted since c. 5 cal. ka BP. The results emphasize the highly continental setting of the study site and therefore suggest that the climate at Lake Emanda was predominantly controlled by changes in summer insolation, global sea level, and the extent of ice sheets over Eurasia, which influenced atmospheric circulation patterns.
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung
    Keywords: 551 ; Siberia ; Lake Emanda ; late Quaternary ; climate history ; environmental history
    Type: article
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Karstic groundwater systems are often investigated by a combination of environmental or artificial tracers. One of the major downsides of tracer‐based methods is the limited availability of tracer measurements, especially in data sparse regions. This study presents an approach to systematically evaluate the information content of the available data, to interpret predictions of tracer concentration from machine learning algorithms, and to compare different machine learning algorithms to obtain an objective assessment of their applicability for predicting environmental tracers. There is a large variety of machine learning approaches, but no clear rules exist on which of them to use for this specific problem. In this study, we formulated a framework to choose the appropriate algorithm for this purpose. We compared four different well‐established machine learning algorithms (Support Vector Machines, Extreme Learning Machines, Decision Trees, and Artificial Neural Networks) in seven different karst springs in France for their capability to predict tracer concentrations, in this case SO42− and NO3−, from discharge. Our study reveals that the machine learning algorithms are able to predict some characteristics of the tracer concentration, but not the whole variance, which is caused by the limited information content in the discharge data. Nevertheless, discharge is often the only information available for a catchment, so the ability to predict at least some characteristics of the tracer concentrations from discharge time series to fill, for example, gaps or increase the database for consecutive analyses is a helpful application of machine learning in data sparse regions or for historic databases.
    Description: Key Points: Application of entropy and mutual information reveals the information content gap between discharge derived from joint tracer and discharge analyses. Understanding the information content of hydrological data enhances the interpretation of machine learning prediction results. Similarities in information could be used for regionalization of catchment characteristics of karst‐affected catchments.
    Description: German Research Foundation (DFG
    Keywords: 551.48 ; Machine learning ; entropy ; information content ; karst ; hydrograph separation
    Type: article
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Stable isotopes (δ18O, δD) of wedge ice hold potential to reconstruct past winter climate conditions. Here, we present records of the marine isotope stages (MIS) 3 and 2 including the last Glacial maximum (LGM) from Bol’shoy Lyakhovsky Island (NE Siberia). MIS 3 wedge ice dated from 52 to 40 Kyr b2k varies between −32 and −29‰ in δ18O. Colder LGM conditions are implied by δ18O of −37‰ around 25 Kyr b2k. Similar Deuterium excess values indicate comparable moisture sources during MIS 3 and MIS 2. Regional LGM climate reconstructions depend on the seasonal resolution of the proxies and model simulations. Our wedge‐ice record reflects coldest winters during global minima in atmospheric CO2 and sea level. The extreme LGM winter cooling is not represented in model projections of global LGM climate where West Beringia shows noticeably little cooling or even warming in mean annual temperatures compared to the late Holocene.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The geochemical signature of stable isotopes of permafrost ground ice preserves information about past climate conditions. A common type of ground ice is ice wedges that form by the freezing of snowmelt in frost cracks developed on the ground and grow over time in width and length. Winter temperatures, and the type (snow or rain) and origin (regional moisture source) of winter precipitation largely control the stable isotope characteristics of oxygen and hydrogen in ice wedges. Here, we study the stable isotope composition of ice wedges from the last glacial period in northeastern Siberia. Plant and animal fossils that were found within the ice and in the surrounding frozen ground provide age control spanning from more than 50 to 24 thousand years ago when the ice wedges grew. The coldest winter conditions are inferred from a New Siberian Island ice‐wedge site as indicated by the lowest stable isotope values of all our sampled ice wedges at times, corresponding to the last Glacial maximum around 25 thousand years ago.
    Description: Key Points: Pronounced west Beringian MIS 3 to MIS 2 winter cooling delineated in wedge‐ice stable isotope signatures. Coldest winters reflected by exceptionally depleted values of −37.4 ± 0.4‰ in δ18O and −292 ± 3‰ in δD in LGM wedge ice. LGM wedge ice directly radiocarbon‐dated to 25,890 and 23,980 yr b2k.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
    Keywords: 551 ; ground ice ; last Glacial maximum ; permafrost ; radiocarbon ; Siberia ; stable isotopes
    Type: article
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2021-06-16
    Description: Information on water balance components such as evapotranspiration and groundwater recharge are crucial for water management. Due to differences in physical conditions, but also due to limited budgets, there is not one universal best practice, but a wide range of different methods with specific advantages and disadvantages. In this study, we propose an approach to quantify actual evapotranspiration, groundwater recharge and water inflow, i.e. precipitation and irrigation, that considers the specific conditions of irrigated agriculture in warm, arid environments. This approach does not require direct measurements of precipitation or irrigation quantities and is therefore suitable for sites with an uncertain data basis. For this purpose, we combine soil moisture and energy balance monitoring, remote sensing data analysis and numerical modelling using Hydrus. Energy balance data and routine weather data serve to estimate ET0. Surface reflectance data from satellite images (Sentinel‐2) are used to derive leaf area indices, which help to partition ET0 into energy limited evaporation and transpiration. Subsequently, first approximations of water inflow are derived based on observed soil moisture changes. These inflow estimates are used in a series of forward simulations that produce initial estimates of drainage and ETact, which in turn help improve the estimate of water inflow. Finally, the improved inflow estimates are incorporated into the model and then a parameter optimization is performed using the observed soil moisture as the reference figure. Forward simulations with calibrated soil parameters result in final estimates for ETact and groundwater recharge. The presented method is applied to an agricultural test site with a crop rotation of cotton and wheat in Punjab, Pakistan. The final model results, with an RMSE of 2.2% in volumetric water content, suggest a cumulative ETact and groundwater recharge of 769 and 297 mm over a period of 281 days, respectively. The total estimated water inflow accounts for 946 mm, of which 77% originates from irrigation.
    Description: Approach to quantify ETact, GWR and water inflow that considers the specific conditions of irrigated agriculture in warm, acid environments. It combines soil moisture and energy balance monitoring, remote sensing data analysing data analysis and numerical modelling using Hydrus. The final model results suggest that GWR accounts for one third of the total water inflow, of which 77% originates from irrigations. image
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
    Keywords: 551 ; actual evapotranspiration ; ground heat flux ; groundwater recharge ; Hydrus ; irrigation ; net radiation ; Sentinel‐2 ; soil moisture
    Type: article
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Bare‐soil evaporation involves coupled flow of liquid water, water vapor, and heat. As evaporation results in non‐isothermal conditions in the soil, the temperature dependence of transport properties and thermal fluxes of water and vapor must be accounted for. In a companion paper, we showed that the Richards equation, that is, a single‐phase flow model assuming isothermal conditions, is applicable to accurately determine soil hydraulic properties including the medium to dry range from evaporation experiments by inverse modeling. This is warranted if pressure head data across a wide moisture range, that is, from almost saturated to almost air‐dry, are used in the objective function and a suitable parameterization of the hydraulic conductivity function including vapor and non‐capillary flow is used. In this article, we confirm the theoretical results by examining real evaporation experiments, in which we measured the temporal dynamics of evaporation rate, soil temperature, and pressure head in laboratory soil columns. Pressure head was measured with mini‐tensiometers and relative humidity sensors. The measurements were evaluated by inverse modeling with the Richards equation assuming isothermal conditions and ambient temperature in the soil. Our results for a sandy and a loamy soil show that the observed transient water and vapor dynamics in the drying soil could be accurately matched, provided the hydraulic conductivity curve considered isothermal vapor diffusion and film flow. These components dominate hydraulic conductivity in the medium to dry soil moisture range and were uniquely identified in agreement with the theoretical analysis in the companion article.
    Description: Key Points: Identification of soil hydraulic properties across the full moisture range by inverse modeling of evaporation experiments. Advanced instrumentation with tensiometers and relative humidity sensors allows to identify hydraulic conductivity in medium to dry soil. Evaporation experiments can be modeled correctly with Richards’ equation, provided hydraulic properties account for vapor and film flow.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; Evaporation ; hydraulic conductivity ; inverse modeling ; soil hydraulic properties ; vadose zone ; water retention curve
    Type: article
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: The separation between Australia and Antarctica occurred during the final stages of the break‐up of Pangea. Reconstructions of the rifting of the Australian plate away from Antarctica show fast spreading rates since Mid‐Eocene (45 Ma). These reconstructions can be used to understand and quantify the forces driving the Australia/Antarctica separation, and to test hypotheses on mechanisms that may be of shallow (i.e., lithosphere) or deep (i.e., mantle) origin. Analytical calculations indicate that plate‐boundary forces are highly unlikely to be a plausible candidate to explain such a separation. Thus, we use a recently developed global coupled models of mantle and lithosphere dynamics, here we show that this event, whose kinematics are reproduced in our models within the bounds of the reconstruction uncertainties, owes to a significant degree to the pressure‐driven asthenospheric Poiseuille flow associated with the mantle buoyancy field inherited from viscous circulation history throughout the Mesozoic. On the contrary, in simulations when such a buoyancy field is replaced by another one resulting from a random distribution of mantle temperature–thus not representative of Earth’s mantle circulation history–the rapid northward motion of Australia does not occur. Similarly, suppressing contemporaneous plate‐boundary processes (i.e., subduction of the Pacific ridge at the Aleutians and healing of the India‐Australia ridge) from our models does not have a noticeable effect on the Australia‐Antarctica kinematics. Thus, a pressure‐driven Poiseuille mantle flow must be considered, at least in this example and possible elsewhere, as a main driver of plate tectonics.
    Description: Key Points: Reconstructions of the rifting of the Australian plate away from Antarctica shows fast spreading rates since Mid‐Eocene (45 Ma). Analyzed mechanisms to separate the Australian plate from Antarctica using coupled global models of mantle and lithosphere dynamics. Results indicate that the separation between the Australian and Antarctica plate was driven by an asthenospheric pressure Poiseuille flow.
    Description: Københavns Universitet http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001734
    Keywords: 551 ; mantle circulation history ; pressure‐driven Poiseuille flow ; separation of Australia/Antarctica
    Type: article
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Lahars are among the most hazardous mass flow processes on earth and have caused up to 23 000 casualties in single events in the recent past. The Cotopaxi volcano, 60 km southeast of Quito, has a well‐documented history of massively destructive lahars and is a hotspot for future lahars due to (i) its ~10 km2 glacier cap, (ii) its 117–147‐year return period of (Sub)‐Plinian eruptions, and (iii) the densely populated potential inundation zones (300 000 inhabitants). Previous mechanical lahar models often do not (i) capture the steep initial lahar trajectory, (ii) reproduce multiple flow paths including bifurcation and confluence, and (iii) generate appropriate key parameters like flow speed and pressure at the base as a measure of erosion capacity. Here, we back‐calculate the well‐documented 1877 lahar using the RAMMS debris flow model with an implemented entrainment algorithm, covering the entire lahar path from the volcano edifice to an extent of ~70 km from the source. To evaluate the sensitivity and to constrain the model input range, we systematically explore input parameter values, especially the Voellmy–Salm friction coefficients μ and ξ. Objective selection of the most likely parameter combinations enables a realistic and robust lahar hazard representation. Detailed historic records for flow height, flow velocity, peak discharge, travel time and inundation limits match best with a very low Coulomb‐type friction μ (0.0025–0.005) and a high turbulent friction ξ (1000–1400 m/s2). Finally, we apply the calibrated model to future eruption scenarios (Volcanic Explosivity Index = 2–3, 3–4, 〉4) at Cotopaxi and accordingly scaled lahars. For the first time, we anticipate a potential volume growth of 50–400% due to lahar erosivity on steep volcano flanks. Here we develop a generic Voellmy–Salm approach across different scales of high‐magnitude lahars and show how it can be used to anticipate future syneruptive lahars.
    Description: A generic model approach is developed to simulate massive syneruptive lahars at Cotopaxi from initiation on the steep volcano flanks to distal reaches. Evaluation of 14 calibration constraints shows that the Voellmy–Salm model reliably reproduces bulk behaviour of syneruptive lahars. Estimations of lahar erosivity on the volcano flanks anticipate an erosion‐related volume increase for future Cotopaxi lahars between 50 and 400%.
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
    Keywords: 551 ; debris flow erosion ; lahar ; model calibration ; numerical model ; predictive modelling
    Type: article
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  • 55
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    In:  SUB Göttingen | 4 MIN II, 1918:187
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Die vorliegende Arbeit bildet einen Teil einer größeren Gemeinschaftsarbeit über die Entwicklung der nordalpinen Saumtiefe. Aus vielen neuen Erkenntnissen jüngerer Lokalstudien wird nach den grundlegenden Arbeiten von GÜMBEL und WEITHOFER einmal wieder eine Synthese gewagt, um die vielen Einzeltatsachen zu einem geschlossenen Bild von dem epirogenen und orogenen Werdegang der bayerischen Molasse zu vereinen. Das Literaturstudium ergab bald, daß eigene Geländeuntersuchungen nötig waren, um manche Widersprüche zu klären und die eine oder andere Lücke zu schließen.
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen
    Keywords: 554.3 ; 551 ; Alpenvorland {Geologie} ; Tertiär ; Känozoikum ; Flöz ; Sediment ; Erdkruste ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: anthologyArticle_digi
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2021-04-22
    Description: The seasonal cycle represents one of the largest signals of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the ocean, yet these seasonal variations are not well established at a global scale. Here, we present the Mapped Observation‐Based Oceanic DIC (MOBO‐DIC) product, a monthly DIC climatology developed based on the DIC measurements from GLODAPv2.2019 and a two‐step neural network method to interpolate and map the measurements. MOBO‐DIC extends from the surface down to 2,000 m and from 65°N to 65°S. We find the largest seasonal amplitudes of surface DIC in the northern high‐latitude Pacific (∼30 to 〉50 μmol kg−1). Surface DIC maxima occur in hemispheric spring and minima in fall, driven by the input of DIC into the upper ocean by mixing during winter, and net community production (NCP) driven drawdown of DIC over summer. The seasonal pattern seen at the surface extends to a nodal depth of 〈50 m in the tropics and several hundred meters in the subtropics. Below the nodal depth, the seasonal cycle of DIC has the opposite phase, primarily owing to the seasonal accumulation of DIC stemming from the remineralization of sinking organic matter. The well‐captured seasonal drawdown of DIC in the mid‐latitudes (23° to 65°) allows us to estimate the spring‐to‐fall NCP in this region. We find a spatially relatively uniform spring‐to‐fall NCP of 1.9 ± 1.3 mol C m−2 yr−1, which sums to 3.9 ± 2.7 Pg C yr−1 over this region. This corresponds to a global spring‐to‐fall NCP of 8.2 ± 5.6 Pg C yr−1.
    Description: Key Points We present a near‐global monthly DIC climatology (MOBO‐DIC) based on ship observations and a two‐step neural network Seasonal surface DIC amplitudes range from 0 to more than 50 μmol kg−1 MOBO‐DIC yields a spring‐to‐fall NCP in the euphotic zone of the mid‐latitudes of 3.9 ± 2.7 Pg C yr−1
    Description: European Community's Horizon 2020 Project
    Description: International Max Planck Research School on Earth System Modelling (IMPRS‐ESM)
    Keywords: 551 ; DIC ; seasonal variability ; neural networks ; SOM‐FFN ; monthly climatology ; NCP
    Type: article
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Variations in depositional rates affect the temporal depositional resolutions of proxies used for paleoenvironmental reconstructions; for example, condensation can make reconstructed environmental changes appear very abrupt. This is commonly addressed by transforming proxy data using age models, but this approach is limited to situations where numerical ages are available or can be reliably inferred by correlation. Here we propose a new solution, in which relative age models are constructed based on proxies for depositional rates. As a case study, we use the onset of the late Silurian Lau Carbon Isotope Excursion (LCIE) in Gotland, Sweden. The studied succession is a gradual record of shallowing upward in a tropical, neritic carbonate platform. As proxies for depositional rates we tested thorium concentration, carbonate content, and the concentration of pelagic palynomorphs. These three proxies were used to create relative age models using the previously published DAIME model. We applied these models to transform the δ13Ccarb values as well as concentrations of selected redox‐sensitive elements. The three relative age models yielded qualitatively similar results. In our case study, variations in depositional rates resulted in peaks of redox proxies appearing up to 76% higher when taken at face value, compared to when accounting for these rates. In the most extreme cases, our corrections resulted in a reversal in the stratigraphic trend of elemental concentrations. This approach can be applied and developed across depositional setting and types of paleoenvironmental proxies. It provides a flexible tool for developing quantitative models to improve our understanding of the stratigraphic record.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The depositional rate reflects how quickly a given thickness of sedimentary rock forms. Abrupt changes in environmental signals recorded in an interval of strata can be the result of (1) fast changes in environmental conditions and average sedimentation rate or (2) average changes in environmental conditions and slow sedimentation rate. To correct for this effect, age models are used, but they are often not available or lack sufficient resolution to detect rapid changes in the environment. We propose a method to estimate relative changes in depositional rates and test it in a sedimentary section on the Swedish island of Gotland. The section preserves geochemical records of a carbon cycle perturbation, expressed as shifts in carbon isotopes. It has also been proposed to record periods of oxygen depletion in marine water, detectable as enrichment in elements sensitive to redox conditions. We measured these parameters and compared the original values as preserved in the section with values corrected for depositional rates. We show that (1) perturbations of the carbon cycle were most likely more rapid than they appear in the section and (2) high depositional rates during the carbon cycle perturbation partly disguised the intervals of oxygen depletion.
    Description: Key Points: Relative age models are reconstructed from concentrations of Th, carbonate, and pelagic palynomorphs. δ13Ccarb and elemental proxies for redox conditions are transformed using the age models. Accounting for depositional rates can decrease peaks in redox proxies by up to 45% and make the δ13Ccarb excursion appear more abrupt.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; depositional rate ; sedimentation rate ; age model ; thorium ; Silurian ; anoxia
    Type: article
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Insolation differences play a primary role in controlling microclimate and vegetation cover, which together influence the development of topography. Topographic asymmetry (TA), or slope differences between terrain aspects, has been well documented in small‐scale, field‐based, and modeling studies. Here we combine a suite of environmental (e.g., vegetation, temperature, solar insolation) and topographic (e.g., elevation, drainage network) data to explore the driving mechanisms and markers of TA on a global scale. Using a novel empirical TA analysis method, we find that (1) steeper terrain has higher TA magnitudes, (2) globally, pole‐facing terrain is on average steeper than equator‐facing terrain, especially in mid‐latitude, tectonically quiescent, and vegetated landscapes, and (3) high‐elevation and low‐temperature regions tend to have terrain steepened toward the equator. We further show that there are distinct differences in climate and vegetation cover across terrain aspects, and that TA is reflected in the size and form of fluvial drainage networks. Our work supports the argument that insolation asymmetries engender differences in local microclimates and vegetation on opposing terrain aspects, which broadly encourage the development of asymmetric topography across a range of lithologic, tectonic, geomorphic, and climatic settings.
    Description: Key Points: Steep terrain has higher topographic asymmetry magnitudes. Pole‐facing terrain is on average steeper than equator‐facing terrain. High‐elevation and low‐temperature regions tend to have terrain steepened towards the equator.
    Keywords: 551 ; erosion ; freeze‐thaw cycling ; solar radiation ; topographic asymmetry ; topography ; vegetation cover
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Description: Sliding of glacial ice over its base is typically described by a frictionless or slowly deforming bed. This view is challenged by recent seismic observations of stick‐slip motion at the ice‐bed interface. We revisit a high‐frequency (20–35 Hz) harmonic tremor recorded on Gornergletscher, Switzerland. In contrast to previous interpretation in terms of glaciohydraulic tremor, we present evidence for superimposed stick‐slip episodes as tremor sources: we locate the tremor source with matched field processing polarity optimization, which allows for azimuthal polarity patterns associated with nonisotropic moment tensors and yields a tremor source clustering near the glacier bed. Our analysis confirms an S wave radiation pattern in agreement with a double‐couple source derived from ice sliding over bedrock and explains our tremor observations in terms of glacier stick‐slip motion. Adding to observations of stick‐slip tremor beneath polar ice streams, this first report on stick‐slip tremor beneath Alpine ice favors widespread seismogenic glacier sliding.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: For many years, researchers have observed cryoseismic stick‐slip tremor exclusively in Antarctica. Stick‐slip tremor is due to small repeating slip events at the glacier bed as a glacier advances downstream. This type of tremor is a telltale sign of what is happening at the ice‐bed interface and indicates frictional sliding. Here, we present first evidence for stick‐slip tremor at an Alpine glacier—Gornergletscher, Switzerland. We identify indicators in the seismic signature and apply data processing techniques that reveal that the creeping glacier sole moves under the influence of gravity and irregularly rubs over a sticky area at the bed.
    Description: Key Points: We revisit a harmonic tremor recorded by a seismic array on an Alpine glacier, which was previously interpreted as hydraulic tremor. Applying matched field processing that accounts for nonisotropic radiation patterns suggests a tremor source at the ice‐bedrock interface. A focal mechanism derived from ice slip over bedrock explains our results and suggests seismogenic stick‐slip motion at the glacier's base.
    Description: Swiss National Science Foundation
    Keywords: 551 ; Alpine glacier ; cryoseismology ; matched field processing ; stick‐slip tremor
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Spatially explicit knowledge of the origins of water resources for ecosystems and rivers is challenging when using tracer data alone. We use simulations from a spatially distributed model calibrated by extensive ecohydrological data sets in a small, energy‐limited catchment, where hillslope‐riparian dynamics are broadly representative of humid boreal headwater catchments that are experiencing rapid environmental transition. We hypothesize that in addition to wetness status, landscape heterogeneity modulates the water pathways that sustain ecosystem function and streamflows. Simulations show that catchment storage inversely controls stream water ages year‐round, but only during the drier seasons for transpiration and soil evaporation. The ages of these evaporative outputs depend much less on wetness status in the oft‐saturated riparian soils than on the freely draining hillslopes that subsidize them. This work highlights the need to consider local dynamics and time‐changing lateral heterogeneities when interpreting the ages, and thus the vulnerability, of water resources feeding streams and ecosystems in landscapes.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Knowing how much time water spends in a landscape (its “age”) helps understanding how water travels through it. These dynamics inform of the stability of water resources for ecosystems and societies, and of their vulnerabilities under climate and land use changes. Water ages may vary depending on how wet or dry a location gets between seasons and years. We thus need to learn more about the demographics (“how much and how old?”) of the water used by plants, evaporated from soils, and flowing in streams, but it is often impossible to monitor the heterogeneity of water pathways within landscapes. Addressing this challenge, we used a numerical model built upon coupling ecohydrological processes and that maps landscape locations. We adjusted this model using multiple data sets in a catchment representative of humid boreal environments where climate and vegetation are rapidly changing. We found markedly different aging patterns between water escaping the system through the plants, soils, and stream, depending on water storage status. This changing duration of water movement also differs between the catchment as a whole and its parts. This method can be used to better understand the multiple ways in which water moves through landscapes, in current and future conditions.
    Description: Key Points: Age since precipitation displays inverse storage effect in stream, but not transpiration and soil evaporation, in a humid northern catchment Hysteresis between storage and the age of transpired water suggests cross‐season carryover, despite weak hydroclimatic seasonality Downslope water subsidies result in valley bottom having weaker storage‐age relationships than seen in freely draining hillslopes
    Description: EC | FP7 | FP7 Ideas: European Research Council (FP7 Ideas) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100011199
    Description: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000104
    Description: NASA EPSCoR
    Description: NASA Ecological Forecasting Program
    Description: European Research Council http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000781
    Description: Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; ecohydrological modeling
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2021-07-03
    Description: Deep groundwater flow in mountain belts and its thermal effects are uncertain. Here, we use a new database of discharge, temperature, and composition of thermal springs in the Alps to estimate the extent of deep groundwater flow and its contribution to the groundwater and heat budget. The results indicate that thermal springs are fed exclusively by meteoric water and make up 0.1% of the total groundwater budget. Spring water circulates on average to a depth of at least 2 km. The net heat extracted from the subsurface equals 1% of the background heat flow, which equals an average thermal footprint of 7 km2. Cooling by downward flow and heating by upward flow are three and two times higher than the net heat flow, respectively. Comparison with North American orogens shows that hydrothermal activity is higher in areas with high relief or areas under extension.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Groundwater that originates as rainfall may reach considerable depths in mountain belts. Groundwater can also transport heat and affect subsurface temperatures in mountain belts. However, the amount of groundwater that circulates to deeper levels and the extent to which it affects subsurface temperatures is largely unknown. Here we analyze newly compiled data from hot springs in the Alps to quantify groundwater flow and its thermal effects. On average the groundwater discharging in springs reaches a depth of at least 2 km. The thermal spring water makes up a very small portion (0.1%) of all the groundwater in the Alps, while almost all of the groundwater flows out into rivers and lakes or is evapotranspired. However, the groundwater that feeds springs does affect temperatures of rocks considerably. In areas where the water infiltrates and flows downward, it cools the subsurface, whereas near springs the water flows upward and heats the subsurface.
    Description: Key Points: Thermal springs in the Alps are exclusively fed by meteoric water, which on average circulates to a depth of at least 2 km. On average the contributing area of springs in the Alps is 0.6 km2 and the thermal footprint is 7 km2. Comparison with North American orogens indicates that hydrothermal activity is highest in orogens with high relief or undergoing extension.
    Description: German Research Foundation (DFG)
    Keywords: 551 ; thermal springs ; groundwater ; heat flow ; Alps
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Modeling soil hydraulic properties requires an effective representation of capillary and noncapillary storage and conductivity. This is made possible by using physically comprehensive yet flexible soil hydraulic property models. Such a model (Brunswick [BW] model) was introduced by Weber et al. (2019, https://doi.org/10.1029/2018WR024584), and it overcomes some core deficiencies present in the widely used van Genuchten‐Mualem (VGM) model. We first compared the performance of the BW model to that of the VGM model in its ability to describe water retention and hydraulic conductivity data on a set of measurements of 402 soil samples with textures covering the entire range of classes. Second, we developed a simple transfer function to predict BW parameters based on VGM parameters. Combined with our new function, any existing pedotransfer function for the prediction of the VGM parameters can be extended to predict BW model parameters. Based on information criteria, the smaller variance of the residuals, and a 40% reduction in mean absolute error in the hydraulic conductivity over all samples, the BW model clearly outperforms VGM. This is possible as the BW model explicitly accounts for hydraulic properties of dry soils. With the new pedotransfer function developed in this study, better descriptions of water retention and hydraulic conductivities are possible. We are convinced that this will strengthen the utility of the new model and enable improved field‐scale simulations, climate change impact assessments on water, energy and nutrient fluxes, as well as crop productivity in agroecosystems by soil‐crop and land‐surface modeling. The models and the pedotransfer function are included in an R package spsh (https://cran.r‐project.org/package=spsh).
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Soil hydraulic property models are mathematical functions, which describe the relationship between the soil water pressure head and the state of soil water saturation, on the one hand, and the soil water pressure head and the unsaturated soil hydraulic conductivity, on the other. These types of mathematical functions are flexible by adjustable parameters. With one set of model equations, the hydraulic properties of soils which may have very different properties due to their vast natural variability can be described. The models treated in this work are (i) the van Genuchten‐Mualem model, a model with well‐known problems, but still frequently applied, and (ii) a relatively new physical comprehensive model, named the Brunswick model. First of all, in a data‐based comparison of model performance, we demonstrate that the Brunswick model has systematic advantages. Second, knowledge about these above‐mentioned parameters can be determined through other mathematical functions, so‐called hydro‐pedotransfer functions, which empirically relate these parameters to observed soil properties. The information about these soil properties can be measured in the laboratory and is also recorded in soil maps. We created a new pedotransfer function to facilitate the prediction of model parameters for the new Brunswick model.
    Description: Key Points: A pedotransfer function is established to relate van Genuchten‐Mualem (VGM) to Brunswick (BW) soil hydraulic property model parameters. The BW model overcomes the structural deficiencies in VGM and leads to considerably better descriptions of retention and conductivity data. With the new pedotransfer function, soil properties and information in soil maps can be used to predicted BW model parameters.
    Description: German Research Foundation http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100007450
    Description: Collaborative Research Center 1253 CAMPOS
    Keywords: 551 ; hydraulic conductivity ; model comparison ; model improvement ; pedotransfer functions ; soil hydraulic properties ; water retention
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: Many stable isotope paleoaltimetry studies have focused on paleoelevation reconstructions of orogenic plateaus such as the Tibetan or Andean Plateaus. We address the opportunities and challenges of applying stable isotope paleoaltimetry to “smaller” orogens. We do this using a high‐resolution isotope tracking general circulation model (ECHAM5‐wiso) and explore the precipitation δ18O (δ18Op) signal of Cenozoic paleoclimate and topographic change in the European Alps. Results predict a maximum δ18Op change of 4–5‰ (relative to present day) during topographic development of the Alps. This signal of topographic change has the same magnitude as changes in δ18Op values resulting from Pliocene and Last Glacial Maximum global climatic change. Despite the similar magnitude of the isotopic signals resulting from topographic and paleoclimate changes, their spatial patterns across central Europe differ. Our results suggest that an integration of paleoclimate modeling, multiproxy approaches, and low‐elevation reference proxy records distal from an orogen improve topographic reconstructions.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Here we use a climate model with water isotopes implemented to explore the maximum precipitation isotopic signal of Cenozoic topographic and paleoclimate change in the European Alps. Our results show that the impact of topography change has the same magnitude as changes in the isotopic composition of local precipitation resulting from Pliocene and Last Glacial Maximum global climatic change.
    Description: Key Points: High‐resolution isotope tracking general circulation model (ECHAM5‐wiso) is used to explore changes in past oxygen isotope ratios in precipitation in the Alps. Model‐simulated isotopic signals of topographic change and difference between glacials and interglacials show the same magnitude. Low‐elevation proxy records improve reconstructions of paleotopography by reducing long‐term climate change bias.
    Description: German Research Foundation (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; paleoaltimetry ; stable water isotopes ; GCM ; European Alps ; paleoclimate ; isotope tracking model
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Upwelling within the Eastern Equatorial Pacific (EEP) Ocean is a key factor for the Earth's climate because it supports 〉10% of the present‐day biological production. The dynamics of upwelling in the EEP across the Plio‐Pleistocene transition—an interval particularly relevant for understanding near‐future warming due to Anthropocene‐like atmospheric carbon‐dioxide levels—have been intensively studied for the region east of the East Pacific Rise. In contrast, changes of the equatorial upwelling regime in the open Pacific Ocean west of this oceanographic barrier have received markedly less attention. We therefore provide new proxy records from Ocean Drilling Program Site 849 located within the EEP open‐ocean upwelling regime. Our target interval (∼3.35–2.0 Ma) covers the Plio‐Pleistocene transition characterized by the intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation (iNHG). We use benthic δ18O values to generate a new, high‐resolution age model for Site 849, and sand‐accumulation rates together with benthic δ13C values to evaluate net export production. Although showing temporary substantial glacial‐interglacial variations, our records indicate stability in net export production on secular timescales across the iNHG. We suggest the following processes to have controlled the long‐term evolution of primary productivity at Site 849. First, nutrient export from the high latitudes to the EEP; second, a successive shoaling of the Pacific nutricline during the studied interval; and third, a simultaneous reduction in dust‐borne iron input.
    Description: Key Points: Glacial‐interglacial change in net export production at East Pacific Site 849 from ∼3.35 to 2.0 Ma. No secular change in net export production in the East Pacific across the Plio‐Pleistocene transition. Net export production on secular timescales regulated by nutrient content of upwelled waters, nutricline dynamics, and iron fertilization.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Trond Mohn Foundation
    Keywords: 551 ; intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation ; Eastern Equatorial Pacific upwelling ; Plio‐Pleistocene ; primary productivity ; sand‐accumulation rates ; stable isotopes
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: The Upper Pleistocene geoarchives in the south‐eastern Carpathian Basin are represented predominantly by loess–palaeosol records. In 2015, a 10 m sediment core composed of clay‐rich lacustrine sediments was recovered by vibracoring a dry lake basin located between the Vršac Mountains (Serbia) and the Banat Sands in the south‐eastern Carpathian Basin; a location relevant for placing regional archaeological results in a palaeoenvironmental context. Here, we present results from geoelectrical prospection and a lithostratigraphic interpretation of this sequence supported by a detailed granulometric study supplemented by ostracod analysis. An age model based on luminescence dating is discussed against sedimentological proxy data and its implication for palaeoenvironmental change. The cores show a stratigraphy of lighter ochre‐coloured and darker greyish sediment, related to the deposition of clay and silt trapped in an aquatic environment. Geophysical measurements show ~20 m thick lacustrine sediments. The grain‐size distributions including the variability in fine clay are indicative of a lacustrine environment. Fine particles were brought into the depositional environments by aquatic input and settled from suspension; also, direct dust input is constrained by grain‐size results. Riverine input and aeolian dust input interplayed at the locality.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Program IDEI_Proiecte de Cercetare Exploratorie
    Description: Serbian Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development
    Keywords: 551 ; 554 ; Carpathian Basin ; Late Quaternary ; lacustrine sediment ; geoelectric analyses ; luminescence dating ; grain‐size analysis ; environmental dynamics
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: Hydrological models used for flood prediction in ungauged catchments are commonly fitted to regionally transferred data. The key issue of this procedure is to identify hydrologically similar catchments. Therefore, the dominant controls for the process of interest have to be known. In this study, we applied a new machine learning based approach to identify the catchment characteristics that can be used to identify the active processes controlling runoff dynamics. A random forest (RF) regressor has been trained to estimate the drainage velocity parameters of a geomorphologic instantaneous unit hydrograph (GIUH) in ungauged catchments, based on regionally available data. We analyzed the learning procedure of the algorithm and identified preferred donor catchments for each ungauged catchment. Based on the obtained machine learning results from catchment grouping, a classification scheme for drainage network characteristics has been derived. This classification scheme has been applied in a flood forecasting case study. The results demonstrate that the RF could be trained properly with the selected donor catchments to successfully estimate the required GIUH parameters. Moreover, our results showed that drainage network characteristics can be used to identify the influence of geomorphological dispersion on the dynamics of catchment response.
    Description: A new machine‐learning based approach is applied to identify catchment characteristics affecting runoff dynamics. The learning procedure of the algorithms revealed that drainage system characteristics define hydrologic similarity in terms of dynamics.
    Description: Bavarian Ministry of the Environment http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100010219
    Keywords: 551.48 ; catchment classification ; catchment similarity ; drainage velocity ; geomorphologic unit hydrograph ; machine learning ; ungauged catchments
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Tectonics and regional monsoon strength control weathering and erosion regimes of the watersheds feeding into the Bay of Bengal, which are important contributors to global climate evolution via carbon cycle feedbacks. The detailed mechanisms controlling the input of terrigenous clay to the Bay of Bengal on tectonic to orbital timescales are, however, not yet well understood. We produced orbital‐scale resolution geochemical records for International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1443 (southern Bay of Bengal) across five key climatic intervals of the middle to late Miocene (15.8–9.5 Ma). Our new radiogenic Sr, Nd, and Pb isotope time series of clays transported to the Ninetyeast Ridge suggest that the individual contributions from different erosional sources overall remained remarkably consistent during the Miocene despite major tectonic reorganizations in the Himalayas. On orbital timescales, however, high‐resolution data from the five investigated intervals show marked fluctuations of all three isotope systems. Interestingly, the variability was much higher within the Miocene Climatic Optimum (around 16–15 Ma) and across the major global cooling (~13.9–13.8 Ma) until ~13.5 Ma, than during younger time intervals. This change is attributed to a major restriction on the supply of High Himalayan erosion products due to migration of the peak precipitation area toward the frontal domains of the Himalayas and the Indo‐Burman Ranges. The transient excursions of the radiogenic isotope signals on orbital timescales most likely reflect climatically driven shifts in monsoon strength.
    Description: Key Points: A consistent mix of clay sources contributed to the Bay of Bengal throughout the middle to late Miocene A marked change in detrital Sr, Nd, and Pb isotope variability at 13.5 Ma was related to Miocene global cooling Transient orbital‐scale fluctuations in clay source most likely reflect changes in monsoon intensity
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Keywords: 551 ; Bay of Bengal ; IODP Site U1443 ; Miocene ; sediment provenance ; Himalayas ; weathering ; erosion
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Sedimentary structures deposited from dilute pyroclastic currents are largely dominated by the products of metre‐scale dune bedforms containing backset lamination. Since the first seminal works in the 1970s, the vast majority of the literature called these structures antidunes and chutes‐and‐pools. This consensus led to a loose terminology, either as descriptive terms for structures containing backset beds or as an interpretation of hydrodynamic conditions related to Froude‐supercritical flows. Here, the main characteristics of pyroclastic dune bedforms are summarized and classified under four categories. The literature is examined and a discussion is provided regarding a possible interpretation in terms of supercritical‐flow bedforms, including antidunes, chutes‐and‐pools and cyclic steps. The interpretation of pyroclastic dune bedforms as related to supercritical conditions is a possibility among others, yet open questions remain, and under the present state of knowledge alternative interpretations are equally valid. There is consensus that an interpretation of pyroclastic dune bedforms as related to supercritical flows implies deposition from a basal underflow supporting an internal free‐surface formed at a density interface within the overall current structure. Antidunes are likely to be limited to low‐angle, incipient bedforms. Chutes‐and‐pools may occur in the form of series of steep truncations formed by an erosive supercritical ‘chute’, with a depositional signature occurring exclusively in the subcritical ‘pool’ of a Froude jump. Rare examples of cyclic steps may be found as large‐scale undulations with superimposed metre‐scale bedforms, or for short‐scale, fully‐aggrading structures in periodic trains. Additionally, some pyroclastic bedforms may be formed by granular flows passing granular Froude jumps or as frozen granular stationary waves. The dominance of chute‐and‐pool structures over bedforms characterized by relatively more stable morphodynamics (antidunes and cyclic steps) could be the likely result of pulsating flow conditions and abrupt high‐rate deposition, impeding stable flow conditions. In a majority of cases, the growth of pyroclastic bedforms appears triggered by the influence of an inherited bed topography and by bed‐flow feedback effects. Apart from a possible interpretation as supercritical bedforms, other specific dynamics of dilute pyroclastic currents may well explain the characteristics of pyroclastic dune bedform structures. In particular, the inherent turbulence fluctuations, internal organization and highly depositional dynamics may be key to the formation of pyroclastic dune bedforms. In this respect, rather than solely focusing on the Froude dimensionless number of the formative current, theoretical considerations accounting for the Reynolds, Richardson and Rouse dimensionless parameters may be also implemented for the understanding of pyroclastic bedforms.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001711
    Description: H2020 European Research Council http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010663
    Keywords: 551 ; Antidune ; chute‐and‐pool ; cyclic‐step ; dune bedform ; pyroclastic ; pyroclastic density currents ; supercritical
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2021-11-03
    Description: Stable organic carbon and nitrogen isotopes can be used to interpret past vegetation patterns and ecosystem qualities. Here we present these proxies for two loess-palaeosol sequences from the southern Carpathian Basin to reconstruct the palaeoenvironment during the past 350 ka and establish regional commonalities and differences. Until now, isotopic studies on loess sequences from this region were only conducted on deposits from the last glacial cycle. We conducted methodological tests concerning the complete decalcification of the samples prior to stable isotope analyses. Two decalcification methods (fumigation method and wet chemical acidification), different treatment times, and the reproducibility of carbon isotope analyses were tested. Obtained results indicate that the choice of the decalcification method is essential for organic carbon stable isotope analyses of loess-palaeosol sequences because ratios vary by more than 10‰ between the wet chemical and fumigation methods, due to incomplete carbonate removal by the latter. Therefore, we suggest avoiding the fumigation method for studies on loess-palaeosol sequences. In addition, our data show that samples with TOC content 〈0.2% bear increased potential for misinterpretation of their carbon isotope ratios. For our sites, C3-vegetation is predominant and no palaeoenvironmental shifts leading to a change of the dominant photosynthesis pathway can be detected during the Middle to Late Pleistocene. Furthermore, the potential for further stable nitrogen isotope studies is highlighted, since this proxy seems to reflect especially past precipitation patterns and reveals favourable conditions in the southern Carpathian Basin, especially during interstadials.
    Keywords: 551 ; southern Carpathian Basin ; loess-palaeosol sequences ; stable isotope analyses ; Pleistocene ecosystem reconstruction
    Language: English
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2021-11-03
    Description: In Antarctic and Subantarctic environments, 14C-based age determination is often challenging due to unknown reservoir effects, low organic carbon contents of sediments, and high contributions of petrogenic (14C-free) carbon in ice marginal settings. In this study, we evaluate possible benefits and challenges of compound-specific radiocarbon analysis (CSRA) as a tool for age determination of marine Antarctic and Subantarctic sediment sequences. We present a comprehensive data set of 14C ages obtained on bulk organic carbon, carbonates, and on fatty acids (FA) from three coastal marine sediment cores from Subantarctic South Georgia and East Antarctica. Low molecular weight (LMW) FA represent the least 14C-depleted fraction, indicating that the phytoplankton-derived compounds can be a means of dating sediments. In contrast, vascular plant-derived high molecular weight FA are systematically depleted in 14C relative to the low molecular weight homologues, reflecting processes such as soil formation/erosion in the catchment. Comparative age-depth models show significant differences, depending on the material used for the respective models. While the land plant-derived FA may lead to an overestimation of the actual sediment age, LMW FA reveal complex aquatic reservoir effects. Bulk sedimentary organic carbon 14C ages likely provide appropriate age estimates in settings with low petrogenic carbon input in the Antarctic, whereas CSRA has the potential to produce improved age control in settings with high contributions of petrogenic carbon.
    Keywords: 551 ; Antarctica ; marine sediments ; compound‐specific radiocarbon analysis (CSRA)
    Language: English
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2021-11-03
    Description: The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission ended its operation in October 2017, and the GRACE Follow-On mission was launched only in May 2018, leading to approximately 1 year of data gap. Given that GRACE-type observations are exclusively providing direct estimates of total water storage change (TWSC), it would be very important to bridge the gap between these two missions. Furthermore, for many climate-related applications, it is also desirable to reconstruct TWSC prior to the GRACE period. In this study, we aim at comparing different data-driven methods and identifying the more robust alternatives for predicting GRACE-like gridded TWSC during the gap and reconstructing them to 1992 using climate inputs. To this end, we first develop a methodological framework to compare different methods such as the multiple linear regression (MLR), artificial neural network (ANN), and autoregressive exogenous (ARX) approaches. Second, metrics are developed to measure the robustness of the predictions. Finally, gridded TWSC within 26 regions are predicted and reconstructed using the identified methods. Test computations suggest that the correlation of predicted TWSC maps with observed ones is more than 0.3 higher than TWSC simulated by hydrological models, at the grid scale of 1° resolution. Furthermore, the reconstructed TWSC correctly reproduce the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) signals. In general, while MLR does not perform best in the training process, it is more robust and could thus be a viable approach both for filling the GRACE gap and for reconstructing long-period TWSC fields globally when combined with statistical decomposition techniques.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; GRACE ; total water storage change ; predidicting method
    Language: English
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2021-10-28
    Description: It is widely assumed that the ventilation of the Southern Ocean played a crucial role in driving glacial-interglacial atmospheric CO2 levels. So far, however, ventilation records from the Indian sector of the Southern Ocean are widely missing. Here we present reconstructions of water residence times (depicted as ΔΔ14C and Δδ13C) for the last 32,000 years on sediment records from the Kerguelen Plateau and the Conrad Rise (~570- to 2,500-m water depth), along with simulated changes in ocean stratification from a transient climate model experiment. Our data indicate that Circumpolar Deep Waters in the Indian Ocean were part of the glacial carbon pool. At our sites, close to or bathed by upwelling deep waters, we find two pulses of decreasing ΔΔ14C and δ13C values (~21–17 ka; ~15–12 ka). Both transient pulses precede a similar pattern in downstream intermediate waters in the tropical Indian Ocean as well as rising atmospheric CO2 values. These findings suggest that 14C-depleted, CO2-rich Circumpolar Deep Water from the Indian Ocean contributed to the rise in atmospheric CO2 during Heinrich Stadial 1 and also the Younger Dryas and that the southern Indian Ocean acted as a gateway for sequestered carbon to the atmosphere and tropical intermediate waters.
    Keywords: 551 ; radiocarbon ; ventilation ; Southern Ocean ; Younger Dryas ; carbon cycle ; Indian Ocean
    Language: English
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2021-10-28
    Description: There is a converging body of evidence supporting a measurable slowdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) as climate warms and Northern Hemisphere ice sheets inexorably shrink. Within this context, we assess the variability of the AMOC during the Holocene based on a marine sediment core retrieved from the deep northwest Atlantic, which sensitively recorded large-scale deglacial transitions in deep water circulation. While there is a diffuse notion of Holocene variability in Labrador and Nordic Seas overturning, we report a largely invariable deep water circulation for the last ~11,000 years, even during the meltwater pulse associated with the 8.2-ka event. Sensitivity tests along with high-resolution 231Pa/230Th data constrain the duration and the magnitude of possible Holocene AMOC variations. The generally constant baseline during the Holocene suggests attenuated natural variability of the large-scale AMOC on submillennial timescales and calls for compensating effects involving the upstream components of North Atlantic Deep Water.
    Keywords: 551 ; AMOC ; Holocene ; high resolution 231Pa/230Th ; Bermuda Rise ; sensitivity tests
    Language: English
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2021-10-28
    Description: Due to seasonal or interannual variability, the relevance of hydrological processes and of the associated model parameters can vary significantly throughout the simulation period. To achieve accurately identified model parameters, temporal variations in parameter dominance should be taken into account. This is not achieved if performance criteria are applied to the entire model output time series. Even when using complementary performance criteria, it is often only possible to identify some of the model parameters precisely. We present an innovative approach to improve parameter identifiability that exploits the information available regarding temporal variations in parameter dominance. Using daily parameter sensitivity time series, we construct a set of sensitivity-weighted performance criteria, one for each parameter, whereby periods of higher dominance of a model parameter and its corresponding process are assigned higher weights in the calculation of the associated performance criterion. These criteria are used to impose constraints on parameter values. We demonstrate this approach by constraining 12 model parameters for three catchments and examine ensemble hydrological simulations generated using these constrained parameter sets. The sensitivity-weighted approach improves in particular the identifiability for parameters whose corresponding processes are dominant only for short periods of time or have strong seasonal patterns. This results overall in slight improvement of model performance for a set of 10 contrasting performance criteria. We conclude that the sensitivity-weighted approach improves the extraction of hydrologically relevant information from data, thereby resulting in improved parameter identifiability and better representation of model parameters.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; parameter identifiability ; parameter constraints ; temporal diagnostic analysis ; sensitivity analysis ; performance criteria
    Language: English
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2021-10-29
    Description: Tunnel valleys are major features of glaciated margins and they enable meltwater expulsion from underneath a thick ice cover. Their formation is related to the erosion of subglacial sediments by overpressured meltwater and direct glacial erosion. Yet, the impact of pre-existing structures on their formation and morphology remains poorly known. High-quality 3D seismic data allowed the mapping of a large tunnel valley that eroded underlying preglacial delta deposits in the southern North Sea. The valley follows the N–S strike of crestal faults related to a Zechstein salt wall. A change in downstream tunnel valley orientation towards the SE accompanies a change in the strike direction of salt-induced faults. Fault offsets indicate important activity of crestal faults during the deposition of preglacial deltaic sediments. We propose that crestal faults facilitated tunnel valley erosion by acting as high-permeability pathways and allowing subglacial meltwater to reach low-permeability sediments in the underlying Neogene deltaic sequences, ultimately resulting in meltwater overpressure build-up and tunnel valley excavation. Active faults probably also weakened the near-surface sediment to allow a more efficient erosion of the glacial substrate. This control of substrate structures on tunnel valley morphology is considered as a primary factor in subglacial drainage pattern development in the study area.
    Keywords: 551 ; southern North Sea ; Quarternary ; tunnel valley formation ; salt-induced faults
    Language: English
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2021-10-29
    Description: The timing and mechanisms of the Cretaceous sea incursions into Central Asia are still poorly constrained. We provide a new chronostratigraphic framework based on biostratigraphy and magnetostratigraphy together with detailed paleoenvironmental analyses of Cretaceous records of the proto-Paratethys Sea fluctuations in the Tajik and Tarim basins. The Early Cretaceous marine incursion in the western Tajik Basin was followed by major marine incursions during the Cenomanian (ca. 100 Ma) and Santonian (ca. 86 Ma) that reached far into the eastern Tajik and Tarim basins. These marine incursions were separated by a Turonian-Coniacian (ca. 92–86 Ma) regression. Basin-wide tectonic subsidence analyses imply that the Early Cretaceous sea incursion into the Tajik Basin was related to increased Pamir tectonism. We find that thrusting along the northern edge of the Pamir at ca. 130–90 Ma resulted in increased subsidence in a retro-arc basin setting. This tectonic event and coeval eustatic highstand resulted in the maximum observed geographic extent of the sea during the Cenomanian (ca. 100 Ma). The following Turonian-Coniacian (ca. 92–86 Ma) major regression, driven by eustasy, coincides with a sharp slowdown in tectonic subsidence during the late orogenic unloading period with limited thrusting. The Santonian (ca. 86 Ma) major sea incursion was likely controlled by eustasy as evidenced by the coeval fluctuations in the west Siberian Basin. An early Maastrichtian cooling (ca. 71–70 Ma), potentially connected to global Late Cretaceous trends, is inferred from the replacement of mollusk-rich limestones by bryozoan- and echinoderm-rich limestones.
    Keywords: 551 ; Tajik Basin ; Tarim Basin ; Cretaceous sea incursions ; tectonic subsidence ; proto‐Paratethys Sea
    Language: English
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2021-10-29
    Description: Columnar jointed lava is an important facies in many geothermal reservoir systems. The permeability of jointed lavas is dominated by the contribution from fracture networks. We use a scaling for the permeability of a set of fractures in a solid or porous mass and extend this to arrays of hexagonal intercolumn fractures. To validate our analytical results, we create numerical domains with relevant geometries and extract system-scale permeability using the LBflow lattice-Boltzmann fluid flow simulation tool. Finally, we model the cooling contraction of columns to extend our results so that they predict the permeability with time after lava emplacement. Importantly, we use these results to estimate the range of permeabilities typical of columnar joints that form during cooling from high temperature and are preserved in the crust at moderate to low temperatures.
    Keywords: 551 ; fractured lavas ; permeability ; prediction
    Language: English
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2021-09-27
    Description: The magnitudes of river floods in Europe have been observed to change, but their alignment with changes in the spatial coverage or extent of individual floods has not been clear. We analyze flood magnitudes and extents for 3,872 hydrometric stations across Europe over the past five decades and classify each flood based on antecedent weather conditions. We find positive correlations between flood magnitudes and extents for 95% of the stations. In central Europe and the British Isles, the association of increasing trends in magnitudes and extents is due to a magnitude-extent correlation of precipitation and soil moisture along with a shift in the flood generating processes. The alignment of trends in flood magnitudes and extents highlights the increasing importance of transnational flood risk management.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; flood ; synchrony ; magnitude ; climate change ; classification ; spatial statistics
    Language: English
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2021-09-27
    Description: This investigation attempts to understand the eco-hydrology of, and accordingly suggest an option to manage floodwater for agriculture in, the understudied and data-sparse ephemeral Baraka River Basin within the hyper-arid region of Sudan. Reference is made to the major feature of the basin, that is, the Toker Delta spate irrigation scheme. A point-to-pixel comparison of gridded and ground-based data sets is performed to enhance the estimates of rainfall. Analysis of remotely sensed land use/cover data is performed. The results show a significant reduction of the grassland and barren areas explained by a significant expansion of the cropland and open shrubland (invasive mesquite trees) areas in the delta. The cotton sown area is highly dependent on the flooded area and the discharge volume in the delta. However, the area of this major crop has declined since the early 1990s in favour of cultivation of more profitable food crops. Expansion of mesquite in the delta is problematic, taking hold under increased floodwater, and can only be manged by clearance to provide crop cultivation area. There is a great potential for floodwater harvesting during the rainfall season (June to September). A total seasonal runoff volume of around 4.6 and 10.8 billion cubic metres is estimated at 90 and 50% probabilities of exceedance (reliabilities), respectively. Rather than leaving the runoff generated from rainfall events to pass to the Red Sea or be consumed by mesquite trees, a location for runoff harvesting structure in a highly suitable area is proposed. Such a structure will support any policy shifts towards planning and managing the basin water resources for use in irrigating the agricultural scheme.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; Baraka River Basin ; eco-hydrology ; floodwater harvesting ; land-cover classification ; Mesquite ; Toker Delta
    Language: English
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2021-09-27
    Description: Droughts lead to falling river water levels and consequently expose river sediments. It is well known that from these exposed aquatic sediments, CO2 emits to the atmosphere, but upscaling of CO2 measurements from discrete point measurements to an entire river system remains challenging. Naturally occurring heterogeneous processes must be accounted for to obtain an overall CO2 flux and to assess its significance. We contribute to this challenge by incorporating a two stage scaling approach using in situ CO2 fluxes and remote sensing data. First, by combining optical airborne data with closed chamber measurements at a representative model site during a first scaling stage, we derive land cover type specific CO2 fluxes and identify distance to the water as the most suitable proxy for further upscaling. Second, we upscale derived spatial relations from the first scaling stage to the entire river system of the Elbe River using a satellite-based analysis. In this way, we derived area-weighted CO2 emissions from exposed river sediments of 56.6 ± 64.8 tC day−1 (corrected distance proxy) and 52.9 ± 44.6 tC day−1 (land cover proxy), respectively, for 1 day during the 2018 extreme drought. Given the intensification of droughts in terms of length and reoccurrence frequency, this result not only highlights the importance of drought-induced exposition of river sediment as a source of atmospheric CO2 but also underscores the ability to monitor CO2 emissions over an entire river system on a regular basis using remote sensing.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; carbon dioxide emission ; chamber measurements ; hydrological drought ; Sentinel-2 ; upscaling
    Language: English
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2021-09-27
    Description: Detailed organic geochemical and carbon isotopic (δ13C and Δ14C) analyses are performed on permafrost deposits affected by coastal erosion (Herschel Island, Canadian Beaufort Sea) and adjacent marine sediments (Herschel Basin) to understand the fate of organic carbon in Arctic nearshore environments. We use an end-member model based on the carbon isotopic composition of bulk organic matter to identify sources of organic carbon. Monte Carlo simulations are applied to quantify the contribution of coastal permafrost erosion to the sedimentary carbon budget. The models suggest that ~40% of all carbon released by local coastal permafrost erosion is efficiently trapped and sequestered in the nearshore zone. This highlights the importance of sedimentary traps in environments such as basins, lagoons, troughs, and canyons for the carbon sequestration in previously poorly investigated, nearshore areas.
    Keywords: 551 ; permafrost ; coastal erosion ; biomarker ; radiocarbon ; carbon flux ; carbon burial
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2021-10-07
    Description: The transition from the Pliocene to the Pleistocene was accompanied by major tectonic reorganizations of key oceanic gateways. In particular, the gradual closure of the Panama Gateway and the constriction of the Indonesian Gateway significantly affected the structure of the Pacific thermocline. In the East Pacific, the thermocline shoaled from an early Pliocene El Niño-like depth to its modern state, which had significant implications for global climate. Here we use Mg/Ca temperature estimates from subsurface and thermocline dwelling foraminifera to reconstruct the meridional Plio-Pleistocene evolution of the Southeast Pacific thermocline, in relation to atmospheric circulation changes. In combination with similar reconstructions from the north-equatorial Pacific, our data indicate a change in the thermocline, responding to the northward displacement of the Intertropical Convergence Zone/South Pacific High system between ~3.8 and 3.5 Ma. After 3.5 Ma, we record a second major phase of thermocline shoaling, which points to the Intertropical Convergence Zone/South Pacific High-system movement toward its modern position along with the gradual cooling of the Northern Hemisphere and its associated glaciation. These findings highlight that a warming globe may affect equatorial regions more intensively due to the potential temperature-driven movement of the Intertropical Convergence Zone/South Pacific High and their associated oceanic systems.
    Keywords: 551 ; ITCZ ; South Pacific High ; Plio-Pleistocene ; El Niño ; thermocline
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2021-10-07
    Description: The brittle-ductile transition is a domain of finite extent characterized by high differential stress where both brittle and ductile deformation are likely to occur. Understanding its depth location, extent, and stability through time is of relevance for diverse applications including subduction dynamics, mantle-surface interactions, and, more recently, proper targeting of high-enthalpy unconventional geothermal resources, where local thermal conditions may activate ductile creep at shallower depths than expected. In this contribution, we describe a thermodynamically consistent physical framework and its numerical implementation, therefore extending the formulation of the companion paper Jacquey and Cacace (2020, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JB018474) to model thermo-hydro-mechanical coupled processes responsible for the occurrence of transitional semi-brittle, semi-ductile behavior in porous rocks. We make use of a damage rheology to account for the macroscopic effects of microstructural processes leading to brittle-like material weakening and of a rate-dependent plastic model to account for ductile material behavior. Our formulation additionally considers the role of porosity and its evolution during loading in controlling the volumetric mechanical response of a stressed rock. By means of dedicated applications, we discuss how our damage poro-visco-elasto-viscoplastic rheology can effectively reconcile the style of localized deformation under different confining pressure conditions as well as the bulk macroscopic material response as recorded by laboratory experiments under full triaxial conditions.
    Keywords: 551 ; lithosphere ; brittle-ductile transition ; modeling
    Language: English
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2021-10-07
    Description: This paper presents evidence for a limnological response to the Laacher See eruption (LSE) as detected in lake sediments from Nahe, northern Germany. The sediment section of the Allerød period dating to between 13 422 and 12 708 cal. a BP is preserved in annual laminations. Within this section, the LSE was identified as a cryptotephra layer (12 944±44 cal. a BP). Microfacies analysis, continuous high-resolution geochemical measurements and pollen analyses enabled a high-resolution reconstruction of environmental change. The older part of the Allerød (c. 13 422 to 12 943 cal. a BP) was characterized by relatively stable sedimentation conditions. Evidence for windier conditions dating to c. 13 160 to 13 080 cal. a BP probably reflects the Gerzensee oscillation. Pronounced changes of the lake sedimentation followed the LSE. Four unusually thick varves with increased amounts of allochthonous material indicate serious disturbance of the local environment immediately after the LSE, related to increased storminess and/or the occurrence of high intensity rainfall events. A pronounced reduction of biogenic silica accumulation for c. 60 years after the LSE could reflect a period of acidification. Indications of a simultaneous lake level increase until c. 60 years after the LSE are in line with the supposed reduced evapotranspiration associated with cooler conditions. About 120 years after the LSE, increased oxygen access at the lake bottom, allochthonous input and Cl fluxes point to an onset of increasingly stronger westerly winds, probably as a long-term response to the LSE. This supports the idea of a southward shift of the mid-latitude westerlies wind system within the interval between the LSE and the beginning of the Younger Dryas. The pace of the southwards shift of this wind system decreased from 10 km a−1 in the initial phase (40–120 years after LSE) to 6 km a−1 in the later phase (120–200 years after LSE).
    Keywords: 551 ; Laacher See eruption (LSE) ; lake sediments
    Language: English
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: Upwelling ocean currents associated with oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) supply nutrients fuelling intense marine productivity. Perturbations in the extent and intensity of OMZs are projected in the future, but it is currently uncertain how this will impact fluxes of redox-sensitive trace metal micronutrients to the surface ocean. Here we report seawater concentrations of Fe, Mn, Co, Cd, and Ni alongside the redox indicator iodide/iodate in the Peruvian OMZ during the 2015 El Niño event. The El Niño drove atypical upwelling of oxygen-enriched water over the Peruvian Shelf, resulting in oxidized iodine and strongly depleted Fe (II), total dissolved Fe, and reactive particulate Fe concentrations relative to non-El Niño conditions. Observations of Fe were matched by the redox-sensitive micronutrients Co and Mn, but not by non-redox-sensitive Cd and Ni. These observations demonstrate that oxygenation of OMZs significantly reduces water column inventories of redox-sensitive micronutrients, with potential impacts on ocean productivity.
    Keywords: 551 ; iron ; trace metals ; oxygen minimum zone ; El Niño ; eastern tropical south pacific ; shelf source
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: Heat transport in natural porous media, such as aquifers or streambeds, is generally modeled assuming local thermal equilibrium (LTE) between the fluid and solid phases. Yet, the mathematical and hydrogeological conditions and implications of this simplification have not been fully established for natural porous media. To quantify the occurrence and effects of local thermal disequilibrium during heat transport, we systematically compared thermal breakthrough curves from a LTE with those calculated using a local thermal nonequilibrium (LTNE) model, explicitly allowing for different temperatures in the fluid and solid phases. For the LTNE model, we developed a new correlation for the heat transfer coefficient representative of the conditions in natural porous aquifers using six published experimental results. By conducting an extensive parameter study (〉50,000 simulations), we show that LTNE effects do not occur for grain sizes smaller than 7 mm or for groundwater flow velocities that are slower than 1.6 m day−1. The limits of LTE are likely exceeded in gravel aquifers or in the vicinity of pumped bores. For such aquifers, the use of a LTE model can lead to an underestimation of the effective thermal dispersion by a factor of up to 30 or higher, while the advective thermal velocity remains unaffected for most conditions. Based on a regression analysis of the simulation results, we provide a criterion which can be used to determine if LTNE effects are expected for particular conditions.
    Keywords: 551 ; local thermal nonequilibrium ; thermal dispersion ; modeling advective heat transport ; local thermal equilibrium ; porous aquifer
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: As the Arctic coast erodes, it drains thermokarst lakes, transforming them into lagoons, and, eventually, integrates them into subsea permafrost. Lagoons represent the first stage of a thermokarst lake transition to a marine setting and possibly more saline and colder upper boundary conditions. In this research, borehole data, electrical resistivity surveying, and modeling of heat and salt diffusion were carried out at Polar Fox Lagoon on the Bykovsky Peninsula, Siberia. Polar Fox Lagoon is a seasonally isolated water body connected to Tiksi Bay through a channel, leading to hypersaline waters under the ice cover. The boreholes in the center of the lagoon revealed floating ice and a saline cryotic bed underlain by a saline cryotic talik, a thin ice-bearing permafrost layer, and unfrozen ground. The bathymetry showed that most of the lagoon had bedfast ice in spring. In bedfast ice areas, the electrical resistivity profiles suggested that an unfrozen saline layer was underlain by a thick layer of refrozen talik. The modeling showed that thermokarst lake taliks can refreeze when submerged in saltwater with mean annual bottom water temperatures below or slightly above 0°C. This occurs, because the top-down chemical degradation of newly formed ice-bearing permafrost is slower than the refreezing of the talik. Hence, lagoons may precondition taliks with a layer of ice-bearing permafrost before encroachment by the sea, and this frozen layer may act as a cap on gas migration out of the underlying talik.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; thermokarst lake ; talik ; lagoon ; subsea permafrost ; salt diffusion ; Siberia
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: Nowadays, national and international requirements and laws emphasize the “natural” development of river-floodplain systems. One goal is to increase the connectivity between the river and its floodplains and thus reactivate floodplains as flooding areas, which potentially increases the mobility of fine sediments. The objective of this study is to analyze the long-term effects of reactivated floodplains on the mobility of floodplain deposits of small rivers based on two river restoration scenarios: elevating the riverbed or lowering the floodplains. Past channel fixation and degradation as well as the subsequent increase in the floodplain elevation led to the decoupling of the channel and floodplain morphodynamics associated with the reduction of the habitat connectivity. Here, the floodplain sedimentation rates were determined using a numerical model based on the Delft3D software. The novelty of these numerical investigations is the morphological long-term analysis over timescales of decades, which is not comparable to other short-term hydrodynamic and morphodynamic studies for small meandering lowland rivers. The results of 11 river restoration scenarios show that lowering the floodplain and raising the riverbed elevation both lead to an increase in the fine sediment deposition on the floodplain. However, lowering the floodplain elevation is generally more effective. Based on the numerical model results and the assumption of a fixed river channel, only anthropogenic activity might have increased the amount of fine sediments deposited on floodplains and has accelerated the decoupling of the floodplains from the riverbed in the past centuries.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; Reactivation of floodplain sediment deposits ; Numerical modelling ; River restorations
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: Tunnel valleys are assumed to form near the margin of ice sheets. Hence, they can be used to reconstruct the dynamics of former ice margins. The detailed formation and infill of tunnel valleys, however, are still not well understood. Here, we present a dense grid of high-resolution 2D multi-channel reflection seismic data from the German sector of the southeastern North Sea imaging tunnel valleys in very great detail. Three tunnel valley systems were traced over distances ranging between 11 and 21 km. All tunnel valleys are completely filled and buried. They differ in incision depth, incision width and number of incisions. The tunnel valleys cut 130–380 m deep into Neogene, Palaeogene and Cretaceous sediments; they show a lower V-shaped and an upper U-shaped morphology. For individual tunnel valleys, the overall incision direction ranges from east–west to northeast–southwest. Two tunnel valleys intersect at an oblique angle without reuse of the thalweg. These valleys incise into a pre-existing glaciotectonic complex consisting of thrust sheets in the northwest of the study area. The analysis of the glaciotectonic complex and the tunnel valleys leads us to assume that we identified several marginal positions of (pre-)Elsterian ice lobes in the southeastern North Sea.
    Keywords: 551 ; 622.15 ; glaciogenic unconformity ; glaciotectonic complex ; ice margin ; Quaternary succession ; tunnel valleys
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: The climate of the western Mediterranean was characterized by a strong precipitation gradient during the Holocene driven by atmospheric circulation patterns. The scarcity of terrestrial paleoclimate archives has precluded exploring this hydroclimate pattern during Marine Isotope Stages 5 to 3. Here we present stable carbon and oxygen isotope records from three flowstones from southeast Iberia, which show that Dansgaard/Oeschger events were associated with more humid conditions. This is in agreement with other records from the Iberian Peninsula, the Mediterranean, and western Europe, which all responded in a similar way to millennial-scale climate variability in Greenland. This general increase in precipitation during Dansgaard/Oeschger events cannot be explained by any present-day or Holocene winter atmospheric circulation pattern. Instead, we suggest that changes in sea surface temperature played a dominant role in determining precipitation amounts in the western Mediterranean.
    Keywords: 551 ; Spain ; last glacial ; Dansgaard/Oeschger ; speleothem ; Marine Isotope Stage 3 ; western Mediterranean climate
    Language: English
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: The Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO) was a gradual warming event and carbon cycle perturbation that occurred between 40.5 and 40.1 Ma. A number of characteristics, including greater-than-expected deep-sea carbonate dissolution, a lack of globally coherent negative δ13C excursion in marine carbonates, a duration longer than the characteristic timescale of carbon cycle recovery, and the absence of a clear trigger mechanism, challenge our current understanding of the Earth system and its regulatory feedbacks. This makes the MECO one of the most enigmatic events in the Cenozoic, dubbed a middle Eocene “carbon cycle conundrum.” Here we use boron isotopes in planktic foraminifera to better constrain pCO2 changes over the event. Over the MECO itself, we find that pCO2 rose by only 0.55–0.75 doublings, thus requiring a much more modest carbon injection than previously indicated by the alkenone δ13C-pCO2 proxy. In addition, this rise in pCO2 was focused around the peak of the 400 kyr warming trend. Before this, considerable global carbonate δ18O change was asynchronous with any coherent ocean pH (and hence pCO2) excursion. This finding suggests that middle Eocene climate (and perhaps a nascent cryosphere) was highly sensitive to small changes in radiative forcing.
    Keywords: 551 ; boron isotopes ; pCO2 reconstruction ; Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum ; carbon cycle ; paleoclimate ; cryosphere
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2021-10-15
    Description: Millennial-scale reductions in monsoon precipitation, so-called Weak Monsoon Intervals (WMIs), have been identified in numerous paleoclimate records across the Afro-Asian monsoon domain throughout the last glacial-interglacial cycle. These are considered the regional response to cooling during Heinrich events in the North Atlantic realm and several mechanisms have been suggested to explain this hemisphere-scale climatic teleconnection. In particular, reductions in Indian Ocean sea surface temperature (SST) have been proposed as the linking element between Heinrich events and WMIs. However, the validity of this relationship has only been demonstrated for the last ~20 kyr, leaving unresolved whether it also holds on longer time scales. Here we present a new paired record of planktonic foraminifera-based δ18Osw-ivc and UK'37-based SST from the northern Bay of Bengal, covering the last ~130 kyr. The δ18Osw-ivc record clearly reflects orbitally paced changes of Indian Summer Monsoon intensity superimposed by centennial- to millennial-scale WMIs that occurred synchronously to North Atlantic Heinrich events. Comparison with the UK'37-based SST reconstruction reveals, however, that WMIs in most cases were not paralleled by ocean surface cooling, questioning whether Indian Ocean SST lowering was the linking element between Heinrich events and reductions in monsoon precipitation in Asia also during the last glacial period.
    Keywords: 551 ; Indian Summer Monsoon ; Weak Monsoon Intervals ; marine sediments ; Bay of Bengal ; foraminifera oxygen isotopes ; UK'37 sea surface temperature
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2021-10-27
    Description: Vertical and horizontal components of GNSS displacements in the Long Valley Caldera and adjacent Sierra Nevada range show a clear correlation with hydrological trends at both multiyear and seasonal time scales. We observe a clear vertical and horizontal seasonal deformation pattern primarily attributable to the solid earth response to hydrological surface loading at large-to-regional (Sierra Nevada range) scales. Several GNSS sites, located at the eastern edge of the Sierra Nevada along the southwestern rim of Long Valley Caldera, also show significant horizontal deformation that cannot be explained by elastic deformation from surface loading. Due to the location of these sites and the strong correlation between their horizontal displacements and spring discharge, we hypothesize that this deformation reflects poroelastic processes related to snowmelt runoff water infiltrating into the Sierra Nevada slopes around Long Valley Caldera. Interestingly, this is also an area where water infiltrates to feed the local hydrothermal system, and where snowmelt-induced earthquake swarms have been recently detected.
    Keywords: 551 ; Long Valley Caldera ; GNSS observations ; transient signal ; nontectonic deformation
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2021-10-27
    Description: On interannual timescales the growth rate of atmospheric CO2 is largely controlled by the response of the land and ocean carbon sinks to climate variability. Yet, it is unknown to what extent this variability limits the predictability of atmospheric CO2 variations. Using perfect-model Earth System Model simulations, we show that variations in atmospheric CO2 are potentially predictable for 3 years. We find a 2-year predictability horizon for global oceanic CO2 flux with longer regional predictability of up to 7 years. The 2-year predictability horizon of terrestrial CO2 flux originates in the tropics and midlatitudes. With the predictability of the isolated effects of land and ocean carbon sink on atmospheric CO2 of 5 and 12 years respectively, land dampens the overall predictability of atmospheric CO2 variations. Our research shows the potential of Earth System Model-based predictions to forecast multiyear variations in atmospheric CO2.
    Keywords: 551 ; decadal predictability ; atmospheric CO2 ; carbon fluxes ; internal variability ; Earth System Model
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2021-10-27
    Description: Understanding hemisphere-wide millennial-scale temperature variability during past glacials in response to ice sheet dynamics and orbital forcing is one of the key targets for Quaternary climate research. While an inland propagation of abrupt temperature changes into Eurasia from the North Atlantic realm during the last glacial (Weichselian) receives increasingly broad support, much less is known regarding the penultimate glacial (Saalian) temperature variability, especially from a continental interior perspective. Here, we present a TEX86-derived lake surface temperature (LST) record from the former Black Sea “Lake” covering nearly the entire Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 6. While orbital-scale LST cooling likely relates to meltwater discharge from the retreating Eurasian Ice Sheet during insolation maxima, millennial-scale LST variability suggests interstadial warming in phase with Greenland and northern Mediterranean Sea temperature records during the first half of MIS 6. Although summer insolation reached an interglacial-like level during this period, we propose that the reduced extent of the Eurasian Ice Sheet associated with northward shifted atmospheric fronts was ultimately responsible for the inland propagation of Dansgaard-Oeschger-like temperature variability. During the second half of MIS 6, temperature patterns across the North Atlantic-Eurasian corridor were more variable and less comparable with each other, likely because of the larger continental ice sheet weakening northern hemisphere atmospheric teleconnections. Temperature records across the North Atlantic-Eurasian realm suggest a weaker atmospheric teleconnection during MIS 6 compared to MIS 3, likely related to a stronger imprint of the Eurasian Ice Sheet on the continental and regional climate.
    Keywords: 551 ; lake surface temperature ; Black Sea ; MIS 6 ; Eurasia
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2021-10-11
    Description: We present a local earthquake tomography to illuminate the crustal and uppermost mantle structure beneath the southern Puna plateau and to test the delamination hypothesis. Vp and Vp/Vs ratios were obtained using travel time variations recorded by 75 temporary seismic stations between 2007 and 2009. In the upper crust, prominent low Vp anomalies are found beneath the main volcanic centers, indicating the presence of magma and melt beneath the southern Puna plateau. Beneath the Moho at around 90-km depth, a strong high Vp anomaly is detected just west of the giant backarc Cerro Galan ignimbrite caldera. This high Vp anomaly is only resolved if earthquakes with an azimuthal gap up to 300° are included in the inversion. However, we show through data subset and synthetic tests that the anomaly is robust due to our specific station-event geometry and interpret it as a delaminated block of lower crust and uppermost mantle lithosphere under the southern Puna plateau. The low velocities in the crust are interpreted as a product of the delamination event that triggered the rise of fluids and melts into the crust and induced the high topography in this part of the plateau. The tomography also reveals the existence of low-velocity anomalies that link arc magmatism at the Ojos del Salado volcanic center with slab seismicity clusters at depths of about 100 and 150 km and support fluid transport in the mantle wedge due to dehydration reaction within the subducted slab.
    Keywords: 551 ; southern Puna plateau ; local earthquake tomography ; lithospheric delamination ; slab dehydration ; crustal melt accumulation
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2021-10-11
    Description: Geophysical and geochemical data indicate there is abundant fluid expulsion in the Nootka fault zone (NFZ) between the Juan de Fuca and Explorer plates and the Nootka continental slope. Here we combine observations from 〉20 years of investigations to demonstrate the nature of fluid-flow along the NFZ, which is the seismically most active region off Vancouver Island. Seismicity reaching down to the upper mantle is linked to near-seafloor manifestation of fluid flow through a network of faults. Along the two main fault traces, seismic reflection data imaged bright spots 100–300 m below seafloor that lie above changes in basement topography. The bright spots are conformable to sediment layering, show opposite-to-seafloor reflection polarity, and are associated with frequency reduction and velocity push-down indicating the presence of gas in the sediments. Two seafloor mounds ~15 km seaward of the Nootka slope are underlain by deep, nonconformable high-amplitude reflective zones. Measurements in the water column above one mound revealed a plume of warm water, and bottom-video observations imaged hydrothermal vent system biota. Pore fluids from a core at this mound contain predominately microbial methane (C1) with a high proportion of ethane (C2) yielding C1/C2 ratios 〈500 indicating a possible slight contribution from a deep source. We infer the reflective zones beneath the two mounds are basaltic intrusions that create hydrothermal circulation within the overlying sediments. Across the Nootka continental slope, gas hydrate-related bottom-simulating reflectors are widespread and occur at depths indicating heat flow values of 80–90 mW/m2.
    Keywords: 551 ; fluid flow ; Nootka transform fault ; gas hydrate ; intrusion ; heat flow
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2021-10-13
    Description: Meltwater from glaciers is not only a stable source of water but also affects downstream streamflow dynamics. One of these dynamics is the interannual variability of streamflow. Glaciers can moderate streamflow variability because the runoff in the glacierized part, driven by temperature, correlates negatively with the runoff in the non-glacierized part of a catchment, driven by precipitation, thereby counterbalancing each other. This is also called the glacier compensation effect (GCE), and the effect is assumed to depend on relative glacier cover. Previous studies found a convex relationship between streamflow variability and glacier cover of different glacierized catchments, with lowest streamflow variability at a certain optimum glacier cover. In this study, we aim to revisit these previously found curves to find out if a universal relationship between interannual streamflow variability and glacier cover exists, which could potentially be used in a space-for-time substitution analysis. Moreover, we test the hypothesis that the dominant climate drivers (here precipitation and temperature) switch around the suggested optimum of the curve. First, a set of virtual nested catchments, with the same absolute glacier area but varying non-glacierized area, were modelled to isolate the effect of glacier cover on streamflow variability. The modelled relationship was then compared with a multicatchment data set of gauged glacierized catchments in the European Alps. In the third step, changes of the GCE curve over time were analysed. Model results showed a convex relationship and the optimum in the simulated curve aligned with a switch in the dominant climate driver. However, the multicatchment data and the time change analyses did not suggest the existence of a universal convex relationship. Overall, we conclude that GCE is complex due to entangled controls and changes over time in glacierized catchments. Therefore, care should be taken to use a GCE curve for estimating and/or predicting interannual streamflow variability in glacierized catchments.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; glacier compensation effect ; glacierized catchments ; interannual variability ; modelling experiment ; space-for-time substitution ; streamflow
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2021-10-14
    Description: This study proposes a new process-based framework to characterize and classify runoff events of various magnitudes occurring in a wide range of catchments. The framework uses dimensionless indicators that characterize space–time dynamics of precipitation events and their spatial interaction with antecedent catchment states, described as snow cover, distribution of frozen soils, and soil moisture content. A rigorous uncertainty analysis showed that the developed indicators are robust and regionally consistent. Relying on covariance- and ratio-based indicators leads to reduced classification uncertainty compared to commonly used (event-based) indicators based on absolute values of metrics such as duration, volume, and intensity of precipitation events. The event typology derived from the proposed framework is able to stratify events that exhibit distinct hydrograph dynamics even if streamflow is not directly used for classification. The derived typology is therefore able to capture first-order controls of event runoff response in a wide variety of catchments. Application of this typology to about 180,000 runoff events observed in 392 German catchments revealed six distinct regions with homogeneous event type frequency that match well regions with similar behavior in terms of runoff response identified in Germany. The detected seasonal pattern of event type occurrence is regionally consistent and agrees well with the seasonality of hydroclimatic conditions. The proposed framework can be a useful tool for comparative analyses of regional differences and similarities of runoff generation processes at catchment scale and their possible spatial and temporal evolution.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; event classification ; event type ; rainfall-runoff events ; event typology ; event characteristics ; runoff generation mechanisms
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2021-10-14
    Description: Projections of potential impacts of climate change and groundwater abstraction on gaining and losing streams, particularly in ephemeral river basins exhibiting sporadic and intricate flux exchanges, have remained largely unexplored. To fill this gap, we propose a promising modeling scheme based on the new fully integrated hydrological model SWAT-MODFLOW-NWT, calibrated and validated for 1978–2012, to quantify the intertwined surface-groundwater interactions under a conjuncture of three climatic emission scenarios (RCP 2.6, 4.5 and 8.5) and two groundwater pumping variants: “pumping” (extending current groundwater utilization into the future) and “nonpumping” (assuming a complete cease of pumping in the future). By forcing the integrated model with future downscaled climate predictors of CanESM2 under the aforementioned RCPs for three time slices up to year 2100, projections of various water resources components for the Gharehsoo River Basin (GRB), in northwestern Iran were made. Results demonstrate that because of a general decrease of future precipitation, though with ups and downs across the total projection period, most of the surface and -subsurface budget quantities and fluxes are substantially affected. In particular, future groundwater discharge (baseflow) to the gaining streams will be more influenced by the “pumping” variant (increasing and decreasing for “nonpumping” and “pumping”, respectively) than the concentrated groundwater recharge from the losing streams (decreasing and increasing for “nonpumping” and “pumping”, respectively). Future water yield and groundwater storage will also diminish and, surprisingly, this cannot be alleviated by future “nonpumping”, indicating the groundwater overutilization is the compelling reason for the future water scarcity in the GRB, rather than climate change alone.
    Keywords: 551.48 ; losing streams ; gaining streams ; climate change scenarios ; baseflow ; concentrated groundwater recharge ; pumping variants
    Language: English
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