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  • Other Sources  (1,783)
  • Elsevier  (1,139)
  • AGU (American Geophysical Union)  (454)
  • AMS (American Meteorological Society)  (96)
  • Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research  (94)
  • American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
  • 2020-2024  (1,282)
  • 1995-1999  (501)
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  • 1
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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine Geology (Internat. J. of Marine Geol., Geochem. and Geophys.), Amsterdam, Elsevier, vol. 21, no. 1, pp. 83-96, pp. 2486, (ISBN 1-86239-117-3)
    Publication Date: 1999
    Keywords: Tsunami(s) ; Geol. aspects
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  • 2
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 404 pp., Elsevier, vol. 19, pp. 503, (ISBN 0121341305)
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Reflection seismics ; Handbook of geophysics
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  • 3
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    Elsevier
    In:  Oxford, xxii+320 pp., 1st ed., Elsevier, vol. 13, no. 3, pp. 632 pp., (ISBN 0-8493-0068-1)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Seismology ; Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Recurrence of earthquakes ; Statistical investigations ; Strong motions ; Taiwan ; SAF ; bridges ; landslides ; floods ; socio-economic ; impact
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  • 4
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    Elsevier
    In:  New York, 546 pp., Elsevier, vol. 15, no. 85, pp. 585, (ISBN 0080424309)
    Publication Date: 1996
    Description: This book will help structural geologists keep abreast of rapid changes in work practices resulting from the personal computer revolution. I Computer-Aided Learning; II Microstructural Analysis; III Analysis of Orientation Data; IV Strain and Kinematic Analysis; V Mathematical and Physical Modeling; VI Structural Mapping and GIS. ISBN: 0-08-043110-0
    Keywords: Structural geology ; software ; Textbook of geology ; Stress ; GIS ; Tectonics ; Geol. aspects ; Stress ; cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Fracture
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  • 5
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    Elsevier
    In:  New York, 340 pages, Elsevier, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 1-40, (ISBN: 0-08-040286-0)
    Publication Date: 1996
    Keywords: Textbook of informatics ; Textbook of geology ; Data analysis / ~ processing ; plotting
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  • 6
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    Elsevier
    In:  Int. J. Rock Mech. & Min Sci., Taipei, Elsevier, vol. 34, no. 3-4, pp. 155-162, pp. B09401, (ISBN: 0-12-018847-3)
    Publication Date: 1997
    Keywords: Borehole geophys. ; Stress ; Borehole breakouts ; Hydraulic fracturing ; stability ; Anisotropy ; shear ; tensile ; Strength ; Rock mechanics
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  • 7
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 292 pp., Elsevier, vol. 1, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 127, (ISBN 0-521-66034-3, ISBN 0-521-66948-0 paper)
    Publication Date: 1999
    Description: The book presents multivariate statistical methods useful in geological analysis. The essential distinction between multivariate analysis as applied to full-space data (measurements on lengths, heights, breadths etc.) and compositional data is emphasized with particular reference to geochemical data. Each of the methods is accompanied by a practically oriented computer program and backed up by appropriate examples. The computer programs are provided on a compact disk together with trial data-sets and examples of the output. An important feature of this book is the graphical system developed by Dr. Savazzi which is entitled Graph Server.
    Keywords: Data analysis / ~ processing ; Statistical investigations ; Textbook of geology
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  • 8
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, Elsevier, vol. 1, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 95-104, (ISBN 1-85312-745-0)
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: Inversion ; Elasticity ; Geothermics ; Scattering ; soil ; Modelling ; Fluids ; Acoustics
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  • 9
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    Elsevier
    In:  Professional Paper, Structural Geology and Personal Computers, New York, Elsevier, vol. 15, no. 16, pp. 359-388, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1996
    Keywords: cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Fracture ; Elasticity ; Rock mechanics ; Mathematica ; MATLAB ; MAPLE ; Modelling ; J ; w/out ; dot
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  • 10
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    Elsevier
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Urban Disaster Mitigation: The Role of Science and Technology, New York, Elsevier, vol. 8, no. 16, pp. 15-30, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Seismicity ; Earthquake hazard ; Statistical investigations ; Strong motions ; Spectrum ; Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology
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  • 11
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    Elsevier
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Urban Disaster Mitigation: The Role of Science and Technology, New York, Elsevier, vol. 5, no. 16, pp. 157-166, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Earthquake risk ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Earthquake ; Strong motions ; USA
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  • 12
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 526 pp., Elsevier, vol. 45, pp. ii + 37 pp. + 35 figs. + 4 tabs., (ISBN 975-561-182-7)
    Publication Date: 1996
    Keywords: Applied geophysics ; Geol. aspects ; Borehole geophys. ; Geothermics ; Geochemistry
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  • 13
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    Elsevier
    In:  New York, Elsevier, vol. 138, no. 2, pp. 1-14, (ISBN 0-7923-5034-0)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Seismicity ; Earthquake hazard ; Statistical investigations
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  • 14
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 394 pp., Elsevier, vol. 46, no. XVI:, pp. 1-14, (ISBN 3-9808493-1-7)
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: oil ; gas ; Textbook of geophysics ; Textbook of engineering
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  • 15
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, Elsevier, vol. 6, no. 22, pp. 71-80, (ISBN 0-87590-422-X)
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: Elasticity ; Textbook of geophysics ; Ritz ; Kirchhoff ; p-Ritz ; software ; Textbook of engineering
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  • 16
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 346 pp., Elsevier, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 65-66, (ISBN 3-936546-23-1, 2. Auflage 2005. 876 Seiten + CD-ROM)
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: Seismology ; Textbook of geophysics ; Textbook of geology
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  • 17
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, Elsevier, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 799-804, (ISBN 1-4020-1777-4 (hb) and ISBN 1-4020-1778-2 (pb))
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: Handbook of geophysics ; Gravimetry, Gravitation ; Geomagnetics ; Hilbert transform ; digital signal analysis (also DSP) ; Data analysis / ~ processing ; Fast Fourier transf. ; Spectrum ; Correlation ; Filter- ; discrete ; DFT ; Maximum likelihood
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  • 18
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    Elsevier
    In:  Stuttgart, 403 pp., Elsevier, vol. 18, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 267, (ISBN 3-534-14102-4)
    Publication Date: 1996
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Physical properties of rocks ; porosity ; permeability ; conductivity ; Density ; susceptibility ; incompressibility ; shear ; modulus ; Lame ; viscosity ; Schoen ; Schon
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  • 19
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    Elsevier
    In:  Urban Disaster Mitigation: The Role of Science and Technology, New York, Elsevier, vol. 37, pp. 63-77, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk
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  • 20
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    Elsevier
    In:  Int. J. Rock Mech. & Min. Sci., Hannover, Elsevier, vol. 34, no. 3-4, pp. 13021-13032, pp. L15S14, (ISSN: 1340-4202)
    Publication Date: 1997
    Keywords: Stress ; Stress measurements ; Hydraulic fracturing ; Borehole geophys. ; stability ; North ; Sea ; Norway
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  • 21
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, Elsevier, vol. 47, no. 22, pp. 65-70, (ISBN 3-7643-0253-4)
    Publication Date: 1998
    Keywords: Modelling ; Finite Element Method ; Elasticity ; Error analysis ; Acoustics
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  • 22
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 490 pp., Elsevier, vol. 4, no. 85, pp. 175, (ISBN: 1-85312-689-6)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: graben ; Geol. aspects ; Textbook of geophysics ; Textbook of geology ; Tectonics
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  • 23
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    Elsevier
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Urban Disaster Mitigation: The Role of Science and Technology, New York, Elsevier, vol. 66, no. 2, pp. 47-62, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Strong motions ; China ; Project report/description ; Site amplification
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  • 24
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    Elsevier
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Urban Disaster Mitigation: The Role of Science and Technology, New York, Elsevier, vol. 24, no. 4, pp. 31-46, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Earthquake hazard ; Error analysis
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  • 25
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    Elsevier
    In:  200 pp., Elsevier, vol. 24, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 329, (ISBN: 0-444-50309-9)
    Publication Date: 1999
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Textbook of geology ; Textbook of geophysics ; Earth model, also for more shallow analyses ! ; Geol. aspects ; Mineralogy
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  • 26
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    Elsevier
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Urban Disaster Mitigation: The Role of Science and Technology, New York, Elsevier, vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 147-156, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1995
    Keywords: Earthquake risk ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology
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  • 27
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Water Resources Research, 31 (9). pp. 2213-2218.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-10
    Description: A non-Fickian physico-chemical model for electrolyte transport in high-ionic strength systems is developed and tested with laboratory experiments with copper sulfate as an example electrolyte. The new model is based on irreversible thermodynamics and uses measured mutual diffusion coefficients, varying with concentration. Compared to a traditional Fickian model, the new model predicts less diffusion and asymmetric diffusion profiles. Laboratory experiments show diffusion rates even smaller than those predicted by our non-Fickian model, suggesting that there are additional, unaccounted for processes retarding diffusion. Ionic diffusion rates may be a limiting factor in transporting salts whose effect on fluid density will in turn significantly affect the flow regime. These findings have important implications for understanding and predicting solute transport in geologic settings where dense, saline solutions occur.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2016-12-21
    Description: Alkaline volcanic rocks including nephelinites, basanites and trachybasalts dredged from the volcanic pedestal of Rakahanga Atoll and from a volcanic edifice with 100 satellite volcanoes at the eastern edge of the Manihiki Plateau, ca. 40 km southwest of the atoll, fall well within the category of EM-type ocean island basalts. They indicate a hotspot involvement during the formation of the plateau basement. The rocks are thought to be products of explosive eruptions which took place subaerially or in shallow water in the Aptian. The volcanoes, together with other volcanic eruption centers, most likely were responsible for the formation of the 230 m thick volcaniclastite layer which rests on the basement for at least 5000 km2 of the eastern part of the Manihiki Plateau. Erosion has prevented any substantial sediment cover on the volcanic cone field and most of the slope of Rakahanga and thin pelagic limestones were deposited instead at least since the Maastrichtian.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 29
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    Elsevier
    In:  Chemical Geology, 145 (3-4). pp. 287-323.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-07
    Description: Detrital sediment is carried from land to the sea by three agents, rivers, glaciers, and winds. The shoreline is an arbitrary boundary within the detrital sediment transport system, which extends from a site of origin across areas of temporary storage to a site of long-term deposition. The most important of the agents moving sediment across the land is river transport, estimated to be in the order of 20×1012 kg of sediment annually at present. Analysis of drainage basins indicates that relief and runoff are the most important factors in determining the sediment load of rivers. The competence of rivers to transport sediment is governed by the volume flow, gradient, and the sediment load itself. Today, most large rivers are fed by snowmelt in highland areas, runoff from rainfall in the drainage basin, and groundwater inflow. Along the river course, water is lost to evaporation and groundwater infiltration. River courses can often be divided into two segments, a degradational section in which the gradient is relatively steep and little temporary storage of sediment takes place, and an aggradational section where the gradient is sharply reduced through meandering, and where large-scale temporary sediment storage forms a flood plain. Lakes trap sediment inland and prevent its transport to the sea. Today, many high and mid-latitude rivers are interrupted by lakes of glacial origin. There are also some large areas of internal drainage that deliver no sediment to the sea. The load carried by rivers has been markedly altered by human activity, and may have doubled over the past few thousand years, only to be reduced in the past century by the widespread construction of dams. The ancient use of fire in hunting and its subsequent use in clearing land has increased erosion. Extensive deforestation and cultivation processes have also increased the sediment supply. Dam construction is a relatively new factor and affects the sediment transport system by trapping sediment before it can reach the sea. The resulting lower sediment supply from rivers is, at least in part, compensated by increased coastal erosion. Glacial erosion is difficult to estimate. There is an ongoing controversy whether ice sheets are effective erosive agents or not. Estimates of the present global flux of glacial detritus range from 0.8–50×1012 kg annually, with the lower value most probable. The dust flux is in the order of 0.5 to 0.9×1012 kg annually, but may vary greatly with time.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 30
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    Elsevier
    In:  In: Metabolic biochemistry. Biochemistry and molecular biology of fishes, 4 . Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 191-220. ISBN 0-444-82082-5
    Publication Date: 2018-03-08
    Description: This chapter discusses the rates of protein synthesis in fish. Protein synthesis can be viewed at a number of levels. Whole-animal values can be integrated into the descriptions of assimilation/growth or assimilation/metabolism patterns in different fish species and is the focus of the chapter. The measurement of protein synthesis rates in body organs and tissues can provide information on the extent to which differences exist among various tissues and offer a challenge in understanding the integration of organ metabolism into whole animal physiology. The majority of methods for estimating protein synthesis measure the flux of an amino acid or nitrogen. This involves the use of tracer substances—that is, amino acids labeled with an isotope, which are given in a single dose or by continuous infusion. The measurements, parameters, and formulae that are commonly employed in the studies of protein growth, synthesis, and degradation are described in the chapter. It discusses the mechanism of nutrition and protein synthesis in the fish and explains the impact that protein synthesis has upon the rates of oxygen consumption.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 31
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 102 (B3). pp. 5313-5325.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-11
    Description: Grain‐size‐dependent flow mechanisms tend to be favored over dislocation creep at low differential stresses and can potentially influence the rheology of low‐stress, low‐strain rate environments such as those of planetary interiors. We experimentally investigated the effect of reduced grain size on the solid‐state flow of water ice I, a principal component of the asthenospheres of many icy moons of the outer solar system, using techniques new to studies of this deformation regime. We fabricated fully dense ice samples of approximate grain size 2±1 μm by transforming “standard” ice I samples of 250±50 μm grain size to the higher‐pressure phase ice II, deforming them in the ice II field, and then rapidly releasing the pressure deep into the ice I stability field. At T≤200 K, slow growth and rapid nucleation of ice I combine to produce a fine grain size. Constant‐strain rate deformation tests conducted on these samples show that deformation rates are less stress sensitive than for standard ice and that the fine‐grained material is markedly weaker than standard ice, particularly during the transient approach to steady state deformation. Scanning electron microscope examination of the deformed fine‐grained ice samples revealed an unusual microstructure dominated by platelike grains that grew normal to the compression direction, with c axes preferentially oriented parallel to compression. In samples tested at T≥220 K the elongation of the grains is so pronounced that the samples appear finely banded, with aspect ratios of grains approaching 50:1. The anisotropic growth of these crystallographically oriented neoblasts likely contributes to progressive work hardening observed during the transient stage of deformation. We have also documented remarkably similar microstructural development and weak mechanical behavior in fine‐grained ice samples partially transformed and deformed in the ice II field.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 32
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 42 (11-12). pp. 2113-2126.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-10
    Description: In the Neil Brown Instruments' MKIIIB-CTD (conductivity-temperature-depth profiler), the system's digital outputs for the three basic measurements of temperature, conductivity and pressure typically show some small amplitude deviations from smooth calibrations which should be corrected for to achieve high accuracies, as required, e.g. within the Hydrographic Program (WHP) of the current World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE). These deviations show up as (i) a strong nonlinearity or even discontinuity of several mK close to 0°C in temperature output leading to too high subzero temperatures; (ii) a jump of order 0.002 mS cm−1 in conductivity output when passing the half-range value 32.768 mS cm−1, which causes jumps in the relation of potential temperature and salinity; and (iii) errors in pressure measurements of up to 4 dbar due to mechanical hysteresis and both static and dynamic responses to temperature changes. The existence of these effects is demonstrated, and methods to reduce the associated errors are suggested.
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  • 33
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 46 (6-7). pp. 1063-1082.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-30
    Description: The sea-ice export out of the central Arctic through the Fram Strait is a key variable in the Arctic climate system. Satellite data provide the only basis for mapping ice features with a high spatial and temporal resolution in polar regions. An automatic drift algorithm has been employed and optimized to monitor the sea-ice drift velocity in the Greenland Sea with AVHRR data. The combination of the ice drift and the spatial ice distribution provides an insight into the ice transport processes along the coast of Greenland. The combination with sea-ice thickness measurements allows an estimation of the spatial distribution of the sea-ice mass flux. The seasonal and spatial variability of the mass flux allows further predictions of the meridional melting and freezing processes along the East Greenland Current. This investigation covers the years 1993 and 1994. Seasonal and spatial distributions of the sea-ice drift were derived. The derived absolute values in this study are in good agreement with estimates proposed by other authors.
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  • 34
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 23 . pp. 3175-3178.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-13
    Description: Dissolved and atmospheric nitrous oxide (N2O) were measured on the legs 3 and 5 of the R/V Meteor cruise 32 in the Arabian Sea. A cruise track along 65°E was followed during both the intermonsoon (May 1995) and the southwest (SW) monsoon (July/August 1995) periods. During the second leg the coastal and open ocean upwelling regions off the Arabian Peninsula were also investigated. Mean N2O saturations for the oceanic regions of the Arabian Sea were in the range of 99–103% during the intermonsoon and 103–230% during the SW monsoon. Computed annual emissions of 0.8–1.5 Tg N2O for the Arabian Sea are considerably higher than previous estimates, indicating that the role of upwelling regions, such as the Arabian Sea, may be more important than previously assumed in global budgets of oceanic N2O emissions.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 35
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, 12 (4). pp. 923-934.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: A method to derive salinity data from RAFOS float temperature and pressure measurements is described. It is based on evaluating the float's in situ density from its mechanical properties and in situ pressure and temperature data. The salinity of the surrounding water may then be determined, assuming that the float has reached equilibrium with its environment. This method, in comparison with the possible use of floatborne salinity cells, has the advantage of being both cost and energy neutral and highly stable in the long term. The effect on the estimated salinity of various parameters used in the determination of the float's in situ density is discussed. Results of seven RAFOS Boats deployed in the Brazil Basin are compared with corresponding CTD data to estimate the magnitude of these errors. At present, an accuracy of 0.3 psu is achieved. The accuracy may be improved to 0.02 psu by referring the float's calculated density to a reference density established by a CTD cast at the time of launch. Results from five floats deployed in the heterogeneous water masses of the Iberian Basin are compared with the corresponding CM casts to demonstrate the variability and interpretation of p-T-S float datasets from different areas.
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2017-06-23
    Description: Dinoflagellate cysts and other organic-walled microfossils have been studied in recent surface sediments from the entire Norwegian-Greenland Sea. More than 30 taxa have been recognized, of which only few show a distinct distribution pattern, and allow description of four assemblages. The occurrence of most taxa is related to the relatively warmer waters of the Norwegian Sea. Algidaspaeridium? minutum s.1., Brigantedinium simplex and Impagidinium? pallidum are the only species showing a preference for colder water masses. Two species, I.? pallidum and Nematosphaeropsis labyrinthus are mainly restricted to the oceanic environment, whereas the other species have also been reported from neritic environments in previous studies. Due to the limited knowledge of the ecological and sedimentological factors influencing the occurrence of dinoflagellate cysts in oceanic environments, their distribution in recent sediments can be only related to surface water masses in a broad sense. Although the distribution of assemblages correlates with specific surface water masses, comparison with assemblages recovered from sediment traps deployed basinwide in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea (Dale and Dale, 1992) revealed some major discrepancies in species composition and percentage abundances. The differences cannot be explained with certainty at the moment, although there is some evidence that transport of dinoflagellate cysts and other fossilizable microplankton in water masses by currents, in sea-ice and sediments may modify the assemblages found in recent oceanic surface sediments from the Norwegian-Greenland Sea.
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2017-06-22
    Description: Benthic foraminifera and surface sediments were analyzed from 23 box-core and core-top samples from 250 to 3600 m depth at the southern Portuguese continental margin between 37 and 38 °N. This area is affected by the MOW which flows northwards along the slope between 600 and 1500 m waterdepth. Sediment structures, grain-size distribution and clay mineral assemblages of surface sediments indicate active winnowing in the upper part of the MOW, and deposition of the fine fraction near its lower boundary. R-mode cluster analyses of foraminiferal census data from the 〉 250 μm fraction revealed four associations. The ‘Shelf Edge Association’ occurs on glauconitic shelf and upper slope sands down to 268 m. The ‘Upper Slope Association’ is recognized between 498 and 1300 m where sand-silt-clays to clayey silts are encountered. The ‘Lower Slope Association’ is found between 1405 and 2985 m and differs markedly from assemblages below 3000 m (‘Deep Water Association’) where the near-surface sediments are soft hemipelagic clays. The ‘Boundary Layer Association’ shows no significant depth limits but abundance maxima both in the density interface above the MOW and in the interval of decreasing turbulence below it. The boundaries of the ‘Shelf Edge’ and ‘Upper Slope Association’ correspond to these hydrographic boundary layers whereas the boundary between ‘Lower Slope’ and ‘Deep Water Assemblage’ is related to threshold values of nutrient flux to the benthic community. Examination of hard-substrates reveals 27 different species of epibenthic foraminifera. Six of these, the ‘Epibenthos Group’, were found attached to elevated substrates only within the MOW. Above the MOW, elevated substrates were inhabited by different species, whilst below the MOW they were not used by any epibenthic foraminifers. Evidently, the hydrodynamic environment of the MOW current provides an ecological niche which is efficiently used by opportunistic suspension feeders. The ‘Epibenthos Group’ is more abundant in the middle part of the study area between 37 °20′ and 37 °40′N where the sand content of surface sediments is also higher. Both indicate an enhanced sediment-water interaction in this area which results from an obstruction of the MOW flow by the ‘Principes d'Avis’ basement spur.
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  • 38
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 100 (C2). p. 2441.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-17
    Description: The distributions and transports of deepwater masses at the western boundary in the tropical Atlantic off Brazil have been studied on three surveys along 35 degrees W and 5 degrees S and one at 10 degrees S. Transports are obtained from direct measurements of the velocity fields (Pegasus profiling system and lowered acoustic Doppler current profiler) and from geostrophic computations. Using chlorofluoromethane (CFM) and hydrographic distributions, four water masses could be identified forming the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) system. Two of these have a high CFM content, the ''shallow upper NADW'' (SUNADW) and the ''overflow lower NADW'' (OLNADW). These exhibit the highest velocity signals at 35 degrees W, where distinct flow cores seem to exist; most of the southeastward flow of the SUNADW (centered around 1600 m) occurs 320 km offshore between 3 degrees 09'S and 1 degrees 50'S (9.7 +/- 3.3 Sv); farther north in that section, a highly variable reversing flow is found in a second velocity maximum. The transport of OLNADW (centered around 3800 m) of 4.6 +/- 2.6 Sv is guided by the Parnaiba Ridge at 1 degrees 45'S, 35 degrees W. The water masses located between the two CFM maxima, the Labrador Sea Water (LSW) and the LNADW old water mass (LNADW-old), did not show any persistent flow features, however, a rather constant transport of 11.1 +/- 2.6 Sv was observed for these two layers. The total southeastward flow of the NADW at 35 degrees W showed a transport of 26.8 +/- 7.0 Sv, if one neglects the reversing SUNADW north of 1 degrees 50'S. At 5 degrees S the flow of all deepwater masses shows vertically aligned cores; the main southward transport occurred near the coast (19.5 +/- 5.3 Sv). The boundary current is limited offshore by a flow reversal, present in all three surveys, but located at different longitudes. At 10 degrees S a southward transport of 4.7 Sv was observed in November 1992. However, the section extended only to 32 degrees 30'W, so that probably a significant part of the flow has been missed. An important result is the large transport variability between single cruises as well as variability of the spatial distribution of the flow at 35 degrees W, which could lead to large uncertainties in the interpretation of single cruise observations. Despite these uncertainties we suggest a circulation pattern of the various deepwater masses near the equator by combining our mean transport estimates with other observations.
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  • 39
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    Unknown
    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 42 (5). pp. 773-795.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: The flow field in the area of what was thought to be the source region of the North Brazil Current (NBC) off the northeast coast of Brazil between 5 degrees 30'S and 10 degrees S was investigated in austral spring during November 1992 and compared with observations in October 1990. The data were taken with several different instruments, including vessel-mounted ADCP, lowered-ADCP, Pegasus, CTD and XBTs. The flow was found off the coast at 5 degrees 30'S as well as at 10 degrees S as an undercurrent, the North Brazil Undercurrent (NBUC). The NBUC shows a subsurface core at about 200 m depth with velocities of up to 90.0 cm s(-1), resulting in large northward transports of more than 22 Sv in the upper 1000 m. The transport is about the same at 5 degrees 30'S and 10 degrees S, hence no net inflow from the east is required to feed the NBUC. The climatological Ekman transport is to the south between 5 degrees 30'S and 10 degrees S, and in consequence the northward flow near the surface was reduced and might be one reason for the existence of the undercurrent. The flow near the coast was to the north at 10 degrees S, therefore the Brazil Current had to start as a coastal current south of 10 degrees S. For the zonal sections at 5 degrees 30'S and 10 degrees S the geostrophic computations relative to the density surface sigma(1) = 32.15 kg m(-3) (about 1150 m depth) resulted in transports comparable to those obtained from direct measurements. The results further show that the choice of a correct level of no motion can be supported by the direct observations. A shallower reference based on water mass boundaries alone would reduce the NBUC transport to almost zero. Computations with data from the historical data base for austral fall resulted in a weaker NBUC of less than 20 Sv near 10 degrees S, indicating a possible seasonal signal in the NBUC with a stronger NBUC in austral spring.
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  • 40
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    Unknown
    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 100 (C12). pp. 24745-24760.
    Publication Date: 2017-12-06
    Description: During March 1994 a survey of the western boundary of the tropical Atlantic, between 10 degrees N and 10 degrees S, was carried out by conductivity-temperature-depth and current profiling using shipboard and lowered acoustic Doppler current profilers. In the near-surface layer, above sigma. = 24.5, the inflow into the boundary regime came dominantly from low latitudes; out of the 14 Sv that crossed the equator in the upper part of the North Brazil Current (NBC), only 2 Sv originated from south of 5 degrees S, while 12 Sv came in from the east at 1 degrees-5 degrees S with the South Equatorial Current (SEC). After crossing the equator near 44 degrees W, only a minor fraction of the near-surface NBC retroflected eastward, while a net through flow of about 12 Sv above sigma. = 24.5 continued northwestward along the boundary, By contrast, in the isopycnal range sigma. = 24.5-26.8 encompassing the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC), the source waters of the equatorial circulation were dominantly of higher-latitude South Atlantic origin. While only 3 Sv of eastern equatorial water entered the region through the SEC at 3 degrees-5 degrees S, there was an inflow of 10 Sv of South Atlantic water in the North Brazil Undercurrent (NBUC) along the South American coast that originated south of 10 degrees S, The transport of 14 Sv arriving at the equator along the boundary in the undercurrent layer was almost entirely retroflected into the EUC with only marginal northern water additions along its path to 35 degrees W. The off-equatorial undercurrents in the upper thermocline, the South and North Equatorial Undercurrents carried only small transports across 35 degrees W, of 5 Sv and 3 Sv, respectively, dominantly supplied out of SEC recirculation rather than out of the boundary current. Still deeper, three zonal undercurrents were observed: the westward-flowing Equatorial Intermediate Current (EIC) in the depth range 200-900 m below the EUC, and two off-equatorial eastward undercurrents, the Northern and Southern Intermediate Countercurrents (NICC, SICC) at 400-1000 m and 1 degrees-3 degrees latitude. In the lower part of the NBUC there was an Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) inflow along the coast of 6 Sv, and there was a clear connection at the AAIW level to the SICC by low salinities and high oxygens and a weaker suggestion also that some supply of the NICC might be through AAIW out of the deep NBUC.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2019-01-24
    Description: The Laptev Sea is of great significance for studying the processes of the initial breakup of continents. It is the southern termination of the Gakkel spreading ridge and thus the location of structural features resulting from a continental margin/spreading ridge intersection. The present-day understanding of the Laptev Shelf geology is based on the Russian multichannel seismic reflection data and extrapolation of the terrestrial geology. Geologic and plate-kinematic data are used to constrain the interpretation of the seismic reflection data. The Laptev Rift System consists of several deep subsided rifts and high standing blocks of the basement. From west to east these are: the West Laptev and South Laptev rift basins, Ust' Lena Rift, East Laptev and Stolbovoi horsts, Bel'kov-Svyatoi Nos and Anisin rifts. The central and eastern parts of the shelf have the greatest contrasts in the gravity field ranging from −60 mGal over the rifts to 50 mGal over the horsts. The rifts contain up to five seismic stratigraphic units bounded by clear regional reflectors and underlain by folded heterogeneous basement. They are suggested to be Late Cretaceous to Holocene in age and reflect different stages of spreading ridge/continental margin interaction. The estimated total thickness of the rift-related sediments varies between 4 and 8–10 km while the sedimentary cover on the uplifts is significantly reduced and generally does not exceed 1–2 km. An eastward decrease of the total thickness of the sedimentary sections from about 10 km in the South Laptev Basin to 4–5 km in the Bel'kov-Svyatoi Nos Rift and the simplicity of the entire rift structure may indicate a rejuvenation of the rifts in the same direction. The entire rift system is covered by the uppermost seismic unit, which probably reflects a deceleration of the rifting during the last reorganization of the North American/Eurasian plate interaction since about 2 Ma.
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  • 42
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Physical Oceanography, 25 (1). pp. 77-91.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: The Southern Hemisphere Subtropical Front (STF) is a narrow zone of transition between upper-level subtropical waters to the north and subantarctic waters to the south. It is found near 40 degrees S across the South Atlantic and South Indian Oceans and is associated with an eastward geostrophic current band, The current band in each basin is found at or just north of the surface front except near the eastern boundaries where most of the subtropical waters turn north into the eastern limbs of the subtropical gyres. The bands associated with the STF are thus distinct features separated from the strong zonal flows of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current farther south. The authors have referred to the current bands in the two respective oceans as the South Atlantic Current and the South Indian Ocean Current. In this paper the authors use the historical database from the South Pacific Ocean to investigate the geostrophic flow associated with the STF there. The STF extends across the southern Tasman Sea from south of Tasmania to southern New Zealand, and a weak eastward flow appears to be associated with it. The transport amounts to only about 3 Sv (1Sv = 10(6) m(3) s(-1)), little of which passes south of New Zealand. Mixing within the eddy-rich Tasman Sea may account for this weakness, while also setting up another more significant front in the northern Tasman Sea, the Tasman Front. It branches off from the East Australian Current toward the north of New Zealand, along which moves a flow of about 14 Sv. After passing north of New Zealand, a portion of this current flows east to contribute to a current band near 30 degrees S, while another portion turns south as the East Auckland Current and meets with subantarctic waters near Chatham Rise (44 degrees S), thus reestablishing the STF. An enhanced eastward current band is associated with the front there, one that extends across the remainder of the South Pacific and is referred to as the South Pacific Current. In comparison with its counterparts in the other basins, which typically begin by carrying 30 Sv (Atlantic) to 60 Sv (Indian) in the upper 1000 m in their western portions before weakening to 10-15 Sv in the east, the South Pacific Current is weak. Near Chatham Rise, it starts with a transport of approximately 5 Sv, and it remains near this strength as it shifts gradually north across the basin toward South America. The current appears to split into two smaller bands in the region of 115 degrees-85 degrees W, while near 28 degrees 5, 83 degrees W it begins to turn more strongly north and becomes shallower and weaker. Potential vorticity distributions indicate that this current acts as an impediment toward the northward spreading of Antarctic Intermediate Water, But why the South Pacific Current east of New Zealand should be so much weaker than its counterparts in the other basins is not particularly clear. It may be due to the presence of New Zealand and other topographic barriers to deep now east of Australia, to the axis of the subtropical gyre in the South Pacific shifting more rapidly southward with depth than those elsewhere, thus causing greater reductions in the underlying zonal velocities, and to strong poleward eddy heat and salt fluxes in the other two basins leading to smaller cross-STF gradients in the Pacific.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2016-11-14
    Description: During the ARCTIC '91 expedition aboard RV Polarstern (ARK VIII/3) to the Central Arctic Ocean, a box corer sample on the Gakkel Ridge at 87 degrees N and 60 degrees E yielded a layer of sand-sized, dark brown volcanic glass shards at the surface of the sediment core. These shards have been investigated by petrographic, mineralogical, geochemical and radiogenic isotope methods. The nearly vesicle-free and aphyric glass shards bear only minute microphenocrysts of magnesiochromite and olivine (Fo(88-89)). Most glasses are fresh, although some show signs of incipient low-temperature alteration. From their shapes and sizes, the glass shards most likely formed by spalling of glassy rinds of a nearby volcanic outcrop. Geochemically, the glasses are relatively unfractionated tholeiites with E-MORB trace element compositions. Thus, they are quite similar to the previously investigated ARK IV/3-11-370-5 basalts from 86 degrees N. The Nd and Sr isotopic ratios of PS 2167-2 glasses are significantly lower than for ARK IV/3-11-370-5 basalts and suggest an isotopically heterogeneous mantle source of Gakkel Ridge MORE between 86 degrees and 87 degrees N. The positive Delta-8/4 Pb value (similar to 16) and high Sr-87/Sr-86 ratio (0.70270), found for PS 2167-2 glasses are similar to that of ARK IV/3-11-370-5 basalts and show the influence of the DUPAL isotopic anomaly in the high Arctic mantle. These results argue against the presence of an 'anti-DUPAL anomaly' in the mantle below the North Pole region and simple models of whole-mantle convection.
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  • 44
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    Elsevier
    In:  Continental Shelf Research, 17 (15). pp. 1839-1867.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-21
    Description: AVHRR satellite imagery of the southern Mid-Atlantic Bight during May 1993 revealed a large area of cold water over the shelf break and slope that appeared to spin up into a series of southward propagating anticyclonic eddies. The eddies had diameters of 35–45 km at the surface and moved southward at about 20 cm/sec. A radial TOYO CTD (to 50m) and ADCP velocity (to 400m) transect was conducted across the southern-most of these eddies. The upper 50 meters had minimum temperatures of less than 7°C and salinities of about 33 pss, characteristics similar to cold pool waters usually found over the continental shelf. ADCP velocity data from one of the eddies revealed anticyclonic flow extending to a depth of about 250m. The transport of cold pool water by the eddies was estimated to be 0.1 to 0.2 Sv which is of the same order as the annual mean alongshore transport of shelf water in this region. The origin of the deeper water within the eddy is unlikely to be the continental shelf because the shelf break is less than 100 m. The depth and velocity profiles along the TOYO transect were consistent with the constant potential vorticity eddy model of Flierl (1979) although the source of the eddy kinetic energy is uncertain. The cause for the exodus of cold pool water from the shelf, which extended northward to at least 38°N, is unclear but must involve the establishment of an alongshore baroclinic pressure gradient against the usual southwestward shelf flow. It is possible that the intrusion of Gulf Stream waters onto the shelf near Cape Hatteras was a precursor of this off shelf transport. The southern-most eddy was marked by high biological productivity and very high oxygen supersaturation. The phytoplankton bloom detected within the exported cold pool water, located over the continental slope, suggests a mechanism whereby production fueled by nutrients derived from the shelf can be locally exported into deep water
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  • 45
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    Unknown
    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 104 (C9). 21,123-21,136.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-17
    Description: The modification of the exchange flow in a deep southern hemisphere passage, resembling the Vema Channel, by frictionally induced secondary circulation is investigated numerically. The hydrostatic primitive equation model is a two-dimensional version of the sigma-coordinate Princeton Ocean Model. The time dependent response of a stratified along-channel flow, forced by barotropic or baroclinic pressure gradients, is examined. Near the bottom, where the along-channel now is retarded, there is cross-channel Ekman nux that is associated with downwelling on the eastern side and upwelling on the western side of the channel. In the presence of stratification the cross-channel flow rearranges the density structure, which in turn acts on the along-channel velocity via the thermal wind relation. Eventually the cross-isobath Ekman flux is shut down. In the case of baroclinically driven flow of Antarctic Bottom Water through the Vema Channel the model reproduces the observed shape of the deep temperature profiles and their cross-channel asymmetry. The model offers an explanation that is alternative or supplementary to inviscid multilayer hydraulic theory that;was proposed in earlier studies. It explains the extremely thick bottom boundary layers in the center and on the western slope of the channel. The deep thermocline is spread out in the west and sharpened in the east, and the coldest water is found on the eastern side of the deep trough; The modified density field reduces the along-channel flow near the bottom and focuses it into a narrow jet on the eastern side of the channel.
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  • 46
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 11 . pp. 267-278.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-14
    Description: A theoretical model of CO2aq-dependent phytoplankton carbon isotope fractionation (єp) and abundance (δ13Corg) is compared to observed isotopic trends with temperature and [CO2aq] in the ocean. It is shown that the model's δ13Corg response to surface ocean temperature and to [CO2aq] can simulate observed trends when the other independent model variables (phytoplankton cell growth rate, cell size, cell membrane CO2 permeability, and enzymatic isotope fractionation) are held at realistic, constant values. The possible contribution made by each of these variables to the residual scatter in δ13Corg about its trends with temperature and [CO2aq] is quantified, thus estimating a maximum isotopic sensitivity to changes in each of these variables. The model response to growth rate and especially cell size, however, appears to be unrealistically high. This may occur because the net isotopic effects of such factors may be attenuated through dependent and isotopically offsetting variations among variables. The model's indicated sensitivity to such factors as CO2 permeability, enzymatic fractionation, cell size, and cell surface area/volume provides mechanisms whereby changes in species composition can play a significant role in affecting observed variations in oceanic δ13Corg. Overall, the model is consistent with earlier suggestions that marine δ13Corg and єp variability can be explained by carbon isotope fractionation evoked by CO2aq-dependent phytoplankton. This has important implications for interpreting carbon isotopic variability encountered in plankton and their organic constituents in the present-day ocean and in the marine sedimentary record.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: High-resolution Nd- and Pb-isotope time series for the last 8 Myr are reported for four Atlantic ferromanganese crusts, dated by 10Be/9Be chronology. These are compared to new high-resolution and high-precision Pb-isotope time series and recently published Nd-isotope time series for two previously studied crusts from the NW Atlantic Ocean. These records allow a more detailed examination of Atlantic deepwater variability over the time period of intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation (NHG). Changes in the Pb-isotope time series started after 3 Ma, but were most dramatic over the last 1.8 Myr, coinciding with changes of Pb-isotopes in the Arctic Ocean. This latter change post-dates the intensification of NHG at 3.1 to 2.5 Ma and reflects an increase in the input of material eroded from the Archean Shield of Canada and Greenland. Shifts in Nd- and Pb-isotope compositions in a crust from the Blake Plateau occur before ∼5 Ma and most prominent at ∼8 Ma suggest that water masses from either the Pacific or Southern Ocean influenced the isotope composition of this crust. The relatively high εNd values around 8 Ma recorded by the Blake Plateau crust are explained by a contribution of eastward flowing Pacific water through the Panama Gateway into the Caribbean Sea. This high εNd signal decreased between 8 and 5 Ma suggesting that the supply of Pacific water into the Caribbean became restricted. This is earlier than the Caribbean seawater salinity increase at 4.2 Ma deduced from δ18O data, and may indicate that there was only a surface water connection between the Caribbean and Pacific between ∼5 and 4.2 Ma. The closure of the Panama Gateway to intermediate and deep water exchange (〉200 m depth) apparently occurred much earlier than the intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation at 3.1–2.5 Ma, and cannot therefore have been a direct cause of this climatic change, but may, as recently argued, only have been a necessary precondition
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  • 48
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 104 . pp. 20863-20833.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-17
    Description: We examine recent observations of water mass distribution and circulation schemes at different depths of the South Atlantic Ocean to propose a layered, qualitative representation of the mean distribution of flow in this region. This furthers the simple upper layer geostrophic flow estimates of Peterson and Stramma [1991]. In addition, we assess how well ocean general circulation models (GCMs) capture the overall structure of flow in the South Atlantic in this regard. The South Atlantic Central Water (SACW) is of South Atlantic origin in the subtropical gyre, while the SACW in the tropical region in part originates from the South Indian Ocean. The Antarctic Intermediate Water in the South Atlantic originates from a surface region of the circumpolar layer, especially in the northern Drake Passage and the Falkland Current loop, but also receives some water from the Indian Ocean. The subtropical South Atlantic above the North Atlantic Deep Water and north of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is dominated by the anticyclonic subtropical gyre. In the eastern tropical South Atlantic the cyclonic Angola Gyre exists, embedded in a large tropical cyclonic gyre. The equatorial part of the South Atlantic shows several depth-dependent zonal current bands besides the Angola Gyre. Ocean GCMs have difficulty capturing this detailed zonal circulation structure, even at eddy-permitting resolution. The northward extent of the subtropical gyre reduces with increasing depth, located near Brazil at 16°S in the near-surface layer and at 26°S in the Antarctic Intermediate Water layer, while the tropical cyclonic gyre progresses southward. The southward shift of the northern part of the subtropical gyre is well resolved in global ocean GCMs. However, high horizontal resolution is required to capture the South Atlantic Current north of the ACC. The North Atlantic Deep Water in the South Atlantic progresses mainly southward in the Deep Western Boundary Current, but some water also moves southward at the eastern boundary.
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  • 49
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 103 (C9). pp. 18599-18610.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-17
    Description: We present a new method based on a combination of optimum multiparameter analysis and CFC/oxygen mixing analysis to determine the ages of water masses in regions of mixing. It enables us to follow water mass movements in greater detail than with other methods, which give only the combined pseudoage of a water mass mixture. We define the age of a water mass as the time a water parcel needs to spread from its source region, where it received its individual tracer characteristics, to the point of observation. The age distribution allows us to determine pathways of water masses, which differ from simple advection trajectories because the age is determined by a combination of advective and diffusive processes. We apply the method to hydrographic data along World Ocean Circulation Experiment section I5 in the south east Indian Ocean. In the thermocline, Indian Central Water (ICW) and Subantarctic Mode Water (SAMW) meet and mix. These distinct water masses have different formation mechanisms but similar temperature/salinity characteristics. It is shown that the convective formation of SAMW is a major ventilation mechanism for the lower Indian thermocline. In the eastern part of the south Indian Ocean, SAMW dominates the oceanic thermocline and is found to be about 5 years old. Pure ICW is present only in the thermocline of the region 48 degrees-55 degrees E, with increasing age with depth, confirming the subduction theory. While most SAMW joins the equatorward gyre movement of the southeastern Indian Ocean, some of it propagates westward through turbulent diffusive mixing, reaching 55 degrees E after 15-20 years. It takes ICW some 25-30 years to reach 110 degrees E.
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  • 50
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 12 (3). pp. 467-477.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-14
    Description: The δ13C of dissolved inorganic carbon was measured on samples collected at 49°N in the northeast Atlantic in January 1994. Deeper than 2000 m, δ13C exhibits the same negative correlation versus dissolved phosphate that is observed elsewhere in the deep Atlantic. Upward from 2000 m to about 600 m, δ13C shifts to values more negative than expected from the correlation with nutrients at depth, which is likely due to penetration of anthropogenic CO2. From these data, the profile of the anthropogenic δ13C decrease is calculated by using either dissolved phosphate or apparent oxygen utilization as a proxy for the preanthropogenic δ13C distribution. The shape of the anthropogenic anomaly profile derived from phosphate is similar to that of the increase in dissolved inorganic carbon derived by others in the same area. The reconstruction from oxygen utilization results in a lower estimate of the anthropogenic δ13C decrease in the upper water column, and the vertical anomaly profile is less similar to that of the dissolved inorganic carbon increase. A 13C budget for the atmosphere, ocean, and terrestrial biosphere indicates that within the range of probable ocean CO2 uptake the ratio of δ13C to inorganic carbon change should be mostly influenced by the 13C inventory change of the biosphere. However, the uncertainty in the ratio we derive prevents a strong contraint on the size of the exchangeable biosphere.
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  • 51
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 26 . 21,3329-21,3332.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-13
    Description: The subsurface oceanic circulation is an important part of the Earth climate system. Subsurface currents traditionally are inferred indirectly from distributions of temperature and dissolved substances, occasionally supplemented by current meter measurements. Neutrally-buoyant floats however, now enable us to obtain for the first time directly measured intermediate depth velocity fields over large areas such as the western South Atlantic. Here, our combined data set provides unprecedented observations and quantification of key flow patterns, such as the Subtropical Gyre return flow (12 Sv; 1 Sverdrup = 10(6)m(3)s(-1)), its bifurcation near the Santos Plateau and the resulting continuous narrow and swift northward intermediate western boundary current (4 Sv). This northward flowing water passes through complex equatorial flows and finally enters into the North Atlantic.
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  • 52
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research, 103 . pp. 15869-15883.
    Publication Date: 2017-11-24
    Description: Four World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) repeat cruises (October 1990 to March 1994) in the tropical Atlantic off Brazil are used to study the spatial and temporal evolution of the chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) (components CFC-11 and CFC-12) and tritium signal in the upper North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW). Its shallowest part, located in the tropical Atlantic around 1600-m depth, is the shallow upper North Atlantic Deep Water (SUNADW). It is characterized by a distinct tracer maximum, which is presumably received through winter time convection in the subpolar North Atlantic. Here we discuss the tracer fields and the temporal evolution of the tracer signal of the SUNADW in the tropical Atlantic along two meridional sections at 44 degrees and 35 degrees W and two zonal sections at 5 degrees and 10 degrees S off Brazil. The spatial and temporal development of the tracer field in the tropical Atlantic as well as the correlation with hydrographic parameters show that the temporal tracer change being due to the arrival of "younger" water is disturbed by other processes. In particular, the impact of variable mixing and spreading pathways on the observed tracer variability in the SUNADW is evident in the observations.
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  • 53
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 104 (C7). 15,495-15,514.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-17
    Description: The zonal circulation south of Sri Lanka is an important link for the exchange of water between the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea. Results from a first array of three moorings along 80 degrees 30'E north of 4 degrees 10'N from January .1991 to March 1992 were used to investigate the Monsoon Current regime [Schott et al., 1994]. Measurements from a second array of six current meter moorings are presented here. This array was deployed along 80 degrees 30'E between 45'S and 5 degrees N from July 1993 to September 1994 to investigate the annual cycle and interannual variability of the equatorial currents at this longitude. Both sets of moorings contribute to the Indian Ocean current meter array ICM8 of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment. The semiannual equatorial jet (EJ) was showing a large seasonal asymmetry, reaching a monthly mean eastward transport of 35 Sv (1 Sv = 1 x 10(6) m(3) s(-1)) in November 1993, but just 5 Sv in May 1994. The Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC) had a maximum transport of 17 Sv in March to April 1994. Unexpectedly, compared to previous observations and model studies, the EUC was reappearing again in August 1994 at more than 10 Sv transport and was still flowing when the moorings were recovered. In addition, monthly mean ship drifts near the equator are evaluated to support the interpretation of the moored observations. Interannual variability of the EJ in our measurements and ship drift data appears to be related to the variability of the zonal winds and Southern Oscillation Index. The output of a global numerical model (Parallel Ocean Climate Model) driven by the winds for 1993/1994 is used to connect our observations to the larger scale. The model reproduces the EJ asymmetry and shows the existence of the EUC and its reappearance during summer 1994.
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  • 54
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, 16 . pp. 133-145.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: The reliability of the Comprehensive Ocean–Atmosphere Dataset (COADS) Release 1a 2° monthly winds is tested by comparing it with instrumental measurements in the northwest Atlantic from 1981 to 1991. The instrumental dataset contains anemometer measurements of a very high homogeneity and quality, which were taken by six research sister ships with known anemometer heights in the northwest Atlantic. Special data processing was made with instrumental samples to provide compatibility with the COADS winds. Comparison shows overestimation of the COADS winds in the low ranges and underestimation of the strong and moderate winds. Application of the alternative equivalent Beaufort scales does not remove this bias and makes it even more pronounced. Thus, the conclusion is made that the disagreement obtained results primarily from the uncertainties of anemometer measurements in COADS, especially from the incorrect evaluation of the true wind. Instrumental data also do not indicate significant long-term interannual changes, which are pronounced in the COADS dataset for the 1980s. Some regional features of the comparison are discussed.
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2017-06-29
    Description: Mixed methane–sulfide hydrates and carbonates are exposed as a pavement at the seafloor along the crest of one of the accretionary ridges of the Cascadia convergent margin. Vent fields from which methane-charged, low-salinity fluids containing sulfide, ammonia, 4He, and isotopically light CO2 escape are associated with these exposures. They characterize a newly recognized mechanism of dewatering at convergent margins, where freshening of pore waters from hydrate destabilization at depth and free gas drives fluids upward. This process augments the convergence-generated overpressure and leads to local dewatering rates that are much higher than at other margins in the absence of hydrate. Discharge of fluids stimulates benthic oxygen consumption which is orders of magnitude higher than is normally found at comparable ocean depths. The enhanced turnover results from the oxidation of methane, hydrogen sulfide, and ammonia by vent biota. The injection of hydrate methane from the ridge generates a plume hundreds of meters high and several kilometers wide. A large fraction of the methane is oxidized within the water column and generates δ13C anomalies of the dissolved inorganic carbon pool.
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  • 56
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 24 . pp. 1763-1766.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-13
    Description: The partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) was measured during the 1995 South-West Monsoon in the Arabian Sea. The Arabian Sea was characterized throughout by a moderate supersaturation of 12–30 µatm. The stable atmospheric pCO2 level was around 345 µatm. An extreme supersaturation was found in areas of coastal upwelling off the Omani coast with pCO2 peak values in surface waters of 750 µatm. Such two-fold saturation (218%) is rarely found elsewhere in open ocean environments. We also encountered cold upwelled water 300 nm off the Omani coast in the region of Ekman pumping, which was also characterized by a strongly elevated seawater pCO2 of up to 525 µatm. Due to the strong monsoonal wind forcing the Arabian Sea as a whole and the areas of upwelling in particular represent a significant source of atmospheric CO2 with flux densities from around 2 mmol m−2 d−1 in the open ocean to 119 mmol m−2 d−1 in coastal upwelling. Local air masses passing the area of coastal upwelling showed increasing CO2 concentrations, which are consistent with such strong emissions.
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  • 57
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 25 (22). pp. 4209-4212.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-13
    Description: The deep water of the western Mediterranean Sea is known to have become warmer and saltier since about the 1950s. The causes of these changes have, however, not yet been sactisfactorily determined. Previous studies speculated on decreasing precipitation, greenhouse warming and/or anthropogenic reduction of the freshwater flux into the eastern Mediterranean. Here we report on results from a new oceanographic database of the western Mediterranean Sea together with determinations of longterm changes of the fresh water budget. We analyzed temperature and salinity data of the past 40 years to detect deviations from the longterm average. Certain areas and depth ranges are showing increases in temperature or salinity some of which have been found earlier and some which are new. From the regional and vertical distribution we conclude that the observed increases of temperature and salinity in the western Mediterranean Sea are caused both by changes in atmospheric conditions as described by the NAO‐index and by the regulation of Spanish rivers.
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  • 58
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Reviews of Geophysics, 37 (1). pp. 1-64.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-23
    Description: We review what is known about the convective process in the open ocean, in which the properties of large volumes of water are changed by intermittent, deep-reaching convection, triggered by winter storms. Observational, laboratory, and modeling studies reveal a fascinating and complex interplay of convective and geostrophic scales, the large-scale circulation of the ocean, and the prevailing meteorology. Two aspects make ocean convection interesting from a theoretical point of view. First, the timescales of the convective process in the ocean are sufficiently long that it may be modified by the Earth's rotation; second, the convective process is localized in space so that vertical buoyancy transfer by upright convection can give way to slantwise transfer by baroclinic instability. Moreover, the convective and geostrophic scales are not very disparate from one another. Detailed observations of the process in the Labrador, Greenland, and Mediterranean Seas are described, which were made possible by new observing technology. When interpreted in terms of underlying dynamics and theory and the context provided by laboratory and numerical experiments of rotating convection, great progress in our description and understanding of the processes at work is being made.
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2016-09-15
    Description: We examine the propagation of low-frequency electromagnetic (EM) waves in the coastal ocean produced by controlled or motional impressed sources. Four important modes are the direct, up-over-down, down-over-up, and “beach” modes. The analyses of these modes are complicated by the varying bathymetry in the coastal region. We derive criteria to determine (1) which modes are important for given parameters; (2) a “matched phase” condition describing both when the up-over-down and down-over-up modes interfere constructively in the shallow zone and when the beach mode becomes important; and (3) a low-frequency cutoff, below which the EM fields are not sensitive to the details of the coastal geometry. We verify the theoretically derived criteria with numerical examples and finally discuss the importance of our results in designing navigation and communications applications for subsurface vehicles and instruments.
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  • 60
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Physical Oceanography, 29 (11). pp. 2785-2801.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: The Rio Grande Rise acts as a natural barrier for the equatorward flow of Antarctic Bottom Water in the subtropical South Atlantic. In addition to the Vema Channel, the Hunter Channel cuts through this obstacle and offers a separate route for bottom-water import into the southern Brazil Basin. On the occasion of the Deep Basin Experiment, a component of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE), the expected deep flow through the Hunter Channel was directly observed for the first time by an array of moored current meters and thermistor chains from December 1992 to May 1994. Main results are (i) the Hunter Channel is, in fact, a conduit for bottom-water flow into the Brazil Basin. Our new mean transport from moored current meters [2.92 (±1.24) × 106 m3 s−1] is significantly higher than earlier estimates that were based on geostrophic calculations. (ii) During the WOCE observational period a tendency toward increased bottom-water temperatures was observed. This observation from the Hunter Channel is consistent with findings from the Vema Channel. (iii) The overflow through the Hunter Channel is highly variable and puts in perspective earlier synoptic geostrophic transport estimates
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2017-10-05
    Description: Water samples from surface and bottom waters of two bights of the Baltic Sea were analysed for dissolved and/or particulate concentrations of Al, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn, in addition to the main oceanographic variables, at 27 stations during six cruises between February 1990 and July 1992. The metal values show distinct regional differences, with maximum concentrations at the near-shore stations, The levels of total Hg exhibit a significant negative relationship with salinity. In surface layers, seasonal differences due to biogenic uptake of elements could not be detected for any of the dissolved metals. In bottom waters, however, summer-time concentrations of a number of metals are in clear excess of winter levels either due to diffusion of metals (Go, Fe, Mn) from the sediments under low-oxygen or anaerobic conditions, or due to mineralization processes (Cd, Zn) of recently sedimented biogenic particulates. With the exception of Fe and Pb, the particulate fractions are of minor importance, with slight variabilities between the seasons only. The K-D values (ratio between metal concentrations in the particulate and dissolved fractions) decrease by more than two orders of magnitude in the order Fe-Pb-Mn-Co-Zn-Cd-Cu-Ni. Finally, the results are discussed with regard to a trace metal monitoring programme in the area.
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  • 62
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 79 (1). pp. 7-8.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-10
    Description: A joint research effort is currently focused on the oceanic region south of Africa—the gateway for the exchange of mass, heat, and salt between the Indian and Atlantic Oceans (Figure lb). The name of this collaboration, KAPEX, stands for Cape of Good Hope Experiments, Kap der guten Hoffnung Experimente, or Kaap die Goeie Hoop Eksperimente in the three languages of the participating scientists. This is the first time that scientists are using acoustically tracked floats extensively in ocean regions surrounding southern Africa to measure ocean flow patterns. At the tip of Africa, the Agulhas Current from the Indian Ocean interacts with the South Atlantic Current, contributing to the northwestward flowing Benguela Current, which transports water, heat, and salt to the subtropical and subequatorial South Atlantic (Figure la). This transport increases the heat and salinity of the North Atlantic, preconditioning it for the formation of the global thermohaline circulation cell, a driving force of the world climate [Gordon etal., 1992]. Our objective in the KAPEX is to trace the flow of intermediate water around southern Africa by the Agulhas, Benguela, and South Atlantic Current systems and to answer key questions about the inter-oceanic intermediate circulation.
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  • 63
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 102 (C9). pp. 21147-21159.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-30
    Description: The output of the global eddy‐resolving ¼° ocean model of Semtner/Chervin (run by the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California) has been used to study the oceanic temperature and heat flux in the Indian Ocean. The meridional heat flux in the northern Indian Ocean is at the low end of the observed values. A vertical overturning cell in the upper 500 m is the main contributor to the annual mean meridional heat flux across 5°S, whereas the horizontal gyre circulation, confined to the upper 500 m, dominates north of the equator. The change of monsoon winds is manifested in a reversal of the meridional circulation throughout the whole water column. The most notable result is a strong linear relationship of the meridional temperature flux and the zonal wind stress component north of 20°S. The model's Pacific‐Indian Ocean throughflow across the section at 120°E accounts for −8.8±5.1 Sv (1 Sv≡106 m3 s−1). A strong interannual variability during the model run of 3 years shows a maximum range of 12 Sv in January/February and a minimum during March through June. The inflow from the Pacific into the Indian Ocean results in a total annual mean temperature flux of −0.9 PW (1 PW≡1015 W). In the model the temperature flux from the Pacific through the Indian Ocean to the south dominates in comparison with the input of solar heat from the northern Indian Ocean.
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2017-06-27
    Description: A seasonally-varying sedimentation pattern was observed for the alkenone flux measured with sediment traps in the northern North Atlantic. In the Norwegian Sea (traps were set at 500, 1000 and 3000 m) the alkenone flux varied between 0.1 and 7.1 μg m−2 d−1 and followed the seasonal pattern of the bulk parameters. Maximum fluxes occurred from mid-October until mid-November and were also high in May. A surprising result was that considerably higher particle fluxes were observed at 3000 m. For the alkenone flux, the highest additional input of 250% was observed during the period when sediment resuspension was greatest in summer. At the Barents Sea continental margin (traps at 1840 and 1950 m) the alkenone fluxes follow the sedimentation pattern of the bulk parameters, with a less visible signal of distinct seasonality observed in the 1950 m trap. The sedimentation of total alkenones varied between 0.8 and 144 μg m−2 d−1 at 1840 m and between 0.5 and 31.0 μg m−2 d−1 at 1950 m. Resuspension and lateral advection contributed significantly to measured fluxes in the two near-bottom traps. Alkenone concentrations were determined in faecal pellets of Appendicularia, ostracods and euphausids from selected samples at the Barents Sea site. The alkenone flux in pellets (4% to 24% of total) was 5 to 6 times higher at 1950 m depth than at 1840 m and the major part (77–78%) of the total flux of C37:3 reaching the near-bottom trap at 1950 m was associated with faecal pellets of the meso-zooplankton. Spatial and temporal variations of the U37k′ signals were observed, indicating that the imprint in the alkenone signal depends on the origin and transport pathway of the organic material. Strong deviations occur in areas where nepheloid layers contribute particles of long residence times to the primary flux.
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  • 65
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: Seafloor Hydrothermal Systems: Physical, Chemical, Biological, and Geological Interactions. , ed. by Humphris, S. E., Zierenberg, R. A., Mullineaux, L. S. and Thomson, R. E. Geophysical Monograph Series, 91 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, DC, pp. 115-157. ISBN 0-87590-048-8
    Publication Date: 2016-05-31
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  • 66
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 24 (22). pp. 2805-2808.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-13
    Description: From geostrophic calculations the exchange of deep water from the Somali into the Arabian Basin through the Owen Fracture Zone has been estimated to be about 2 Sv, with a seasonal modulation of the same magnitude. After leaving the Fracture Zone, the flow bifurcates into a northern and a southern branch, each closely following the slope of the Carlsberg Ridge. The weaker vertical gradients of the hydrographic properties in the deep Arabian Basin are consistent with enhanced vertical mixing at the rugged topography over the Carlsberg Ridge.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2017-08-18
    Description: Two newly designed underway systems for the measurement of CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) in seawater and the atmosphere are described. Results of an intercomparison experiment carried out in the North Sea are presented. A remarkable agreement between the two simultaneously measured (pCO2) data sets was observed even though the spatial variability in surface pCO2 was high. The average difference of all l -min averages of the seawater pCO2 was as low as 0.15 μatm with a standard deviation of 1.2 μatm indicating that no systematic difference is present. A closer examination of the profiles shows that differences tend to be highest during maxima of the pCO2 gradient (up to 14 μatm/min). The time constants of both systems were estimated from laboratory experiments to 45 s, respectively, 75 s thus quantitatively underlining their capability of a fast response to pCO2 changes
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  • 68
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 42 . pp. 9-27.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: While the aggregation and mass settlement of diatoms at the termination of blooms results in significant export of carbon from the surface ocean, the mechanisms of bloom aggregation have been poorly understood. The aggregation of a multispecies diatom bloom was investigated under controlled conditions in a 1200 liter, nutrient-enriched, laboratory mesocosm in order to elucidate the parameters sufficient to accurately predict bloom aggregation. A diverse bloom of diatoms dominated by several species of Chaetoceros and Thalassiosira progressed through a classic pattern of exponential, stationary, and senescent phases in the mesocosm. Aggregates larger than 0.5 mm became detectable on the eighth day after inoculation, and aggregates 〉1 mm increased exponentially from Day 10 onward producing the appearance of a mass aggregation event late on Day 10. The bloom aggregated sequentially with Thalassiosira dominating early aggregates and Chaetoceros dominating later ones. Chaetoceros resting spores formed only in aggregates. Aggregation was not linked to nutrient depletion or to the physiological state of the cells since the onset of aggregation and the mass aggregation event occurred 1 to 3 days prior to nutrient depletion and while carbon:nitrogen ratios of cells were still very low and growth rates high. Moreover, visible aggregates did not form in the mesocosm until cell abundances were considerably higher than abundances observed to aggregate in nature, suggesting that aggregation was not strongly linked to phytoplankton cell concentration. Complementary studies in this volume clarify the role of non-phytoplankton particles in aggregation of the mesocosm bloom. The mesocosm approach proved highly effective in producing an aggregating diatom bloom under controlled conditions.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2019-01-22
    Description: The gene coding for the anion-specific porin of the halophilic eubacterium Ectothiorhodospira (Ect.) vacuolata was cloned and sequenced, the first such gene so analyzed from a purple sulfur bacterium. It encodes a precursor protein consisting of 374 amino acid (aa)-residues including a signal peptide of 22-aa residues. Comparison with aa sequences of porins from several other members of the Proteobacteria revealed little homology. Only two regions showed local homology with the previously sequenced porins of Neisseria species, Comamonas acidovorans, Bordetella pertussis, Alcaligenes eutrophus, and Burkholderia cepacia. Genomic Southern blot hybridization studies were carried out with a probe derived from the 5′ end of the gene coding for the porin of Ect. vacuolata. Two related species, Ect. haloalkaliphila and Ect. shaposhnikovii, exhibited a clear signal, while the extremely halophilic bacterium Halorhodospira (Hlr.) halophila (formerly Ect. halophila) did not show any cross-hybridization even at low stringency. This result is in good accordance with a recently proposed reassignment within the family Ectothiorhodospiraceae, which included the separation of the extremely halophilic species into the new genus Halorhodospira.
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  • 70
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Physical Oceanography, 28 (10). pp. 1904-1928.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-06
    Description: The mean warm water transfer toward the equator along the western boundary of the South Atlantic is investigated, based on a number of ship surveys carried out during 1990–96 with CTD water mass observations and current profiling by shipboard and lowered (with the CTD/rosette) acoustic Doppler current profiler and with Pegasus current profiler. The bulk of the northward warm water flow follows the coast in the North Brazil Undercurrent (NBUC) from latitudes south of 10°S, carrying 23 Sv (Sv ≡ 106 m3 s−1) above 1000 m. Out of this, 16 Sv are waters warmer than 7°C that form the source waters of the Florida Current. Zonal inflow from the east by the South Equatorial Current enters the western boundary system dominantly north of 5°S, adding transport northwest of Cape San Roque, and transforming the NBUC along its way toward the equator into a surface-intensified current, the North Brazil Current (NBC). From the combination of moored arrays and shipboard sections just north of the equator along 44°W, the mean NBC transport was determined at 35 Sv with a small seasonal cycle amplitude of only about 3 Sv. The reason for the much larger near-equatorial northward warm water boundary current than what would be required to carry the northward heat transport are recirculations by the zonal current system and the existence of the shallow South Atlantic tropical–subtropical cell (STC). The STC connects the subduction zones of the eastern subtropics of both hemispheres via equatorward boundary undercurrents with the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC), and the return flow is through upwelling and poleward Ekman transport. The persistent existence of a set of eastward thermocline and intermediate countercurrents on both sides of the equator was confirmed that recurred throughout the observations and carry ventilated waters from the boundary regime into the tropical interior. A strong westward current underneath the EUC, the Equatorial Intermediate Current, returns low-oxygen water westward. Consistent evidence for the existence of a seasonal variation in the warm water flow south of the equator could not be established, whereas significant seasonal variability of the boundary regime occurs north of the equator: northwestward alongshore throughflow of about 10 Sv of waters with properties from the Southern Hemisphere was found along the Guiana boundary in boreal spring when the North Equatorial Countercurrent is absent or even flowing westward, whereas during June–January the upper NBC is known to connect with the eastward North Equatorial Countercurrent through a retroflection zone that seasonally migrates up and down the coast and spawns eddies. The equatorial zone thus acts as a buffer and transformation zone for cross-equatorial exchanges, but knowledge of the detailed pathways in the interior including the involved diapycnal exchanges is still a problem.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2017-02-14
    Description: This note describes a method for the determination of the age of individual water mass contributions in a mixture of water masses. The method is based on a combination of Optimum Multi parameter analysis and CFC analysis. Synthetic data designed to mirror the situation in the permanent thermocline of the eastern Indian Ocean are used to demonstrate the method. The feasibility of applications to oceanic data is discussed.
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  • 72
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 79 (27). 317+322-323.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2015-11-24
    Description: Controversy surrounding the mechanisms and controls on argon diffusion in K-feldspar has led us to undertake direct diffusion measurements on a crystal with simple microtextures, over a range of temperatures. Measurements of argon diffusion profiles in a gem-quality iron-rich orthoclase heated in a cold seal apparatus, have been undertaken in situ using an ultra-violet laser ablation microprobe (UVLAMP) technique. The results agree very closely with the previously determined bulk values for Benson Mines orthoclase (activation energy ( E)=43.8±1 kcal mol -1) and vacuum furnace cycle-heating studies of K-feldspars ( E=46±6 kcal mol -1). However, instead of defining a single activation energy ( E) and diffusion coefficient ( Do), the data yield two sets of parameters: a low-temperature (550-720°C) array with an E of 47.2±2.5 kcal mol -1 (198.2±10.5 kJ mol -1) and a Do of 0.0374 +0.1123-0.0281 cm 2 s -1, and a high-temperature (725-1019°C) array with an E of 63.8±3.4 kcal mol -1 (268.0±14.3 kJ mol -1) and a Do of 55.0 +225.5-44.2 cm 2 s -1. The new results closely reproduce two sets of apparent activation energies previously measured in cycle-heating studies of Madagascar K-feldspar (40±3 and 57±3 kcal mol -1). Previous interpretations of the two arrays have included multiple domains with variable activation energies and fast track diffusion. However, the UV depth profile analyses indicate simple diffusion to the grain surface and importantly, diffusion radii calculated by combining the UVLAMP and cycle-heating data, are the same as the physical grain sizes used in the experiments, around 1 mm. Vacuum furnace stepped heating experiments on slowly cooled K-feldspars have been interpreted as showing diffusion radii of around 6 μm and indicate complex populations of sub-grains. This study indicates that Madagascar K-feldspar and thus probably all gem-quality K-feldspars act as single diffusion domains and that short-circuit (or pipe) diffusion was not an important loss mechanism. An apparent diffusion compensation relationship in the stepped heating data for Madagascar K-feldspar implies that similar relationships seen in other K-feldspars are a result of a range of diffusion mechanisms.
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  • 74
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 10 (2). pp. 259-281.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: We reconstructed late Quaternary deep (3000–4100 m) and intermediate depth (1000–2500 m) paleoceanographic history of the Eurasian Basin, Arctic Ocean from ostracode assemblages in cores from the Lomonosov Ridge, Gakkel Ridge, Yermak Plateau, Morris Jesup Rise, and Amundsen and Makarov Basins obtained during the 1991 Polarstern cruise. Modern assemblages on ridges and plateaus between 1000 and 1500 m are characterized by abundant, relatively species-rich benthic ostracode assemblages, in part, reflecting the influence of high organic productivity and inflowing Atlantic water. In contrast, deep Arctic Eurasian basin assemblages have low abundance and low diversity and are dominated by Krithe and Cytheropteron reflecting faunal exchange with the Greenland Sea via the Fram Strait. Major faunal changes occurred in the Arctic during the last glacial/interglacial transition and the Holocene. Low-abundance, low-diversity assemblages from the Lomonosov and Gakkel Ridges in the Eurasian Basin from the last glacial period have modern analogs in cold, low-salinity, low-nutrient Greenland Sea deep water; glacial assemblages from the deep Nansen and Amundsen Basins have modern analogs in the deep Canada Basin. During Termination 1 at intermediate depths, diversity and abundance increased coincident with increased biogenic sediment, reflecting increased organic productivity, reduced sea-ice, and enhanced inflowing North Atlantic water. During deglaciation deep Nansen Basin assemblages were similar to those living today in the deep Greenland Sea, perhaps reflecting deepwater exchange via the Fram Strait. In the central Arctic, early Holocene faunas indicate weaker North Atlantic water inflow at middepths immediately following Termination 1, about 8500–7000 year B.P., followed by a period of strong Canada Basin water overflow across the Lomonosov Ridge into the Morris Jesup Rise area and central Arctic Ocean. Modern perennial sea-ice cover evolved over the last 4000–5000 years. Late Quaternary faunal changes reflect benthic habitat changes most likely caused by changes in the import of cold, deepwater of Greenland Sea origin and warmer and middepth Atlantic water to the Eurasian Basin through the Fram Strait, and export of Arctic Ocean deepwater.
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  • 75
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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine Geology, 130 (1-2). pp. 99-119.
    Publication Date: 2016-02-12
    Description: The late Eocene through Oligocene changes in the paleoceanography of the southernmost Indian Ocean have been reconstructed by means of a coarse fraction analysis of closely spaced samples (20 cm = about 20 kyr) from ODP Site 744, Kerguelen Plateau. Surface water productivity, reconstructed from accumulation rates of opal skeletons and benthic foraminifers is low in the early late Eocene, increases at about 36 Ma and shows a sharp increase to maximum values in the earliest Oligocene. In the early late Oligocene it decreases gradually to a minimum and increases again to a maximum in the latest Oligocene. Beside this general trend productivity varies in short-term cycles of a duration of about 400 kyr (340 kyr in the latest Oligocene) with maxima in productivity in warmer Oligocene periods. These productivity variations are reflected by strong variations in carbonate dissolution. Changes in bottom water mass chemistry have been deduced from the degree of carbonate dissolution and it's relation to productivity proxies. Following Kennett and Stott (1990), it is suggested that a proto-antarctic bottom water (proto-AABW) and an overlying warm, saline deep water (WSDW) from low latitudes shifted vertically and latitudinally with time and exerted their influence on the sediments of Site 744. Proto-AABW is detected by means of strong carbonate dissolution when productivity is low. WSDW is detected by means of an excellent carbonate preservation despite high productivity. Terrigenous material occurs as very coarse ice-rafted detritus (IRD) in the late Eocene (167–168.5 mbsf) and after a main shift in oxygen isotopes in the early Oligocene. Very low amounts of 40–125 μm sized mica and very few quartz grains occur only in high productivity periods and at the transition from low to high productivity periods. These occurrences are attributed to wind/current supply during warmer Oligocene intervals.
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2018-03-08
    Description: The history of the Late Weichselian northwestern Barents Shelf, including western Svalbard, has been investigated by provenance/sedimentologist studies of five cores from the continental shelf and slope west of Svalbard. The chronostratigraphy of the cores is based on AMS 14C dates and oxygen isotope analyses. Interpretations of the cores suggest that the ice sheets of western Svalbard and northwestern Barents Sea experienced advances and retreats in two steps. The first significant ice advance beyond the present coastline occurred ca. 22,000 14C yr B.P. and was followed by an ice advance to the shelf edge ca. 18,000 14C yr B.P. Ice recession from the outer shelf and the southwestern Barents Sea began 14,800 14C yr B.P. and was followed by a second ice recession between 13,000 and 12,000 14 C yr B.P. during which ice withdrew from the inner shelf. A minor readvance of the ice sheet on the shelf west of Svalbard occurred close to 12,400 14C yr B.P. The first deglaciation event was associated with release of icebergs containing ice-rafted detritus, while the later episode also included significant amounts of meltwater and fine-grained sediment.
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  • 77
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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine Geology, 131 (1-2). pp. 89-102.
    Publication Date: 2017-06-23
    Description: Microfaunal studies of planktic foraminifera carried out on 21 sediment cores from the Norwegian-Greenland Sea (NGS) reveal the spatial and lateral distribution as well as meltwater implication of today's non-polar/subpolar species Beella megastoma (Earland). Previous findings are verified in that this foraminifera is characteristic only of the deglaciation phases of Termination II, III, and VI and not the ensuing interglacial optima, thus, rendering this species a ‘meltwater’ indicator. Its distribution is restricted to cores from the central, i.e., more ‘pelagic’, part of the NGS covering an area as far north as 77 ° latitude. A detailed investigation of Termination II indicates that B. megastoma first appeared in the southwest of the NGS at ~131 ka and then about 6 kyr later in the eastern and northern parts of the NGS. For the entire duration B. megastoma always coincided with the deposition of distinct ice-rafted detritus (IRD) suggesting the presence of drifting icebergs during this period. Two different oceanographic models, each with a two-stepped evolution of the post-Saalian surface water circulation, are proposed to account for this time transgressive character. The mechanism of brine formation as possible oceanic phenomenon forcing Atlantic water northwards is suggested for being responsible for the occurrence of B. megastoma in the NGS during early Termination II. The presence of B. megastoma always ceased with the culmination of the interglacial optimum, oxygen isotopic Substage 5.51 (Eemian), when the subpolar foraminiferal fauna reached highest abundances and a general lack of IRD is observed.
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  • 78
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    Elsevier
    In:  Quaternary Science Reviews, 16 (10). pp. 1115-1124.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-19
    Description: Stable carbon and oxygen isotopes of the polar planktic foraminifera Neogloboquadrina pachyderma sinistral from sediment cores of the Norwegian Sea reveal several anomalous 13C and δ18O depletions in the surface water during the last glacial to interglacial transition and during the later Holocene. The depletions that are observed between the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and the end of the main deglacial phase were caused by massive releases of freshwater from thawing icebergs, which consequently resulted in a stratification of the uppermost surface water layer and a non-equilibrium between the water below and the atmosphere. At ~8.5 ka (14C BP) this strong iceberg melting activity ceased as defined by the cessation of the deposition of ice-rafted detritus. After this time, the dominant polar and subpolar planktic foraminiferal species rapidly increased in numbers. However, this post-deglacial evolution towards a modern-type oceanographic environment was interupted by a hitherto undescribed isotopic event (~7–8 ka) which, on a regional scale, is only identified in eastern Norwegian Sea surface water. This event may be associated with the final pulse of glacier meltwater release from Fennoscandia, which affected the onset of intensified coastal surface water circulation off Norway during a time of regional sea-level rise. All these data indicate that surface water changes are an integral part of deglacial processes in general. Yet, the youngest observed change noted around 3 ka gives evidence that such events with similar effects occur even during the later Holocene when from a climatic point of view relativelystable conditions prevailed.
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  • 79
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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine Geology, 131 (1-2). pp. 57-73.
    Publication Date: 2017-06-23
    Description: Ice rafted debris in high latitude ocean sediments represent a complex record of the changing paleoenvironment of the oceans and, in particular, of the growth and decay of ice sheets along the margins of high latitudes. Physical properties measured on sediment cores taken from the Rockall Plateau were examined to determine the distribution of ice rafted debris layers and Heinrich events in the northeastern North Atlantic. These sediment core records may provide one of the keys to reconstruct the iceberg flow between the northeastern Atlantic and the Norwegian Sea. Magnetic susceptibility (MS) and Gamma Ray Attenuation Porosity Evaluator (GRAPE) density changes of these cores revealed that since about 65 ka, dropstone layers are recorded in both MS and GRAPE data of Rockall Plateau sediments. Rockall Plateau sediments show peaks in physical properties that correlate with Heinrich events (H1, H2, H4, H5, H6). Heinrich layer 3 was not observed. The stratigraphy and physical properties represent the Heinrich layers: H1 = 14–15 ka (MS = 52 μcgs, ϱ = 1.64 g/cm3), H2 = 23 ka (MS = 64 μcgs, ϱ = 1.8 g/cm3), H4 = 41 ka (MS = 53 μcgs, ϱ = 1.75 g/cm3), H5 = 50 ka (MS = 53 μcgs, ϱ = 1.75 g/cm3), H6 = 64 ka (MS = 100 μcgs, ϱ = 1.69 g/cm3). Heinrich events at Rockall Plateau sites point to a northward flow of icebergs in the northeastern Atlantic which may indicate a flow pattern to regions north of 54 °N.
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  • 80
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    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 133 (1-2). pp. 163-174.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-14
    Description: Single crystal ages of sanidine phenocrysts from pumice lapilli of the Late Glacial phonolitic Laacher See Tephra (East Eifel Volcanic Field, FRG) are determined by laser probe 40Ar/ 39Ar analysis. Sanidine megacrysts from the East and West Eifel (SAN6001, 410.4 ± 0.9 kyr; SAN6165, 469.8 ± 1.1 kyr) are applied as irradiation monitors, and their potential as Quaternary interlaboratory single crystal standards assessed. The apparent ages of Laacher See sanidine phenocrysts range from 6.4 ± 3.8 kyr to 127 ± 2 kyr (1σ), comprising up to four distinct subpopulations of crystals with individual ages, weighted mean apparent ages or isochron ages of 127 kyr, 55 kyr, 25 kyr and 12.9 kyr. The Laacher See Tephra 40Ar/ 39Ar eruption age is estimated as 12,900 ± 560 yr BP. Older crystals are interpreted as remnants of three earlier magma emplacement and crystallization events in the Laacher See magma system. These recycled, older crystals make up ca. 20% of the apparent juvenile sanidine phenocryst population in the essential phonolite clasts studied.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: An undisturbed 16 m late Pliocene-Pleistocene sediment core spanning 2.6 Myr of deposition was recovered from the Manihiki Plateau by the German research vessel Sonne in 1990. This core 34KL complements the heavily disturbed late Pliocene-Pleistocene core sections of DSDP Site 317, and is well suited for stratigraphic correlation. The sediments consist of calcareous microfossils (93–97% CaCO3), minor portions of siliceous microfossils and detrital minerals. All important calcareous microfossil zones could be identified and correlated with the magnetostratigraphic and isotope stratigraphic events, stages and periods. Due to the high degree of silica dissolution, the late Quaternary radiolarian Buccinosphaera invaginata Zone is the only siliceous fossil zone which could be identified. An interval with Globigerinoides gomitulus/pink was found within the middle Pleistocene which is clearly distinguished from the Globigerinoides ruber/pink interval of the late Pleistocene. The magnetostratigraphic Gauss-Matuyama and Matuyama-Brunhes boundaries as well as the Olduvai and Jaramillo events were clearly identified. The δ180 curve displays the 100 kyr (Milankovitch) and the 41 kyr (Laplace) cyclicity periods. The beginning of the Laplace Period and the last occurrence of the calcareous nannofossil Discoaster brouweri, which marks the end of the Pliocene, fall within the base of the Olduvai Event. There is also a marked drop in sedimentation rates around this time, which seems to be a regional phenomenon. Prominent 3.5 kHz subbottom reflectors at 8 ms and 15 ms reflection time are related to lithologic changes near the Mid-Pleistocene Revolution (MPR) and the beginning of the Laplace Period or the Pleistocene, respectively. It is possible to trace these reflectors laterally to the eroded eastern edge of the Manihiki Plateau where they can be tied to older strata.
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2017-06-20
    Description: Four spicule-bearing chaetetid sponges are described from Upper Triassic (Norian) reef carbonates of the WesternTaurids (Antalya-Region, SW Turkey): Atrochaetetes alakirensisCuif & Fischer, Blastochaetetes dolomiticusBizzarini & Braga, Ptychochaetetes sp. and ?Bauneia sp.. Spicules are preserved as calcitic pseudomorphs. They are either short and thick or long and slender, corresponding to typical styles; oxes are rarely present in Atrochaetetes alakirensis. The styles are mainly embedded in the secondary rigid skeleton, but their rounded ends appear to be attached to the primary wall. In Blastochaetetes dolomiticus and ?Bauneia sp. styles are also embedded in the primary wall. A comparison of these spicule-skeletons with those of other chaetetids, especially Paleozoic species, confirms the polyphyletic origin of the Taxon Chaetetida.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2017-01-06
    Description: Stable isotope and faunal records from the central Red Sea show high-amplitude oscillations for the past 380,000 years. Positive δ18O anomalies indicate periods of significant salt buildup during periods of lowered sea level when water mass exchange with the Arabian Sea was reduced due to a reduced geometry of the Bab el Mandeb Strait. Salinities as high as 53‰ and 55‰ are inferred from pteropod and benthic foraminifera δ18O, respectively, for the last glacial maximum. During this period all planktonic foraminifera vanished from this part of the Red Sea. Environmental conditions improved rapidly after 13 ka as salinities decreased due to rising sea level. The foraminiferal fauna started to reappear and was fully reestablished between 9 ka and 8 ka. Spectral analysis of the planktonic δ18O record documents highest variance in the orbital eccentricity, obliquity, and precession bands, indicating a dominant influence of climatically - driven sea level change on environmental conditions in the Red Sea. Variance in the precession band is enhanced compared to the global mean marine climate record (SPECMAP), suggesting an additional influence of the Indian monsoon system on Red Sea climates.
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  • 84
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    Elsevier
    In:  Cold Regions Science and Technology, 27 (3). pp. 225-243.
    Publication Date: 2017-12-11
    Description: The main objective of this research paper is to estimate the new-ice production in the Laptev Sea flaw lead during the 1991/1992 winter season. A one-dimensional energy balance model was applied to calculate ocean-to-atmosphere heat flux and the resulting new-ice formation over open water. For a detailed estimate of regional ice production, the flaw lead was divided into 14 sections based on the analysis of NOAA-satellite images and Russian ice charts. Opening and maintenance of the lead sections are controlled by offshore winds, whereas closing of open water is caused by onshore winds. Since the orientation of the lead varies from section to section, the same regional wind forcing can cause different local lead behavior. Model results reveal that the seasonally accumulated thickness of new ice formed in the different lead sections—under the assumption of instantaneous lateral new-ice removal from the water surface—varies from 1.3 m to 13 m over temporarily open water and may reach 20 m over permanently open water. The corresponding ice volume produced in the sections varies between 3.4 km3 and 59 km3 and amounts to 258 km3 for the entire lead. The significant regional variations in new-ice production are due to differences in (i) the number of days that a lead section is open (open-lead days), (ii) the oceanic heat loss during open-lead days, and (iii) the areal extent of the lead sections. As compared to other studies,—at least during 1991/1992 winter season—the Laptev Sea flaw lead produced between 28 and 617% more initial sea ice than the Kara, Barents, East Siberian and Chukchi leads. Despite its limited areal extent of roughly 36,000 km2, which represents only 8% of the entire Laptev Sea, the flaw lead produces about 32% of the annual shelf ice. The ice production in the flaw lead is 5.3 times higher than the remainder of the shelf (7.4 m vs. 1.4 m). Furthermore, the Laptev Sea flaw lead produces 2.6% of the ice annually formed the entire Arctic Mediterranean Sea and contributes about 9% to the volume of the Siberian branch of the Transpolar Drift Ice System. This makes the Laptev Sea flaw lead a significant producer of Arctic sea ice on local and regional scales, whereas the contribution of lead ice to the entire volume of annually formed pack in high northern latitudes amounts only to roughly 1.3%.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Sediment proxy data from the Norwegian, Greenland, and Iceland seas (Nordic seas) are presented to evaluate surface water temperature (SST) differences between Holocene and Eemian times and to deduce from these data the particular mode of surface water circulation. Records from planktic foraminiferal assemblages, CaCO3 content, oxygen isotopes of foraminifera, and iceberg-rafted debris form the main basis of interpretation. All results indicate for the Eemian comparatively cooler northern Nordic seas than for the Holocene due to a reduction in the northwardly flow of Atlantic surface water towards Fram Strait and the Arctic Ocean. Therefore, the cold polar water flow from the Arctic Ocean was less influencial in the southwestern Nordic seas during this time. As can be further deduced from the Eemian data, slightly higher Eemian SSTs are interpreted for the western Iceland Sea compared to the Norwegian Sea (ca. south of 70°N). This Eemian situation is in contrast to the Holocene when the main mass of warmest Atlantic surface water flows along the Norwegian continental margin northwards and into the Arctic Ocean. Thus, a moderate northwardly decrease in SST is observed in the eastern Nordic seas for this time, causing a meridional transfer in ocean heat. Due to this distribution in SSTs the Holocene is dominated by a meridional circulation pattern. The interpretation of the Eemian data imply a dominantly zonal surface water circulation with a steep meridional gradient in SSTs.
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  • 86
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep-Sea Research Part I-Oceanographic Research Papers, 45 (12). pp. 2189-2200.
    Publication Date: 2015-08-27
    Description: The vestimentiferan tubeworm Riftia pachyptila derives most or all of its nutrition from intracellular chemosynthetic bacterial symbionts. Because purified preparations of symbionts respire nitrate, possibly nitrite, and oxygen, host transport of nitrate is a topic of interest. In the present study, we have developed a nitrate detection assay that utilizes a nitrite reductase-deficient Escherichia coli strain for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, which is then determined spectrophotometrically. Nitrate and nitrite concentrations were measured in the blood and coelomic fluids of R. pachyptila collected from hydrothermal vent sites at 9°N and 13°N. The blood was shown to have nitrate concentrations up to one hundred times that of ambient sea water (40 μM). Blood nitrate levels reached concentrations of 〉1 mM, while nitrite was measured in the range of 400–700 μM. The concentrations of nitrate and nitrite in the coelomic fluids were 150–240 μM and 〈20 μM, respectively. The nitrate determination technique we present here is simple, applicable for laboratory and shipboard use on sea water or biological fluids, and works reliably within the 0.5 to 2000 μM range.
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2015-08-28
    Description: Eight time slices of surface-water paleoceanography were reconstructed from stable isotope and paleotemperature data to evaluate late Quaternary changes in density, current directions, and sea-ice cover in the Nordic Seas and NE Atlantic. We used isotopic records from 110 deep-sea cores, 20 of which are accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS)-14C dated and 30 of which have high (〉8 cm /kyr) sedimentation rates, enabling a resolution of about 120 years. Paleotemperature estimates are based on species counts of planktonic foraminifera in 18 cores. The δ18O and δ13C distributions depict three main modes of surface circulation: (1) The Holocene-style interglacial mode which largely persisted over the last 12.8 14C ka, and probably during large parts of stage 3. (2) The peak glacial mode showing a cyclonic gyre in the, at least, seasonally ice-free Nordic Seas and a meltwater lens west of Ireland. Based on geostrophic forcing, it possibly turned clockwise, blocked the S-N flow across the eastern Iceland-Shetland ridge, and enhanced the Irminger current around west Iceland. It remains unclear whether surface-water density was sufficient for deepwater formation west of Norway. (3) A meltwater regime culminating during early glacial Termination I, when a great meltwater lens off northern Norway probably induced a clockwise circulation reaching south up to Faeroe, the northward inflow of Irminger Current water dominated the Icelandic Sea, and deepwater convection was stopped. In contrast to circulation modes two and three, the Holocene-style circulation mode appears most stable, even unaffected by major meltwater pools originating from the Scandinavian ice sheet, such as during δ18O event 3.1 and the Bölling. Meltwater phases markedly influenced the European continental climate by suppressing the “heat pump” of the Atlantic salinity conveyor belt. During the peak glacial, melting icebergs blocked the eastward advection of warm surface water toward Great Britain, thus accelerating buildup of the great European ice sheets; in the early deglacial, meltwater probably induced a southward flow of cold water along Norway, which led to the Oldest Dryas cold spell.
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2017-05-30
    Description: Eight techniques for cleaning particulate material and epibionts from the tissue of Fucus vesiculosus were tested on seaweed collected from a metal-contaminated estuary in the southwest of England. When assessed by scanning electron microscopy, only one was found to have efficiently removed the particulate material on the tissue. This technique consisted of applying a 1:9 ethanol:seawater mixture to the surface of the thallus, and scraping with a PTFE spatula. Analysis of Cu, As, Fe, Mn, and Zn content in the tissues cleaned by this technique showed that, in this case, only Fe concentrations decreased significantly when compared to tissue cleaned by rinsing in seawater only. The study is the first to systematically assess cleaning techniques for marine macroalgae and illustrates the need for standard methods for the sampling and analysis of seaweed tissue
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2017-05-30
    Description: Variations in the speciation of iron in the northern North Sea were investigated in an area covering at least two different water masses and an algal bloom, using a combination of techniques. Catalytic cathodic stripping voltammetry was used to measure the concentrations of reactive iron (FeR) and total iron (FeT) in unfiltered samples, while dissolved iron (FeD) was measured by GFAAS after extraction of filtered sea water. FeR was defined by the amount of iron that complexed with 20 μM 1-nitroso-2-napthol (NN) at pH 6.9. FeT was determined after UV-digestion at pH 2.4. Concentrations of natural organic iron complexing ligands and values for conditional stability constants, were determined in unfiltered samples by titration. Mean concentrations of 1.3 nM for FeR, 10.0 nM for FeT and 1.7 nM for FeD were obtained for the area sampled. FeR concentrations increased towards the south of the area investigated, as a result of the increased influence of continental run off. FeR concentrations were found to be enhanced below the nutricline (below ∼40 m) as a result of the remineralisation of organic material. Enhanced levels of FeT were observed in some surface samples and in samples collected below 30 m at stations in the south of the area studied, thought to be a result of high concentrations of biogenic particulate material and the resuspended sediments respectively. FeD concentrations varied between values similar to those of FeT in samples from the north of the area to values similar to those of FeR in the south. The bloom was thought to have influenced the distribution of both FeR and FeT, but less evidence was observed for any influence on FeR and FeD. The concentration of organic complexing ligands, which could possibly include a contribution from adsorption sites on particulate material, increased slightly in the bloom area and in North Sea waters. Iron was found to be fully (99.9%) complexed by the organic complexing ligands at a pH of 6.9 and largely complexed (82–96%) at pH 8. The ligands were almost saturated with iron suggesting that the ligand concentration could limit the concentration of iron occurring as dissolved species.
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  • 90
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    Elsevier
    In:  Fitoterapia, 69 (6). p. 552.
    Publication Date: 2015-10-07
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2017-06-26
    Description: Abundance, biofacies and ATP content of benthic foraminifera (〉63 μm) were studied in the Northeast Water (NEW) Polynya (77–81°N, 5–17°W) over the ice-free summer, 1993, to investigate how a polynya system might influence the underlying benthic community. In the living assemblage, distinguished by Rose Bengal staining, over 60 taxa could be identified. The biofacies identified was similar to that of other Arctic shelf habitats. Foraminifera were counted in 3 size fractions (63–125 μm, 125–250 μm and 〉250 μm), with 65% of the foraminifera occurring in the smallest size fraction (63–125 μm). Total abundances (〉63 μm) in the uppermost 1 cm averaged approximately 200 ind/10 cm3 and declined down-core, as did the number of species. Abundances and species composition correlated positively with sediment chlorophyll and ATP content, with maxima occurring in the shallower northern regions of the polynya, suggesting a general dependence on food. Foraminera biomass was estimated to be 0.1-0.3 g Corg/m2. Abundances, biomass and ATP content were comparable to ice-free, deep-sea regions in the Norwegian Sea. Temporal changes observed over a 2 month period at one location were difficult to distinguish from spatial and analytical variability. Contrary to expectations, growth was unpronounced at the community and at a species level, implying either a delayed response of the benthic foraminiferal community to food inputs from the overlying water column or the presence of biological limitations other than food, such as predation.
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  • 92
  • 93
    Publication Date: 2018-01-31
    Description: Long-range side-scan sonar (GLORIA) imagery of over 600,000 km² of the Polar North Atlantic provides a large-scale view of sedimentation patterns on this glacier-influenced continental margin. High-latitude margins are influenced strongly by glacial history and ice dynamics and, linked to this, the rate of sediment supply. Extensive glacial fans (up to 350,000 km³) were built up from stacked series of large debris flows transferring sediment down the continental slope. The fans were linked with high debris inputs from Quaternary glaciers at the mouths of cross-shelf troughs and deep fjords. Where ice was slower-moving, but still extended to the shelf break, large-scale slide deposits are observed. Where ice failed to cross the continental shelf during full glacials, the continental slope was sediment starved and submarine channels and smaller slides developed. A simple model for large-scale sedimentation on the glaciated continental margins of the Polar North Atlantic is presented.
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2017-06-26
    Description: Colonization structures of the large parasitic foraminifer Hyrrokkin sarcophaga Cedhagen, 1994 on Lophelia pertusa, Acesta excavata and Delectopecten vitreus are described from a deep-water coral reef mound on the mid-Norwegian shelf at 240 to 300 m water depth. Hyrrokkin sarcophaga is the only epibiont which is capable of attaching itself on the soft tissue-protected coral skeleton where it tends to form clusters of 3 to 8 specimens close to the tentacles of Lophelia. The foraminifer excavates a pit up to 1.5 mm deep and etches a straight channel through the skeleton of the host which ends within the soft tissue. In contrast to Lophelia, infested bivalves show a strong wound repair reaction and seal the etched channels by intense calcification. The etching is only performed by adult specimens. Substrate pitting is considered to improve the attachment strength while boring enables the parasite to secure a persistent nutrient source.
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  • 95
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    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Marine Systems, 11 (3-4). pp. 269-278.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-29
    Description: The present literature on biologically mediated fluxes from the benthic nepheloid layer (BNL) across the sediment-water interface into the sediment and vice versa is reviewed. The processes involved are categorised according to direct bioresuspension and biodeposition, i.e. direct interception of the animal with particles, and those effects, which are indirectly created by benthic organisms, e.g., changes of physical properties in the sediments, constructions like tubes and pits and the corresponding changes in hydrodynamic conditions. It is concluded that benthic organisms significantly increase the flux of particles across the interface and that the physically created fluxes are easily modified by a factor of 2 and more.
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  • 96
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    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 70 (1-2). pp. 1-19.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-08
    Description: Sediment cores containing up to twenty-five ash layers were taken at three sites close to Vesterisbanken Seamount in the Greenland Basin. These ash layers imply frequent eruptions of the volcano within the last 60 ka. The eruptions led to airborne transport and volcaniclastic turbidity flows which transported volcanic glassy and crystalline material from the volcano into the surrounding basin. During the eruption and the transport the glass and the crystal particles were mixed. The glasses range in composition between basanites and phonolites/benmoreites with MgO contents of 8 to 0.65%. The glass analyses follow a distinct trend of fractionation suggesting the crystallization of the phases olivine, clinopyroxene, plagioclase, kaersutite, Cr-spinel, Ti-magnetite and apatite. A strong zonation of clinopyroxene and kaersutite phenocrysts implies mixing processes in the magma system although the liquid compositions do not lie on mixing trends. A geochemical study of the bulk ashes shows that some ash layers possess distinct chemical compositions. The ashes are more evolved than the lavas of the volcano, suggesting fractionation of liquid from crystallized material during the eruption or transport of the ashes. Sixteen layers are statistically combined into four groups, of which several can be correlated from core to core reflecting individual eruptive events.
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2016-11-14
    Description: Stable isotope records of demosponges from the Caribbean and Coral Sea are described for the purpose of studying the influence of fossil fuel CO2 on the carbon isotopic composition of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in surface water. The slow-growing sponges precipitate calcium carbonate in isotopic equilibrium with ambient sea water and are used to detect changes in δ13CDIC from pre-industrial times (early 19th century) to the present. We observed similar shapes and ranges in δ13C curves measured on Caribbean specimens collected from water depths of 25, 84 and 91 m as well as a specimen collected in shallow waters off New Caledonia. The records reveal a highly significant correlation with atmospheric δ13CCO2. δ13CDIC values for Caribbean and Coral Sea surface waters were calculated using the δ13C sponge records. While δ13C of atmospheric CO2 decreased by about 1.4‰ from the early 19th century to 1990, δ13CDIC of Caribbean and Coral Sea surface waters decreased by 0.9±0.2‰ and 0.7±0.3‰, respectively. No isotopic equilibrium between surface water DIC and atmospheric CO2 was observed, either during the pre-industrial steady state or during the last 100 years. The lower amount of depletion in the surface water δ13CDIC with respect to the atmospheric anthropogenic signal is explained by the dilution of the surface waters by biologically altered subsurface water DIC. The lower δ13C decrease in the Coral Sea points to a stronger influence of the subsurface water source compared to the Caribbean.
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2018-03-08
    Description: The record of glacier fluctuations in western Scandinavia, as reconstructed from continental data, has been correlated with records of ice-rafted detritus (IRD) from well-dated sediment cores from the Norwegian Sea covering the past 150,000 yr B.P. The input of IRD into the ocean is used as a proxy for ice sheet advances onto the shelf and, thus, for the calibration of a glaciation curve. The marine results generally support land-based reconstructions of glacier fluctuations and improve the time-control on glacial advances. The Saalian ice sheet decayed very rapidly approximately 125,000 yr B.P. In the Early Weichselian, a minor but significant IRD maximum indicates the presence of icebergs in isotope substage 5b (especially between 95,000 and 83,000 yr B.P.). Reduced amounts of calcareous nannofossils indicate that surface waters were influenced by meltwater discharges during isotope substages 5d and 5b. An extensive build-up of inland ice began again during isotope stage 4, but maximum glaciation was reached only in early stage 3 (58,000-53,000 yr B.P.). Marine sediments have minimum carbonate content, indicating strong dilution by lithogenic ice-rafted material. Generally, the IRD accumulation rate was considerably higher in stages 4-2 than in stage 5. A marked peak in IRD accumulation rates from 47,000 to 43,000 yr B.P. correlates well with a second Middle Weichselian ice sheet advance dated by the Laschamp/Olby paleomagnetic event. Minimum ice extent during the Ålesund interstade (38,500-32,500 yr B.P.) and several glacial oscillations during the Late Weichselian are also seen in the IRD record. Of several late Weichselian glacial oscillations on the shelf, at least four correspond to the North Atlantic Heinrich events. Ice sheet behavior was either coupled or linked by external forcing during these events, whereas internal ice sheet mechanisms may account for the noncoherent fluctuations.
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  • 99
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    AMS (American Meteorological Society)
    In:  Journal of Physical Oceanography, 28 (11). pp. 2250-2274.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-06
    Description: In the present paper a hydrostatic “reduced gravity” model, generally used to simulate transient bottom-arrested gravity plumes, was coupled with a sediment transport model. The coupled model considers the respective contribution of suspended sediment particles on the buoyancy of a plume and allows one to simulate autosuspension and size-differential deposition of sediments based on the local turbulence and settling velocities. Simulations using the coupled model reveal that sediment-enriched plumes are able to inject both entrained and original shelf water masses into intermediate and bottom layers of an adjacent ocean basin in an ageostrophic dynamical balance. Hence the mechanism described here is more rapid than classic, “seawater” plumes, which are solely driven by surplus density of the water masses. Results suggest that “turbidity” plumes may constitute an important process in the formation and renewal of deep waters in the Arctic Ocean. In case a turbidity plume reaches its level of equilibrium density, deposition of suspended particles causes the density of the interstitial fluid to be lower than the density of the ambient fluid. This initiates upward convection within the water column. The substantial difference between TS- and turbidity plumes is described by model experiments that utilize idealized slope and sediment distributions. A realistic simulation of a turbidity plume cascading down the continental slope of the western Barents Sea is presented. The computed distribution of deposited sediments agrees well with observations in an area of high accumulation of shelf-derived sediments. The frequency of occurrence of sediment-enriched gravity plumes originating from the Barents Sea shelf is estimated from the various geological variables (thickness of sediments at the bottom, grain size composition) measured from bottom sediments samples.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 13 (2). pp. 193-204.
    Publication Date: 2017-05-10
    Description: Stable oxygen and-carbon isotope and sedimentological-paleontological investigations supported by accelerator mass spectrometry (14)C datings were carried out on cores from north of 85 degrees N in the eastern central Arctic Ocean. Significant changes in accumulation rates, provenance of ice-rafted debris (IRD), and planktic productivity over the past 80,000 years are documented. During peak glacials, i.e., oxygen isotope stages 4 and 2, the Arctic Ocean was covered by sea ice with decreased seasonal variation, limiting planktic productivity and bulk sedimentation rates. In early stage 3 and during Termination I, major deglaciations of the circum-Arctic regions caused lowered salinities and poor oxygenation of central Arctic surface waters. A meltwater spike and an associated IRD peak dated to similar to 14-12 (14)C ka can be traced over the southern Eurasian Basin of the Arctic Ocean. This event was associated with the early and rapid deglaciation of the marine-based Barents Sea Ice Sheet. A separate Termination Ib meltwater event is most conspicuous in the central Arctic and is associated with characteristic dolomitic carbonate IRD. This lithology suggests an origin of glacial ice from northern Canada and northern Greenland where lower Paleozoic platform carbonates crop extensively out.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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