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  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Auffret, Gérard A; Zaragosi, Sebastien; Dennielou, Bernard; Cortijo, Elsa; Van Rooij, David; Grousset, Francis E; Pujol, Claude; Eynaud, Frédérique; Siegert, Martin J (2002): Terrigenous fluxes at the Celtic Margin during the last glacial cycle. Marine Geology, 188(1-2), 79-108, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(02)00276-1
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The sedimentary sections of three cores from the Celtic margin provide high-resolution records of the terrigenous fluxes during the last glacial cycle. A total of 21 14C AMS dates allow us to define age models with a resolution better than 100 yr during critical periods such as Heinrich events 1 and 2. Maximum sedimentary fluxes occurred at the Meriadzek Terrace site during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Detailed X-ray imagery of core MD95-2002 from the Meriadzek Terrace shows no sedimentary structures suggestive of either deposition from high-density turbidity currents or significant erosion. Two paroxysmal terrigenous flux episodes have been identified. The first occurred after the deposition of Heinrich event 2 Canadian ice-rafted debris (IRD) and includes IRD from European sources. We suggest that the second represents an episode of deposition from turbid plumes, which precedes IRD deposition associated with Heinrich event 1. At the end of marine isotopic stage 2 (MIS 2) and the beginning of MIS 1 the highest fluxes are recorded on the Whittard Ridge where they correspond to deposition from turbidity current overflows. Canadian icebergs have rafted debris at the Celtic margin during Heinrich events 1, 2, 4 and 5. The high-resolution records of Heinrich events 1 and 2 show that in both cases the arrival of the Canadian icebergs was preceded by a European ice rafting precursor event, which took place about 1–1.5 kyr before. Two rafting episodes of European IRD also occurred immediately after Heinrich event 2 and just before Heinrich event 1. The terrigenous fluxes recorded in core MD95-2002 during the LGM are the highest reported at hemipelagic sites from the northwestern European margin. The magnitude of the Canadian IRD fluxes at Meriadzek Terrace is similar to those from oceanic sites.
    Keywords: CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Celtic Shelf; CH-NKS12; IMAGES; IMAGES I; International Marine Global Change Study; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952002; MD95-2002; Meriadzec; NO-MKS03; PC; Piston corer
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: During the fourth Antarctic voyage ANT-IV of the research icebreaker POLARSTERN standard meteorological measurements have been performed. The measurements include 3-hourly synoptic observations as well as daily upper air soundings. The measurements started on September 6 1985 at Bremerhaven and were terminated at April 28 1986 in Punta Arenas. The 3-hourly synoptic observations are performed following the instructions of the FM 13 ships code defined by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). The datasets include automatic measurements such as mean ship's speed, wind velocity, wind direction, air temperature, water temperature as well as visual observations such as total cloud amount, present weather, clouds, height and period of swell waves, ice classification. The visual observation are not performed during night time. For the upper air soundings VAISALA RS80 radiosondes, carried by helium-filled balloons (TOTEX 350 - 1500) were used. Data reception and evaluation were carried out by a MicroCora System (VAISALA). The upper air soundings include profile measurements of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind vector. Usually the soundings started at the heliport (10 m above sea level) and terminated between 15 and 37 km. The height of the measurements was calculated by applying the barometric formula. The wind vector was determined with the aid of the OMEGA navigation system.
    Keywords: ANT-IV/1a; ANT-IV/1b; ANT-IV/1c; ANT-IV/2; ANT-IV/3; ANT-IV/4; AWI_Meteo; Canarias Sea; CT; Meteorological Long-Term Observations @ AWI; North Atlantic Ocean; North Sea; Polarstern; PS08; PS08/01331; PS08/01332; PS08/01333; PS08/01334; PS08/01335; PS08/01336; PS08/01337; PS08/01338; PS08/01339; PS08/01340; PS08/01341; PS08/01342; PS08/01343; PS08/01344; PS08/01345; PS08/01346; PS08/01347; PS08/01348; PS08/01349; PS08/01350; PS08/01351; PS08/01352; PS08/01353; PS08/01354; PS08/01355; PS08/01356; PS08/01357; PS08/01358; PS08/01359; PS08/01360; PS08/01361; PS08/01362; PS08/01363; PS08/01364; PS08/01365; PS08/01366; PS08/01367; PS08/01368; PS08/01369; PS08/01370; PS08/01371; PS08/01372; PS08/01373; PS08/01374; PS08/01375; PS08/01376; PS08/01377; PS08/01378; PS08/01379; PS08/01380; PS08/01381; PS08/01382; PS08/01383; PS08/01384; PS08/01385; PS08/01386; PS08/01387; PS08/01388; PS08/01389; PS08/01390; PS08/01391; PS08/01392; PS08/01393; PS08/01394; PS08/01395; PS08/01396; PS08/01397; PS08/01398; PS08/01399; PS08/01400; PS08/01401; PS08/01402; PS08/01403; PS08/01404; PS08/01405; PS08/01414; PS08/01415; PS08/01416; PS08/01417; PS08/01418; PS08/01419; PS08/01420; PS08/01421; PS08/01422; PS08/01423; PS08/01424; PS08/01425; PS08/01426; PS08/01427; PS08/01428; PS08/01429; PS08/01430; PS08/01431; PS08/01432; PS08/01433; PS08/01434; PS08/01435; PS08/01436; PS08/01437; PS08/01438; PS08/01439; PS08/01440; PS08/01441; PS08/01442; PS08/01443; PS08/01444; PS08/01445; PS08/01446; PS08/01447; PS08/01448; PS08/01449; PS08/01450; PS08/01451; PS08/01452; PS08/01453; PS08/01454; PS08/01455; PS08/01456; PS08/01457; PS08/01458; PS08/01459; PS08/01460; PS08/01461; PS08/01462; PS08/01463; PS08/01464; PS08/01465; PS08/01466; PS08/01467; PS08/01468; PS08/01469; PS08/01470; PS08/01471; PS08/01472; PS08/01473; PS08/01474; PS08/01475; PS08/01476; PS08/01477; PS08/01478; PS08/01479; PS08/01480; PS08/01481; PS08/01482; PS08/01483; PS08/01484; PS08/01485; PS08/01486; PS08/01487; PS08/01488; PS08/01489; PS08/01490; PS08/01491; PS08/01492; PS08/01493; PS08/01494; PS08/01495; PS08/01496; PS08/01497; PS08/01498; PS08/01499; PS08/01500; PS08/01501; PS08/01502; PS08/01503; PS08/01504; PS08/01505; PS08/01506; PS08/01507; PS08/01508; PS08/01509; PS08/01510; PS08/01511; PS08/01512; PS08/01513; PS08/01514; PS08/01515; PS08/01516; PS08/01517; PS08/01518; PS08/01519; PS08/01520; PS08/01521; PS08/01522; PS08/01523; PS08/1a-track; PS08/1b-track; PS08/1c-track; PS08/2-track; PS08/3-track; PS08/4-track; PS08 NOAMP; RADIO; Radiosonde; South Atlantic Ocean; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 191 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Michels, Klaus; Kuhn, Gerhard; Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Diekmann, Bernhard; Fütterer, Dieter K; Grobe, Hannes; Uenzelmann-Neben, Gabriele (2002): The southern Weddell Sea: combined contourite-turbidite sedimentation at the southeastern margin of the Weddell Gyre. In: Stow, D A V; Pudsey, C; Howe, J C; Faugères, J-C & Viana, A R (eds.), Deep-water contourite systems: modern drifts and ancient series, seismic and sedimentary characteristics. Geological Society of London, Memoirs, London, 22, 305-323, hdl:10013/epic.14690.d001
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Sedimentary processes in the southeastern Weddell Sea are influenced by glacial-interglacial ice-shelf dynamics and the cyclonic circulation of the Weddell Gyre, which affects all water masses down to the sea floor. Significantly increased sedimentation rates occur during glacial stages, when ice sheets advance to the shelf edge and trigger gravitational sediment transport to the deep sea. Downslope transport on the Crary Fan and off Dronning Maud and Coats Land is channelized into three huge channel systems, which originate on the eastern-, the central and the western Crary Fan. They gradually turn from a northerly direction eastward until they follow a course parallel to the continental slope. All channels show strongly asymmetric cross sections with well-developed levees on their northwestern sides, forming wedge-shaped sediment bodies. They level off very gently. Levees on the southeastern sides are small, if present at all. This characteristic morphology likely results from the process of combined turbidite-contourite deposition. Strong thermohaline currents of the Weddell Gyre entrain particles from turbidity-current suspensions, which flow down the channels, and carry them westward out of the channel where they settle on a surface gently dipping away from the channel. These sediments are intercalated with overbank deposits of high-energy and high-volume turbidity currents, which preferentially flood the left of the channels (looking downchannel) as a result of Coriolis force. In the distal setting of the easternmost channel-levee complex, where thermohaline currents are directed northeastward as a result of a recirculation of water masses from the Enderby Basin, the setting and the internal structures of a wedge-shaped sediment body indicate a contourite drift rather than a channel levee. Dating of the sediments reveals that the levees in their present form started to develop with a late Miocene cooling event, which caused an expansion of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet and an invigoration of thermohaline current activity.
    Keywords: ANT-IV/3; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/5; AWI_Paleo; Camp Norway; gcmd1; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Halley Bay; KL; Lyddan Island; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS08; PS08/333; PS12; PS12/319; PS12/340; PS12/458; PS1367-2; PS1599-1; PS1599-3; PS16; PS16/409; PS16/410; PS16/419; PS1607-3; PS1635-1; PS1789-1; PS1790-1; PS1794-2; SL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 13 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wollenburg, Jutta Erika; Mackensen, Andreas; Kuhnt, Wolfgang (2007): Benthic foraminiferal biodiversity response to a changing Arctic palaeoclimate in the last 24.000 years. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 255(3-4), 195-222, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2007.05.007
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Four sediment cores recovered from 1000 to 2500 m water depth in the Arctic Ocean, tracing the inflowing Atlantic water from Fram Strait, Yermak Plateau, northern Barents Sea continental slope as far as the Laptev Sea, have been analyzed for species richness and diversity. Samples were wet sieved after freeze-drying using a 63-µm sieve. Where possible at least 300 specimens were counted from the size fraction 〉63 µm, however, samples from deglacial periods are often affected by carbonate dissolution. In such samples foraminiferal numbers are low. Samples containing less than 40 specimens were excluded from statistical analyses. Because we are aware that specimen numbers 〈100 specimen are still critical for H analyses, core sections containing less than 100 specimens are highlighted in the figures. Here, we will characterize biodiversity trends by the two most widely used biodiversity measurements, the information function H (Buzas and Gibson, 1969) with its decomposition equation ln(S) and ln(E) (Buzas and Hayek, 1996), and the Fisher Alpha Index (Fisher, Corbett, and Williams, 1943). For spectral analysis the Fisher alpha record of core PS2837-5 was resampled at equally spaced 100-year intervals. For the spectral analysis, two methodes were used within the ANALYSERIES software package (Paillard et al., 1996): 1. The Blackman-Tuckey (1958) for its high confidence of the results; 2. The maximum entropy method (e.g. Haykin, 1983) for its high resolution. The cores reveal well-correlated biodiversity maxima and minima. Distinct periodicities of species richness variability of 1.57 kyr and 0.76 kyr characterize the Late Weichselian, and of 1.16 kyr and 0.54 kyr even more pronounced the Holocene. The biodiversity maxima/minima coincide with terrestrial and marine warm and cool events at high northern latitude. We suggest that either the physiology of most rare species is temperature sensitive, or sustained food supply increased the taxonomic richness during warmer intervals.
    Keywords: ARK-III/3; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/3; ARK-XIII/2; AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; GIK21290-4 PS07/579; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Laptev Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS07; PS1290-4; PS19/245; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2212-3; PS2458-4; PS27; PS27/038; PS2837-5; PS44; PS44/065; SL; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Berner, Heinrich (1991): Mechanismen der Sedimentbildung in der Framstrasse, im Arktischen Ozean und in der Norwegischen See. Berichte aus dem Fachbereich Geowissenschaften der Universität Bremen, 20, 167 pp, urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-ep000106655
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The grain size distribution and clay mineral composition of lithogenic particles of ice-rafted material, sinking matter, surface sediments, as well as from deep-sea cores are analysed. The samples were collected in the Fram Strait, the Arctic Ocean, and the Norwegian Sea during several expeditions with the research vessels "Polarstern", "Meteor" and "Poseidon", and Norwegian rearch vessels. Sinking matter was caught with sediment traps, fitted with timer-controlled sample changers, which had been deployde in the sea for usually one year.
    Keywords: 104-1; 109-1; 111-2; 114-1; 117-1; 120-1; 121-1; 122-2; 57-04; 57-06; 57-07; 57-08; 57-09; 57-11; 57-12; 57-13; 57-14; 57-20; 58-08; Arctic Ocean; ARK-I/3; ARK-II/4; ARK-II/5; ARK-III/3; ARK-IV/3; BC; BI-1_trap; Box corer; Fram Strait; FS-1_trap; FS-2_trap; FS-3_trap; GC; GeoB; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Giant box corer; GIK16103-1; GIK16104-1; GIK16105-1; GIK16109-1; GIK16122-1; GIK16129-1; GIK16131-1; GIK16132-1; GIK16133-1; GIK16135-1; GIK16136-1; GIK16138-1; GIK16139-1; GIK16143-1; GIK16144-1; GIK16145-1; GIK16146-1; GIK16147-1; GIK16149-1; GIK16150-1; GIK16152-1; GIK16156-1; GIK16157-1; GIK16158-1; GIK16161-1; GIK16162-1; GIK16163-1; GIK16167-1; GIK16168-1; GIK16169-1; GIK16170-1; GIK16172-1; GIK16175-1; GIK16176-1; GIK16180-1; GIK21289-1 PS07/578; GIK21290-3 PS07/579; GIK21291-3 PS07/581; GIK21292-3 PS07/582; GIK21293-3 PS07/583; GIK21294-3 PS07/584; GIK21295-3 PS07/586; GIK21295-5 PS07/586; GIK21296-3 PS07/587; GIK21297-3 PS07/588; GIK21298-3 PS07/590; GIK21300-3 PS07/592; GIK21301-2 PS07/593; GIK21302-2 PS07/594; GIK21303-2 PS07/595; GIK21305-1 PS07/597; GIK21306-2 PS07/598; GIK21307-2 PS07/599; GIK21308-3 PS07/601; GIK21309-3 PS07/602; GIK21310-4 PS07/603; GIK21311-3 PS07/605; GIK21312-3 PS07/606; GIK21314-3 PS07/608; GIK21316-5 PS07/612; GIK21318-4 PS07/615; GIK21319-2 PS07/617; GIK21322-3 PS07/626; GIK21323-3 PS07/627; GIK21513-8 PS11/276-8; GIK21514-5 PS11/278-5; GIK21515-10 PS11/280-10; GIK21516-5 PS11/282-5; GIK21518-13 PS11/287-13; GIK21519-10 PS11/296-10; GIK21520-10 PS11/310-10; GIK21521-13 PS11/340-13; GIK21522-18 PS11/358-18; GIK21523-14 PS11/362-14; GIK21524-1 PS11/364-1; GIK21525-2 PS11/365-2; GIK21528-7 PS11/372-7; GIK21529-7 PS11/376-7; GIK21530-3 PS11/382-3; GIK21532-1 PS11/396-1; GIK23055-1; GIK23056-2; GIK23057-1; GIK23058-1; GIK23059-1; GIK23060-1; GIK23061-3; GIK23062-2; GIK23063-1; GIK23064-2; GIK23065-1; GIK23066-1; GIK23067-2; GIK23068-1; GIK23069-1; GIK23070-2; GIK23071-1; GIK23072-1; GIK23073-2; GIK23074-2; GIK23126-1 PS03/126; GIK23138-1 PS03/138; GIK23150-1 PS03/150; GIK23189-1 PS03/189; GIK23206-1 PS03/206; GIK23207-1 PS03/207; GIK23210-1 PS03/210; GIK23211-1 PS03/211; GIK23216-1 PS03/216; GIK23217-1 PS03/217; GIK23220-1 PS03/220; GIK23221-1 PS03/221; GIK23222-1 PS03/222; GIK23229-1 PS05/414; GIK23230-1 PS05/416; GIK23231-2 PS05/417; GIK23232-1 PS05/418; GIK23233-1 PS05/420; GIK23235-1 PS05/422; GIK23240-1 PS05/428; GIK23241-1 PS05/429; GIK23243-2 PS05/431; GIK23244-1 PS05/449; GIK23247-2 PS05/452; GIK23248-1 PS05/453; GKG; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Håkon Mosby; HM52; HM52-02; HM57; HM57-04; HM57-05; HM57-06; HM57-07; HM57-08; HM57-09; HM57-11; HM57-12; HM57-13; HM57-14; HM57-20; HM58; HM58-02; HM58-08; HM82/83; ICE; Iceland Sea; Ice station; LB-1_trap; Lofoten Basin; M107-1; M118-1; M2/2; Meteor (1986); Mooring (long time); MOORY; Na-1_trap; Nansen Basin; NB-1_trap; Norway Slope; Norwegian Sea; Polarstern; PS03; PS05; PS07; PS1050-1; PS1060-1; PS1071-1; PS11; PS11/269-1; PS1105-1; PS1120-2; PS1121-1; PS1124-1; PS1125-1; PS1127-1; PS1128-1; PS1130-1; PS1131-1; PS1132-1; PS1229-1; PS1230-1; PS1231-2; PS1232-1; PS1233-1; PS1235-1; PS1240-1; PS1241-1; PS1243-2; PS1244-1; PS1247-2; PS1248-1; PS1289-1; PS1290-3; PS1291-3; PS1292-3; PS1293-3; PS1294-3; PS1295-3; PS1295-5; PS1296-3; PS1297-3; PS1298-3; PS1300-3; PS1301-2; PS1302-2; PS1303-2; PS1305-1; PS1306-2; PS1307-2; PS1308-3; PS1309-3; PS1310-4; PS1311-3; PS1312-3; PS1314-3; PS1316-5; PS1318-4; PS1319-2; PS1322-3; PS1323-3; PS1511-1; PS1513-8; PS1514-5; PS1515-10; PS1516-5; PS1518-13; PS1519-10; PS1520-10; PS1521-13; PS1522-18; PS1523-14; PS1524-1; PS1525-2; PS1528-7; PS1529-7; PS1530-3; PS1532-1; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Sea_Ice_A; Sea_Ice_B; Sea_Ice_C; Sea_Ice_D; SL; SP-1; SP-1_trap; Svalbard; Trap, sediment; TRAPS; Voering Plateau; Voring Plateau; VP-2_trap; Western Djupet
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 18 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 6
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Stein, Ruediger; Grobe, Hannes; Hubberten, Hans-Wolfgang; Marienfeld, Peter; Nam, Seung-Il (1993): Latest Pleistocene to Holocene changes in glaciomarine sedimentation in Scoresby Sund and along the adjacent East Greenland Continental Maring: preliminary results. Geo-Marine Letters, 13, 9-16, https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01204387
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: High-resolution stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses and detailed sedimentological and geochemical investigations were performed in order to (i) reconstruct the paleoclimate and paleoceanography of the Greenland Sea associated with late Quaternary glacial-interglacial cycles, and (ii) to link the terrestrial and deep-sea climatic records. The reconstruction of the paleoenvironmental history of the East Greenland margin and the correlation between the terrestrial and deep sea records are major objectives of the ESF-PONAM-Programme (European Science Foundation - Polar North Atlantic Margins). For this study 16 gravity and 2 box cores were recovered along the East Greenland continental margin between 69° N and 72° N on three W-E transects running from the shelf to the deep sea.
    Keywords: ARK-V/3b; ARK-VII/3b; AWI_Paleo; GIK21726-1 PS13/193; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Greenland Shelf; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS13 GRÖKORT; PS17; PS17/239; PS1726-1; PS1916-1; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 7
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Assmy, Philipp; Henjes, Joachim; Klaas, Christine; Smetacek, Victor (2007): Mechanisms determining species dominance in a phytoplankton bloom induced by the iron fertilization experiment EisenEx in the Southern Ocean. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 54(3), 340-362, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2006.12.005
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The dynamics of phytoplankton species populations recorded during the 3-week, iron-fertilization experiment EisenEx carried out in spring in the Antarctic Polar Frontal Zone are presented and discussed as the difference between growth and mortality rates. Only two cosmopolitan diatom species, the centric Chaetoceros debilis and the pennate Pseudo-nitzschia lineola, increased population density exponentially throughout the experiment to 150-fold and 90-fold of initial values respectively. Because C. debilis initial abundance was tenfold lower than that of P. lineola, the two contributed 1 % and 21 % to bloom biomass respectively at the end of the experiment, high-lighting the role of seeding in bloom formation. The other significant species increased population size at a linear rate throughout the experiment or for a short spurt phase to 3 to 18-fold of initial values. Conservative estimates of mortality rates within diatom species populations were obtained by comparing net accumulation rates of full cells with those of empty and broken frustules. The ratios were consistent over time for the various species but varied widely between them. The species-specific variation can be explained by differences in both growth and mortality rates, the latter partly due to either selective grazing or avoidance by the large protozoo- and metazooplankton populations present. Selective predation by the abundant copepod populations on protistan grazers (ciliates and heterotrophic dinoflagellates) of diatoms apparently aided diatom biomass build-up. The response patterns of populations of the phytoplankton species present fall into 6 categories comprising disparate species, indicating that phylogeny is a poor predictor of ecology. The group that did not respond to fertilization was the most diverse and included both endemic and cosmopolitan as well as background and bloom-forming species. This lack of response to the advent of favorable growth conditions indicates that proximate factors during EisenEx triggered growth only in some species but had little effect on others. We attribute the differences in behavior to ultimate factors such as seasonal effects on life cycles and other internal constraints on growth rates. The implications for our understanding of the evolutionary ecology of phytoplankton and its impact on global biogeochemical cycles are pointed out.
    Keywords: ANT-XVIII/2; CTD/Rosette; CTD117; CTD123; CTD126; CTD128; CTD145; CTD149; CTD16; CTD18; CTD45; CTD51; CTD54; CTD57; CTD61; CTD66; CTD70; CTD74; CTD88; CTD9; CTD-RO; EisenEx; European Iron Enrichment Experiment in the Southern Ocean; Polarstern; PS58/009-2; PS58/011-3; PS58/012-5; PS58/014-4; PS58/038-3; PS58/041-2; PS58/042-2; PS58/043-2; PS58/045-2; PS58/046-3; PS58/048-3; PS58/049-3; PS58/061-3; PS58/088-4; PS58/090-4; PS58/091-4; PS58/092-3; PS58/107-5; PS58/108-1; PS58 EISENEX; South Atlantic
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 95 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 8
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Henjes, Joachim; Assmy, Philipp; Klaas, Christine; Smetacek, Victor (2007): Response of the larger protozooplankton to an iron-induced phytoplankton bloom in the Polar Frontal Zone of the Southern Ocean (EisenEx). Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 54(5), 774-791, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2007.02.005
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The responses of larger (〉50 µm in diameter) protozooplankton groups to a phytoplankton bloom induced by in situ iron fertilization (EisenEx) in the Polar Frontal Zone (PFZ) of the Southern Ocean in austral spring are presented. During the 21 days of the experiment, samples were collected from seven discrete depths in the upper 150 m inside and outside the fertilized patch for the enumeration of acantharia, foraminifera, radiolaria, heliozoa, tintinnid ciliates and aplastidic thecate dinoflagellates. Inside the patch, acantharian numbers increased twofold, but only negligibly in surrounding waters. This finding is of major interest, since acantharia are suggested to be involved in the formation of barite (BaSO_4 ) found in sediments and which is a palaeoindicator of both ancient and modern high productivity regimes. Foraminifera increased significantly in abundance inside and outside the fertilized patch. However the marked increase of juveniles after a full moon event suggests a lunar periodicity in the reproduction cycle of some foraminiferan species rather than a reproductive response to enhanced food availability. In contrast, adult radiolaria showed no clear trend during the experiment, but juveniles increased threefold indicating elevated reproduction. Aplastidic thecate dinoflagellates almost doubled in numbers and biomass, but also increased outside the patch. Tintinnid numbers decreased twofold, although biomass remained constant due to a shift in the size spectrum. Empty tintinnid loricae, however, increased by a factor of two indicating that grazing pressure on this group mainly by copepods intensified during EisenEx. The results show that iron-fertilization experiments can shed light on the biology and the role of these larger protists in pelagic ecosystem which will improve their use as proxies in palaeoceanography.
    Keywords: ANT-XVIII/2; CTD/Rosette; CTD11; CTD118; CTD121; CTD125; CTD130; CTD146; CTD15; CTD150; CTD19; CTD47; CTD52; CTD55; CTD58; CTD64; CTD67; CTD71; CTD75; CTD88; CTD-RO; EisenEx; European Iron Enrichment Experiment in the Southern Ocean; Polarstern; PS58/009-6; PS58/011-3; PS58/012-4; PS58/014-6; PS58/038-7; PS58/041-5; PS58/042-5; PS58/043-4; PS58/045-9; PS58/046-5; PS58/048-5; PS58/049-5; PS58/061-3; PS58/088-7; PS58/090-2; PS58/091-3; PS58/092-6; PS58/107-6; PS58/108-3; PS58 EISENEX; South Atlantic
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 38 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Henjes, Joachim; Assmy, Philipp; Klaas, Christine; Verity, Peter; Smetacek, Victor (2007): Response of microzooplankton (protists and small copepods) to an iron-induced phytoplankton bloom in the Southern Ocean (EisenEx). Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 54(3), 363-384, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2006.12.004
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The dynamics, composition and grazing impact of microzooplankton were studied during the in situ iron fertilisation experiment EisenEx in the Antarctic Polar Frontal Zone in austral spring (November 2000). During the 21 day experiment, protozooplankton and small metazooplankton were sampled from the mixed layer inside and outside the patch using Niskin bottles. Aplastidic dinoflagellates increased threefold in abundance and biomass in the first 10 d of the experiment, but decreased thereafter to values twofold higher than pre-fertilisation values. The decline after day 10 is attributed to increasing grazing pressure by copepods. They also constrained ciliate abundances and biomass which were higher inside the fertilised patch than outside but highly variable. Copepod nauplii abundance also remained stable whereas biomass doubled. Numbers of copepodites and adults of small copepod species increased threefold inside the patch, but doubled in surrounding waters. Grazing rates estimated using the dilution method suggest that microzooplankton grazing constrained pico- and nanoplankton populations, but species capable of feeding on large diatoms (dinoflagellates and small copepods including possibly nauplii) were selectively predated by the metazoan community. Thus, iron fertilisation of a developing spring phytoplankton assemblage resulted in a trophic cascade which favoured dominance of the bloom by large diatoms.
    Keywords: ANT-XVIII/2; CTD/Rosette; CTD117; CTD123; CTD126; CTD128; CTD145; CTD149; CTD16; CTD18; CTD45; CTD51; CTD54; CTD57; CTD61; CTD66; CTD70; CTD74; CTD87; CTD9; CTD-RO; EisenEx; European Iron Enrichment Experiment in the Southern Ocean; Polarstern; PS58/009-2; PS58/011-1; PS58/012-5; PS58/014-4; PS58/038-3; PS58/041-2; PS58/042-2; PS58/043-2; PS58/045-2; PS58/046-3; PS58/048-3; PS58/049-3; PS58/061-1; PS58/088-4; PS58/090-4; PS58/091-4; PS58/092-3; PS58/107-5; PS58/108-1; PS58 EISENEX; South Atlantic
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 38 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Presented is a spatial distribution of Temperature, Salinity, Oxygen, Nitrate, Ammonia Nitrogen, Organic Nitrogen, Phosphate, Organic Phosphate, and Silicate data from the Sea of Okhotsk during the 1990 - 1997 period for the months of June - August.
    Keywords: Ak_MA_Lavrentyev_1994; Akademik A Nesmeyanov; Akademik M.A. Lavrentyev; AN_1992; AN_1993; GOFLO; Go-Flo bottles; Lavrentyev-94_10; Lavrentyev-94_100; Lavrentyev-94_102; Lavrentyev-94_103; Lavrentyev-94_105; Lavrentyev-94_107; Lavrentyev-94_108; Lavrentyev-94_109; Lavrentyev-94_11; Lavrentyev-94_110; Lavrentyev-94_111; Lavrentyev-94_113; Lavrentyev-94_114; Lavrentyev-94_115; Lavrentyev-94_119; Lavrentyev-94_12; Lavrentyev-94_120; Lavrentyev-94_121; Lavrentyev-94_122; Lavrentyev-94_123; Lavrentyev-94_124; Lavrentyev-94_125; Lavrentyev-94_126; Lavrentyev-94_127; Lavrentyev-94_128; Lavrentyev-94_129; Lavrentyev-94_13; Lavrentyev-94_130; Lavrentyev-94_131; Lavrentyev-94_132; Lavrentyev-94_133; Lavrentyev-94_134; Lavrentyev-94_135; Lavrentyev-94_136; Lavrentyev-94_137; Lavrentyev-94_138; Lavrentyev-94_14; Lavrentyev-94_140; Lavrentyev-94_141; Lavrentyev-94_142; Lavrentyev-94_143; Lavrentyev-94_144; Lavrentyev-94_145; Lavrentyev-94_146; Lavrentyev-94_147; Lavrentyev-94_148; Lavrentyev-94_149; Lavrentyev-94_15; Lavrentyev-94_150; Lavrentyev-94_16; Lavrentyev-94_17; Lavrentyev-94_18; Lavrentyev-94_19; Lavrentyev-94_2; Lavrentyev-94_20; Lavrentyev-94_21; Lavrentyev-94_22; Lavrentyev-94_23; Lavrentyev-94_24; Lavrentyev-94_25; Lavrentyev-94_26; Lavrentyev-94_27; Lavrentyev-94_28; Lavrentyev-94_29; Lavrentyev-94_3; Lavrentyev-94_30; Lavrentyev-94_32; Lavrentyev-94_33; Lavrentyev-94_34; Lavrentyev-94_35; Lavrentyev-94_37; Lavrentyev-94_38; Lavrentyev-94_39; Lavrentyev-94_4; Lavrentyev-94_41; Lavrentyev-94_42; Lavrentyev-94_43; Lavrentyev-94_44; Lavrentyev-94_45; Lavrentyev-94_46; Lavrentyev-94_47; Lavrentyev-94_48; Lavrentyev-94_49; Lavrentyev-94_5; Lavrentyev-94_50; Lavrentyev-94_51; Lavrentyev-94_52; Lavrentyev-94_53; Lavrentyev-94_54; Lavrentyev-94_55; Lavrentyev-94_56; Lavrentyev-94_57; Lavrentyev-94_58; Lavrentyev-94_59; Lavrentyev-94_6; Lavrentyev-94_60; Lavrentyev-94_61; Lavrentyev-94_63; Lavrentyev-94_65; Lavrentyev-94_66; Lavrentyev-94_67; Lavrentyev-94_68; Lavrentyev-94_69; Lavrentyev-94_7; Lavrentyev-94_70; Lavrentyev-94_71; Lavrentyev-94_72; Lavrentyev-94_73; Lavrentyev-94_76; Lavrentyev-94_77; Lavrentyev-94_79; Lavrentyev-94_8; Lavrentyev-94_80; Lavrentyev-94_81; Lavrentyev-94_82; Lavrentyev-94_83; Lavrentyev-94_84; Lavrentyev-94_85; Lavrentyev-94_87; Lavrentyev-94_89; Lavrentyev-94_9; Lavrentyev-94_90; Lavrentyev-94_91; Lavrentyev-94_92; Lavrentyev-94_94; Lavrentyev-94_96; Lavrentyev-94_97; Lavrentyev-94_99; Levanidov-97_1; Levanidov-97_100; Levanidov-97_101; Levanidov-97_102; Levanidov-97_103; Levanidov-97_104; Levanidov-97_105; Levanidov-97_107; Levanidov-97_108; Levanidov-97_109; Levanidov-97_11; Levanidov-97_110; Levanidov-97_111; Levanidov-97_112; Levanidov-97_113; Levanidov-97_114; Levanidov-97_115; Levanidov-97_116; Levanidov-97_119; Levanidov-97_12; Levanidov-97_120; Levanidov-97_121; Levanidov-97_122; Levanidov-97_123; Levanidov-97_124; Levanidov-97_125; Levanidov-97_128; Levanidov-97_129; Levanidov-97_130; Levanidov-97_131; Levanidov-97_132; Levanidov-97_133; Levanidov-97_134; Levanidov-97_135; Levanidov-97_136; Levanidov-97_137; Levanidov-97_139; Levanidov-97_14; Levanidov-97_140; Levanidov-97_141; Levanidov-97_142; Levanidov-97_143; Levanidov-97_144; Levanidov-97_145; Levanidov-97_146; Levanidov-97_147; Levanidov-97_149; Levanidov-97_15; Levanidov-97_150; Levanidov-97_151; Levanidov-97_152; Levanidov-97_154; Levanidov-97_155; Levanidov-97_156; Levanidov-97_157; Levanidov-97_158; Levanidov-97_16; Levanidov-97_160; Levanidov-97_18; Levanidov-97_19; Levanidov-97_2; Levanidov-97_20; Levanidov-97_21; Levanidov-97_22; Levanidov-97_23; Levanidov-97_25; Levanidov-97_26; Levanidov-97_27; Levanidov-97_28; Levanidov-97_29; Levanidov-97_3; Levanidov-97_30; Levanidov-97_31; Levanidov-97_32; Levanidov-97_33; Levanidov-97_34; Levanidov-97_35; Levanidov-97_36; Levanidov-97_37; Levanidov-97_38; Levanidov-97_39; Levanidov-97_4; Levanidov-97_40; Levanidov-97_41; Levanidov-97_42; Levanidov-97_43; Levanidov-97_45; Levanidov-97_46; Levanidov-97_47; Levanidov-97_48; Levanidov-97_49; Levanidov-97_51; Levanidov-97_53; Levanidov-97_54; Levanidov-97_55; Levanidov-97_56; Levanidov-97_57; Levanidov-97_58; Levanidov-97_59; Levanidov-97_6; Levanidov-97_60; Levanidov-97_61; Levanidov-97_62; Levanidov-97_64; Levanidov-97_65; Levanidov-97_66; Levanidov-97_67; Levanidov-97_68; Levanidov-97_69; Levanidov-97_7; Levanidov-97_70; Levanidov-97_71; Levanidov-97_72; Levanidov-97_73; Levanidov-97_74; Levanidov-97_75; Levanidov-97_76; Levanidov-97_77; Levanidov-97_78; Levanidov-97_79; Levanidov-97_8; Levanidov-97_80; Levanidov-97_81; Levanidov-97_82; Levanidov-97_83; Levanidov-97_84; Levanidov-97_85; Levanidov-97_86; Levanidov-97_87; Levanidov-97_88; Levanidov-97_89; Levanidov-97_9; Levanidov-97_90; Levanidov-97_91; Levanidov-97_92; Levanidov-97_93; Levanidov-97_94; Levanidov-97_95; Levanidov-97_96; Levanidov-97_97; Levanidov-97_98; Mlechniy_Put_1990; Mlechny Put; MP90_320; MP90_321; MP90_322; Nesmeyanov-92_2178; Nesmeyanov-92_2179; Nesmeyanov-92_2180; Nesmeyanov-92_2181; Nesmeyanov-92_2182; Nesmeyanov-92_2183; Nesmeyanov-92_2184; Nesmeyanov-92_2185; Nesmeyanov-92_2186; Nesmeyanov-92_2187; Nesmeyanov-92_2188; Nesmeyanov-92_2193; Nesmeyanov-92_2194; Nesmeyanov-92_2195; Nesmeyanov-92_2200; Nesmeyanov-92_2201; Nesmeyanov-92_2202; Nesmeyanov-92_2203; Nesmeyanov-92_2204; Nesmeyanov-92_2207; Nesmeyanov-92_2208; Nesmeyanov-92_2209; Nesmeyanov-92_2210; Nesmeyanov-92_2211; Nesmeyanov-92_2212; Nesmeyanov-92_2217; Nesmeyanov-92_2218; Nesmeyanov-92_2219; Nesmeyanov-92_2220; Nesmeyanov-92_2221; Nesmeyanov-92_2222; Nesmeyanov-92_2223; Nesmeyanov-92_2224; Nesmeyanov-92_2225; Nesmeyanov-92_2226; Nesmeyanov-92_2227; Nesmeyanov-92_2230; Nesmeyanov-92_2231; Nesmeyanov-92_2232; Nesmeyanov-92_2233; Nesmeyanov-92_2234; Nesmeyanov-92_2235; Nesmeyanov-92_2240; Nesmeyanov-92_2241; Nesmeyanov-92_2242; Nesmeyanov-92_2243; Nesmeyanov-92_2244; Nesmeyanov-92_2245; Nesmeyanov-92_2246; Nesmeyanov-92_2250; Nesmeyanov-92_2251; Nesmeyanov-92_2252; Nesmeyanov-92_2265; Nesmeyanov-92_2266; Nesmeyanov-93_2273; Nesmeyanov-93_2274; Nesmeyanov-93_2275; Nesmeyanov-93_2276; Nesmeyanov-93_2277; Nesmeyanov-93_2278; Nesmeyanov-93_2279; Nesmeyanov-93_2281; Nesmeyanov-93_2282; Nesmeyanov-93_2283; Nesmeyanov-93_2284; Nesmeyanov-93_2285; Nesmeyanov-93_2286; Nesmeyanov-93_2287; Nesmeyanov-93_2288; Nesmeyanov-93_2289; Nesmeyanov-93_2291; Nesmeyanov-93_2292; Nesmeyanov-93_2293; Nesmeyanov-93_2294; Nesmeyanov-93_2295; Nesmeyanov-93_2297; Nesmeyanov-93_2298; Nesmeyanov-93_2299; Nesmeyanov-93_2300; Nesmeyanov-93_2304; Nesmeyanov-93_2305; Nesmeyanov-93_2306; Nesmeyanov-93_2308; Nesmeyanov-93_2309; Nesmeyanov-93_2310; Nesmeyanov-93_2311; Nesmeyanov-93_2313; Nesmeyanov-93_2314; Nesmeyanov-93_2315; Nesmeyanov-93_2316; Nesmeyanov-93_2317; Nesmeyanov-93_2318; Nesmeyanov-93_2319; Nesmeyanov-93_2320; Nesmeyanov-93_2321; Nesmeyanov-93_2357; Nesmeyanov-93_2359; Nesmeyanov-93_2360; Nesmeyanov-93_2362; Nesmeyanov-93_2363; Nesmeyanov-93_2364; Nesmeyanov-93_2365; Nesmeyanov-93_2366; Nesmeyanov-93_2369; Nesmeyanov-93_2370; Nesmeyanov-93_2371; Nesmeyanov-93_2372; Nesmeyanov-93_2373; Nesmeyanov-93_2374; Nesmeyanov-93_2375; Nesmeyanov-93_2377; Nesmeyanov-93_2378; Nesmeyanov-93_2379; Nesmeyanov-93_2380; Nesmeyanov-93_2381; Nesmeyanov-93_2382; Nesmeyanov-93_2384; Nesmeyanov-93_2385; Nesmeyanov-93_2386; Nesmeyanov-93_2387; Nesmeyanov-93_2388; Nesmeyanov-93_2389; Nesmeyanov-93_2390; Nesmeyanov-93_2391; Nesmeyanov-93_2392; Nesmeyanov-93_2396; Nesmeyanov-93_2397; Nesmeyanov-93_2398; Nesmeyanov-93_2399; Nesmeyanov-93_2400; Nesmeyanov-93_2402; Nesmeyanov-93_2403; Nesmeyanov-93_2404; Nesmeyanov-93_2405; Nesmeyanov-93_2406; Nesmeyanov-93_2410; Nesmeyanov-93_2412; Nesmeyanov-93_2413; Nesmeyanov-93_2418; Nesmeyanov-93_2419; Nesmeyanov-93_2420; Nesmeyanov-93_2421; Nesmeyanov-93_2422; Nesmeyanov-93_2423; Nesmeyanov-93_2426; Nesmeyanov-93_2427; Nesmeyanov-93_2428; Nesmeyanov-93_2429; Nesmeyanov-93_2430; Nesmeyanov-93_2431; Okhotsk Sea; Prof_Levanidov_1997; Professor
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 11
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Esper, Oliver; Zonneveld, Karin A F; Höll, Christine; Karwath, Britta; Schneider, Ralph R; Vink, Annemiek; Weise-Ihlo, Ilka; Willems, Helmut (2000): Reconstruction of palaeoceanographic conditions in the South Atlantic Ocean at the last two Terminations based on calcareous dinoflagllate cysts. International Journal of Earth Sciences, 88(4), 680-693, https://doi.org/10.1007/s005310050297
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Despite the increasing interest in the South Atlantic Ocean as a key area of the heat exchange between the southern and the northern hemisphere, information about its palaeoceanographic conditions during transitions from glacial to interglacial stages, the so-called Terminations, are not well understood. Herein we attempt to increase this information by studying the calcareous dinoflagellate cysts and the shells of Thoracosphaera heimii (calcareous cysts) of five Late Quaternary South Atlantic Ocean cores. Extremely high accumulation rates of calcareous cysts at the Terminations might be due to a combined effect of increased cyst production and better preservation as result of calm, oligotrophic conditions in the upper water layers. Low relative abundance of Sphaerodinella albatrosiana compared with Sphaerodinella tuberosa in the Cape Basin may be the result of the relatively colder environmental conditions in this region compared with the equatorial Atlantic Ocean with high relative abundance of S. albatrosiana. Furthermore, the predominance of S. tuberosa during glacials and interglacials at the observed site of the western Atlantic Ocean reflects decreased salinity in the upper water layer.
    Keywords: Brazil Basin; Cape Basin; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB; GeoB1105-4; GeoB1117-2; GeoB1214-1; GeoB2204-2; GeoB3603-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M12/1; M23/3; M34/1; M9/4; Meteor (1986); SFB261; SL; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents; Southern Cape Basin
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 12
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Esper, Oliver; Zonneveld, Karin A F (2007): The potential of organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts for the reconstruction of past sea-surface conditions in the Southern Ocean. Marine Micropaleontology, 65(3-4), 185-212, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2007.07.002
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: In this study we investigate the potential of organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts (dinocysts) as tools for quantifying past sea-surface temperatures (SST) in the Southern Ocean. For this purpose, a dinocyst reference dataset has been formed, based on 138 surface sediment samples from different circum-Antarctic environments. The dinocyst assemblages of these samples are composed of phototrophic (gonyaulacoid) and heterotrophic (protoperidinioid) species that provide a broad spectrum of palaeoenvironmental information. The relationship between the environmental parameters in the upper water column and the dinocyst distribution patterns of individual species has been established using the statistical method of Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA). Among the variables tested, summer SST appeared to correspond to the maximum variance represented in the dataset. To establish quantitative summer SST reconstructions, a Modern Analogue Technique (MAT) has been performed on data from three Late Quaternary dinocyst records recovered from locations adjacent to prominent oceanic fronts in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. These dinocyst time series exhibit periodic changes in the dinocyst assemblage during the last two glacial/interglacial-cycles. During glacial conditions the relative abundance of protoperidinioid cysts was highest, whereas interglacial conditions are characterised by generally lower cyst concentrations and increased relative abundance of gonyaulacoid cysts. The MAT palaeotemperature estimates show trends in summer SST changes following the global oxygen isotope signal and a strong correlation with past temperatures of the last 140,000 years based on other proxies. However, by comparing the dinocyst results to quantitative estimates of summer SSTs based on diatoms, radiolarians and foraminifer-derived stable isotope records it can be shown that in several core intervals the dinocyst-based summer SSTs appeared to be extremely high. In these intervals the dinocyst record seems to be highly influenced by selective degradation, leading to unusual temperature ranges and to unrealistic palaeotemperatures. We used the selective degradation index (kt-index) to determine those intervals that have been biased by selective degradation in order to correct the palaeotemperature estimates. We show that after correction the dinocyst based SSTs correspond reasonably well with other palaeotemperature estimates for this region, supporting the great potential of dinoflagellate cysts as a basis for quantitative palaeoenvironmental studies.
    Keywords: Agulhas Basin; ANT-IV/4; ANT-IX/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-X/4; ANT-X/6; ANT-XVIII/5a; APSARA4; Atlantic Indik Ridge; AWI_Paleo; BC; Bounty Trough, Southwest Pacific; Box corer; Brazil Basin; Cape Basin; Central South Atlantic; ELT27; ELT27.030-PC; ELT29; ELT29.001-PC; ELT29.002-PC; ELT29.070-PC; ELT34; ELT34.006-PC; ELT34.007-PC; ELT34.009-PC; ELT34.011-PC; ELT36; ELT36.023-PC; ELT36.025-TC; ELT36.027-PC; ELT36.043-PC; ELT43; ELT43.005-PC; ELT44; ELT44.005-PC; ELT44.006-PC; ELT53; ELT53.022-PC; ELT53.023-PC; ELT53.025-PC; ELT55; ELT55.001-PC; ELT55.002-PC; ELT55.003-PC; ELT55.004-PC; ELT55.005-PC; ELT55.006-PC; ELT55.007-PC; ELT55.008-PC; ELT55.009-PC; ELT55.010-PC; Eltanin; GC; GeoB2001-1; GeoB2007-1; GeoB2008-1; GeoB2009-1; GeoB2011-1; GeoB2018-1; GeoB2019-2; GeoB2021-4; GeoB2022-3; GeoB3601-1; GeoB3602-2; GeoB3603-1; GeoB3604-4; GeoB3605-1; GeoB3809-1; GeoB3810-2; GeoB3812-2; GeoB6407-2; GeoB6409-2; GeoB6413-4; GeoB6414-1; GeoB6416-2; GeoB6417-2; GeoB6418-3; GeoB6419-2; GeoB6421-1; GeoB6422-5; GeoB6423-2; GeoB6425-1; GeoB6427-1; GeoB6429-1; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Indian Ocean; KAL; Kasten corer; KC029; KC032; KC046; KC064; KC073; KC075; KC078; KC081; KC083; KC084; KC090; KC095; KC098; KC100; KR88-01; KR88-02; KR88-03; KR88-04; KR88-07; KR88-08; KR88-09; KR88-13; KR88-15; KR88-16; KR88-18; KR88-25; KR88-29; KR88-30; M23/1; M34/1; M34/3; M46/4; Marion Dufresne (1972); Maud Rise; MD94-02; MD94-04; MD94-06; MD94-07; Meteor (1986); Meteor Rise; MIC; Mid Atlantic Ridge; MiniCorer; MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; PC; Piston corer; Polarstern; PS08; PS08/621; PS12; PS12/284; PS12/549; PS12/551; PS12/557; PS1459-4; PS1585-1; PS16; PS16/284; PS16/311; PS1650-1; PS1651-2; PS1654-1; PS1756-5; PS1768-8; PS18; PS18/238; PS2082-1; PS21 06AQANTX_4; PS22; PS22/899; PS22/902; PS22/947; PS22/973; PS2230-1; PS2366-1; PS2367-1; PS2372-1; PS2376-2; PS58; PS58/251-1; PS58/254-2; PS58/256-1; PS58/258-1; PS58/265-1; PS58/266-4; PS58/267-4; PS58/268-1; PS58/269-4; PS58/270-1; PS58/272-4; PS58/274-4; PS58/276-1; PS58/280-1; PS58/290-1; PS58/291-3; PS58/292-1; Q215; Q219; Q575; Q861; R657; S924; Shona Ridge; SL; South African margin; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; Southeast Pacific; Southern Cape Basin; South Pacific; South Pacific Ocean; TAS_67GC01; TAS_67GC18; TAS_67GC44; TAS_67GC45; TAS_67GC46; TAS_67GC47; TAS_67GC49; TAS_67GC50; TAS_67GC51; TAS_67PC02; TAS_67PC03; TAS_67PC04; U938; U950
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 13
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Fahl, Kirsten; Nöthig, Eva-Maria (2007): Lithogenic and biogenic particle fluxes on the Lomonosov Ridge (central Arctic Ocean) and their relevance for sediment accumulation: Vertical vs. lateral transport. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 54(8), 1256-1272, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2007.04.014
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Investigations of lithogenic and biogenic particle fluxes using long-term sediment traps are still very rare in the northern high latitudes and restricted to the arctic marginal seas and sub-arctic regions. Here, for the first time, data on the variability of fluxes of lithogenic matter, carbonate, opal, and organic carbon as well as biomarker composition from the central Arctic Ocean are presented for a one-year period. The study has been carried out on material obtained from a long-term mooring system equipped with two multi-sampling-traps (150 and 1550 m water depth) and deployed on the southern Lomonosov Ridge close to the Laptev Sea continental margin from September 1995 to August 1996. In addition, data from surface-sediments were included in the study to get more information about the flux and sedimentation of organic carbon in this area. Annual fluxes of lithogenic matter, carbonate, opal, and particulate organic carbon are 3.9 g/m**2/y, 0.8 g/m**2/y, 2.6 g/m**2/y, 1.5 g/m**2/y, respectively, at the shallow trap and 11.3 g/m**2/y, 0.5 g/m**2/y, 2.9 g/m**2/y, 1.05 g/m**2/y, respectively, at the deep trap. Both the shallow as well as the deep trap show significant differences in vertical flux values over the year. Higher values were found from mid-July to end of October (total flux of 75-130 mg/m**2/d in the shallow trap and 40-225 mg/m**2/d in the deep trap, respectively). During all other months, fluxes were fairly low in both traps (most total flux values 〈10 mg/m**2/d1). The interval of increased fluxes can be separated into (1) a mid-July/August maximum caused by increased primary production as documented in high abundances of marine biomarkers and diatoms, and (2) a September/October (absolute) maximum caused by increased influence of Lena river discharge indicated by maximum lithogenic flux and high portions of terrigenous/fluvial biomarkers in both traps. Here, total fluxes in the deep trap were significantly higher than in the shallow trap, suggesting a lateral sediment flux at greater depth. The lithogenic flux data also support the importance of sediment input from the Laptev Sea for the sediment accumulation on the Lomonosov Ridge on geological time scales, as indicated in sedimentary records from this region.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-XI/1; AWI_BioOce; AWI_Paleo; Biological Oceanography @ AWI; Mooring (long time); MOORY; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2756-1; PS36; PS36/051LOMO-2
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 14
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Weber, Michael E; Wiedicke-Hombach, Michael; Kudrass, Hermann-Rudolph; Erlenkeuser, Helmut (2003): Bengal Fan sediment transport activity and response to climate forcing inferred from sediment physical properties. Sedimentary Geology, 155(3-4), 361-381, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0037-0738(02)00187-2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: We obtained sediment physical properties and geochemical data from 47 piston and gravity cores located in the Bay of Bengal, to study the complex history of the Late Pleistocene run-off from the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers and its imprint on the Bengal Fan. Grain-size parameters were predicted from core logs of density and velocity to infer sediment transport energy and to distinguish different environments along the 3000-km-long transport path from the delta platform to the lower fan. On the shelf, 27 cores indicate rapidly prograding delta foresets today that contain primarily mud, whereas outer shelf sediment has 25% higher silt contents, indicative of stronger and more stable transport regime, which prevent deposition and expose a Late Pleistocene relic surface. Deposition is currently directed towards the shelf canyon 'Swatch of No Ground', where turbidites are released to the only channel–levee system that is active on the fan during the Holocene. Active growth of the channel–levee system occurred throughout sea-level rise and highstand with a distinct growth phase at the end of the Younger Dryas. Coarse-grained material bypasses the upper fan and upper parts of the middle fan, where particle flow is enhanced as a result of flow-restriction in well-defined channels. Sandier material is deposited mainly as sheet-flow deposits on turbidite-dominated plains at the lower fan. The currently most active part of the fan with 10-40 cm thick turbidites is documented for the central channel including inner levees (e.g., site 40). Site 47 from the lower fan far to the east of the active channel–levee system indicates the end of turbidite sedimentation at 300 ka for that location. That time corresponds to the sea-level lowering during late isotopic stage 9 when sediment supply to the fan increased and led to channel avulsion farther upstream, probably indicating a close relation of climate variability and fan activity. Pelagic deep-sea sites 22 and 28 contain a 630-kyear record of climate response to orbital forcing with dominant 21- and 41-kyear cycles for carbonate and magnetic susceptibility, respectively, pointing to teleconnections of low-latitude monsoonal forcing on the precession band to high-latitude obliquity forcing. Upper slope sites 115, 124, and 126 contain a record of the response to high-frequency climate change in the Dansgaard–Oeschger bands during the last glacial cycle with shared frequencies between 0.75 and 2.5 kyear. Correlation of highs in Bengal Fan physical properties to lows in the d18O record of the GISP2 ice-core suggests that times of greater sediment transport energy in the Bay of Bengal are associated with cooler air temperatures over Greenland. Teleconnections were probably established through moisture and other greenhouse-gas forcing that could have been initiated by instabilities in the methane hydrate reservoir in the oceans.
    Keywords: Bay of Bengal; Bengal Fan; BENGAL FAN; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Gulf of Mannar; Indian Ocean; KL; Piston corer (BGR type); SL; SO93/1; SO93/1_01KL; SO93/1_09KL; SO93/1_19KL; SO93/1_24KL; SO93/1_27KL; SO93/1_28KL; SO93/1_29KL; SO93/1_32KL; SO93/1_34KL; SO93/2; SO93/2_36KL; SO93/2_39KL; SO93/2_42KL; SO93/2_45KL; SO93/2_46KL; SO93/2_47KL; SO93/2_49KL; SO93/2_51KL; SO93/2_54KL; SO93/2_56KL; SO93/3; SO93/3_107KL; SO93/3_114SL; SO93/3_126KL; SO93/3_66SL; SO93/3_68SL; SO93/3_69SL; SO93/3_70SL; SO93/3_71SL; SO93/3_77SL; SO93/3_78SL; SO93/3_79SL; SO93/3_80SL; SO93/3_82SL; SO93/3_83KL; SO93/3_84KL; SO93/3_85KL; SO93/3_86KL; SO93/3_87KL; SO93/3_96KL; SO93-63KL; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 39 datasets
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  • 15
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schnack-Schiel, Sigrid B; Michels, Jan; Mizdalski, Elke; Schodlok, Michael P; Schröder, Michael (2008): Composition and community structure of zooplankton in the sea ice covered western Weddell Sea in spring 2004 - with emphasis on calanoid copepods. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 55(8-9), 1040-1055, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2007.12.013
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The mesozooplankton community, with special emphasis on calanoid copepods, was studied with respect to its species composition, abundance, vertical distribution and developmental structure during the ISPOL expedition to the ice covered western Weddell Sea. Stratified zooplankton tows were carried out nine times between December 1, 2004 and January 2, 2005 with a multiple opening-closing net between 0 and 1000 m depth. Copepods were by far the most abundant taxon contributing more than 94% of the total mesozooplankton. Numerical dominants were cyclopoid copepods, mostly Oncaea spp. A total of 66 calanoid copepod species were identified, but the calanoid copepod community was characterised by the dominance of only a few species. The most numerous species was Microcalanus pygmaeus, which comprised on average 70% of all calanoids. Calanoides acutus and Metridia gerlachei represented other abundant calanoid species contributing an average of 8 and 7%, respectively. All other species comprised less than 3%. The temporal changes in the abundance and population structure of M. pygmaeus and M. gerlachei were small while a shift in the stage frequency distribution of C. acutus was observed during the study: CIV dominated the C. acutus population with 48 to 50% during the first week of December, while CV comprised 48% in late December. CI and CII of C. acutus were absent in the samples and males occurred only in very low numbers in greater depths. In M. gerlachei, CI was not found, whereas all developmental stages of M. pygmaeus occurred throughout the study. All three species showed migratory behaviour, and they occurred in upper water layers towards the end of the investigation. This vertical ascent was most pronounced in C. acutus and relatively weak in the other two species. In M. pygmaeus and M. gerlachei, copepodite stages were responsible for the upward migration in late December, while the vertical distribution of adults did not change. In C. acutus all abundant developmental stages (CIV, CV and females) ascended to upper water layers. Almost exclusively (93%) medium- and semi-ripe females of C. acutus and M. gerlachei were found, and only 3 - 4% of the ovaries were ripe. The absence of CI and the low number of ripe females indicate that the main reproductive period had not started in C. acutus and M. gerlachei until the end of our study in early January. In contrast, the high portion of CI and CII of M. pygmaeus suggests that reproduction of this species had started in October-November and hence, before the onset of the phytoplankton bloom in the water. The community structure did not differ between stations with one exception on December 26, when the station was strongly influenced by the continental shelf.
    Keywords: ANT-XXII/2; AWI_BPP; Bentho-Pelagic Processes @ AWI; MSN100; Multiple opening/closing net, 100 µm meshsize; Polarstern; PS67/006-112; PS67/006-129; PS67/006-145; PS67/006-16; PS67/006-31; PS67/006-46; PS67/006-58; PS67/006-77; PS67/006-97; PS67 ISPOL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
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  • 16
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Jahnke, Annika; Berger, Urs; Ebinghaus, Ralf; Temme, Christian (2007): Latitudinal gradient of airborne polyfluorinated alkyl substances in the marine atmosphere between Germany and South Africa (53° N-33° S). Environmental Science and Technology, 41(9), 3055 -3061, https://doi.org/10.1021/es062389h
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Neutral, volatile polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS) were determined in high-volume air samples collected onboard the German research vessel Polarstern during cruise ANT-XXIII/1 between Bremerhaven, Germany (53° N) and Capetown, Republic of South Africa (33° S) in fall 2005. An optimized and validated analytical protocol was used for the determination of several fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs) as well as N-alkylated fluorooctane sulfonamides and sulfonamidoethanols (FOSAs/FOSEs). Quantitative analyses were done by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. This study provides the first concentration data of airborne PFAS from the Southern Hemisphere. Results indicate a strongly decreasing concentration gradient from the European continent toward less industrialized regions. The study confirms that airborne PFAS are mainly restricted to the Northern Hemisphere with a maximum concentration of 190 pg/m**3 (8:2 FTOH) in the first sample collected in the channel between the European mainland and the UK. However, south of the equator, trace amounts of several FTOHs and FOSAs with a maximum of 14 pg/m**3 (8:2 FTOH) could still be detected. Furthermore, a selection of ionic PFAS including perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) were determined in the particulate phase of high-volume air samples by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Levels of ionic PFAS were almost 2 orders of magnitude lower than those of neutral PFAS, with maximum concentrations in the first sample of 2.5 pg/m**3 (PFOS) and 2.0 pg/m**3 (PFOA).
    Keywords: ANT-XXIII/1; CT; Polarstern; PS69; PS69/1-track; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 17
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Department of Geosciences, Bremen University
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: A memory CTD type Sea-Bird was deployed together with each box corer attached to the same wire about 10 m above the corer.
    Keywords: Amazonas Fan; Brazil Basin; CTD, memory; CTD-M; GeoB; GeoB1503-2a; GeoB1504-1a; GeoB1505-3a; GeoB1506-1a; GeoB1507-2a; GeoB1508-1a; GeoB1509-2a; GeoB1510-1a; GeoB1511-6a; GeoB1512-2a; GeoB1513-2a; GeoB1514-4a; GeoB1515-2a; GeoB1516-1a; GeoB1517-2a; GeoB1518-1a; GeoB1519-2a; GeoB1520-1a; GeoB1521-2a; GeoB1522-1a; GeoB1523-2a; Geosciences, University of Bremen; M16/2; Meteor (1986)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 21 datasets
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  • 18
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Pape, Carsten; Teschke, Mathias; Meyer, Bettina (2008): Melatonin and its possible role in mediating seasonal metabolic changes of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology - Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology, 149(4), 426-434, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2008.02.001
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Melatonin, the chief secretory product of the vertebrate pineal gland is suspected to be a ubiquitous molecule principally involved in the transduction of photoperiodic information. Besides vertebrates, melatonin has been detected throughout phylogeny in numerous non-vertebrate taxa. In the present study, the occurrence of melatonin in Antarctic krill Euphausia superba and its possible role in mediating seasonal metabolic changes was evaluated. Melatonin was quantified by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) purified extracts of eyestalks and hemolymph of krill sampled in the Lazarev Sea during the Antarctic winter and summer. In addition, oxygen uptake rates and the activities of the metabolic enzyme malate dehydrogenase (MDH) were recorded to assess the metabolic status of krill. Validation of melatonin measurements was carried out on the basis of three different extraction methods with parallel determination of melatonin by ELISA in crude extracts and in HPLC purified extracts, and after derivatization of melatonin under alkaline conditions in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. A significantly higher respiration rate and MDH activity was found in summer krill than in winter krill indicating that krill was in a state of reduced metabolic activity during winter. However, neither during winter nor during summer there were detectable melatonin concentrations in the visual system or hemolymph of krill. Based on these results, we question a mediating role of melatonin in the control of seasonal metabolic changes in Antarctic krill in particular and its physiological significance in krill in general.
    Keywords: ANT-XXIII/2; ANT-XXIII/6; AWI_BioOce; Biological Oceanography @ AWI; Polarstern; PS69; PS69/043-2; PS69/046-1; PS69/078-1; PS69/092-1; PS69/474-1; PS69/489-1; PS69/497-1; PS69/506-7; PS69/518-1; PS69/520-1; PS69/534-1; Rectangular midwater trawl; RMT
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Without doubt, global climate change is directly linked to the anthropogenic release of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (UN IPCC-Report 2007). Therefore, research efforts to comprehend the global carbon cycle have increased during the last years. In the context of the observed changes, it is of particular interest to decipher the role of the hydro-, bio- and atmospheres and how the different compartments of the earth system are affected by the increase of atmospheric CO2. Due to its huge carbon inventory, the marine carbon cycle represents the most important component in this respect. Numerous findings suggest that the Southern Ocean plays a key role in terms of oceanic CO2 uptake. However, an exact quantification of such fluxes of material is hard to achieve for large areas, not least on account of the inaccessibility of this remote region. In particular, there exist so far only few accurate data for benthic carbon fluxes. The latter can be derived from high resolution pore water oxygen profiles, as one possible method. However the ex situ flux determinations carried out on sediment cores, tend to suffer from temperature and pressure artefacts. Alternatively, oxygen microprofiles can be measured in situ, i.e. at the seafloor. Until now, no such data have been published for the Southern Ocean. During the Antarctic Expedition ANT-XXI/4, within the framework of this thesis, in situ and ex situ oxygen profiles were measured and used to derive benthic organic carbon fluxes. Having both types of measurements from the same locations, it was possible to establish a depth-related correction function which was applied subsequently to revise published and additional unpublished carbon fluxes to the seafloor. This resulted in a consistent data base of benthic carbon inputs covering many important sub-regions of the Southern Ocean including the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Seas (southern Pacific), Scotia and Weddell Seas (southern South Atlantic) as well as the Crozet Basin (southern Indian Ocean). Including additional locations on the Antarctic Shelf, there are now 134 new and revised measurement locations, covering almost 180° of the Southern Ocean, for which benthic organic carbon fluxes and sedimentary oxygen penetration depth values are available. Further, benthic carbon fluxes were empirically related to dominant diatom distributions in surface sediments as well as to long-term remotely sensed chlorophyll-a estimates. The comparison of these results with benthic carbon fluxes of the entire Atlantic Ocean reveals significantly higher export efficiencies for the Southern Ocean than have previously been assumed, especially for the area of the opal belt.
    Keywords: ANT-XXI/4; AWI_BioOce; AWI_Paleo; B_LANDER; Biological Oceanography @ AWI; Bottom lander; MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; PS65; PS65/598-1; PS65/600-1; PS65/600-2; PS65/703-1; PS65/705-1; PS65/705-2; SPP1158
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 20
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Jaeschke, Andrea; Rühlemann, Carsten; Arz, Helge Wolfgang; Heil, Gerrit M N; Lohmann, Gerrit (2007): Coupling of millennial-scale changes in sea surface temperature and precipitation off northeastern Brazil with high-latitude climate shifts during the last glacial period. Paleoceanography, 22(4), PA4206, https://doi.org/10.1029/2006PA001391
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: High-resolution records of alkenone-derived sea surface temperatures and elemental Ti/Ca ratios from a sediment core retrieved off northeastern Brazil (4° S) reveal short-term climate variability throughout the past 63,000 a. Large pulses of terrigenous sediment discharge, caused by increased precipitation in the Brazilian hinterland, coincide with Heinrich events and the Younger Dryas period. Terrigenous input maxima related to Heinrich events H6–H2 are characterized by rapid cooling of surface water ranging between 0.5 and 2° C. This signature is consistent with a climate model experiment where a reduction of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) and related North Atlantic cooling causes intensification of NE trade winds and a southward movement of the Intertropical Convergence Zone, resulting in enhanced precipitation off northeastern Brazil. During deglaciation the surface temperature evolution at the core site predominantly followed the Antarctic warming trend, including a cooling, prior to the Younger Dryas period. An abrupt temperature rise preceding the onset of the Bølling/Allerød transition agrees with model experiments suggesting a Southern Hemisphere origin for the abrupt resumption of the AMOC during deglaciation caused by Southern Ocean warming and associated with northward flow anomalies of the South Atlantic western boundary current.
    Keywords: GeoB; GeoB3910-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M34/4; Meteor (1986); Northeast Brasilian Margin; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 21
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Pérez-Folgado, Marta; Sierro, Francisco Javier; Flores, José-Abel; Cacho, Isabel; Grimalt, Joan O; Zahn, Rainer; Shackleton, Nicholas J (2003): Western Mediterranean planktonic foraminifera events and millennial climatic variability during the last 70 kyr. Marine Micropaleontology, 48(1-2), 49-70, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(02)00160-3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Detailed study of associations of planktonic foraminifera in cores MD95-2043 and ODP 977, located in the Alboran Sea (Mediterranean Sea), has allowed the identification of 29 new faunal events,defined by abrupt changes in the abundances of Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (right and left coiling), Turborotalita quinqueloba, Globorotalia scitula, Globorotalia inflata, Globigerina bulloides and Globigerinoides ruber (white and pink varieties). The age model for ODP 977 was based on that of MD95-2043 [Cacho et al. (1999),Paleoceanogr. 14, 698-705], on the isotopic stratigraphy,and on two AMS 14C measurements. Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) were estimated for the last 54 kyr using the Modern Analog Technique (MAT) and were compared with the SSTs provided by the U37(k0) method. The U37(k0) record is very similar to the MAT annual mean temperature record for the last 8 kyr. However, for older times alkenone-derived temperatures are consistently higher than the annual MAT temperatures. This offset may be due to an underestimation of the SST provided by the planktonic foraminiferal method for glacial times, to an overestimation of the U37(k0) record, or to changes in the seasonal production of alkenones. Most of the variability in the fauna is related to the millennial variability of Heinrich and Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) events. During Heinrich events (HEs) and most of the other D-O stadials, G. bulloides, T. quinqueloba and G. scitula increased, while N. pachyderma (right coiling), G. inflata and G. ruber decreased. By contrast, N. pachyderma (left coiling) was only abundant in the HEs. The main component of the associations -N. pachyderma (right coiling) - follows a general trend similar to that of sea-level and delta18O. This species reached its highest abundance during the Last Glacial Maximum, when sea-level was at a lower position. The occurrence of a shallower nutricline owing to a shallowing of the interface between Atlantic inflowing and Mediterranean outflowing waters could have favoured the development of neogloboquadrinids in the vicinity of the Strait of Gibraltar.
    Keywords: 161-977A; Alboran Sea; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; IMAGES; IMAGES I; International Marine Global Change Study; Joides Resolution; Leg161; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952043; MD95-2043; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: During METEOR Cruise 29/1 all of the recovered gravity cores were subjected to laboratory geophysical studies. A routine shipboard measurement of three physical parameters was carried out on the segmented sediment cores, incIuding the determination of - the compressional (P-) wave velocity vp, - the electric resistivity Rs, and - the magnetic volume susceptibility K. These properties are cIosely related to the grain size, porosity and lithology of the sediments and provide highresolution core logs (spacing 1, 2 and 1 cm, respectively) available prior to all other detailed investigations. In addition, oriented samples for later shore based paleo- and rock magnetic studies were taken at intervals of 10 cm.
    Keywords: GeoB; GeoB2702-1; GeoB2703-5; GeoB2704-3; GeoB2705-6; GeoB2706-7; GeoB2707-3; GeoB2711-1; GeoB2712-4; GeoB2714-4; GeoB2715-3; GeoB2716-1; GeoB2717-1; GeoB2718-3; GeoB2719-4; GeoB2722-3; GeoB2724-5; GeoB2726-1; GeoB2731-5; GeoB2734-1; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M29/1; Meteor (1986); SL; Slope off Argentina
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 55 datasets
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: During METEOR Cruise M 34/1 all recovered gravity cores were subject to laboratory geophysical studies. A routine shipboard measurement of three physical parameters was carried out on the segmented sediment cores, comprising the determination of - the compressional (P-) wave velocity vp, - the electric resistivity Rs, and - the magnetic volume susceptibility K. These properties are closely related to the grain size, porosity and Iithology of the sediments and provide high-resolution core logs (spacing 3, 3 and 1 cm, respectively) available prior to all other detailed investigations. In addition, oriented sampies for later shore based paleo- and rockmagnetic studies were taken at intervals of 10 cm.
    Keywords: GeoB; GeoB3602-1; GeoB3603-2; GeoB3604-3; GeoB3605-2; GeoB3606-1; GeoB3607-2; GeoB3608-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M34/1; Meteor (1986); Northern Cape Basin; SL; Southern Cape Basin
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 23 datasets
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  • 24
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Koç, Nalân; Labeyrie, Laurent D; Manthé, Sandrine; Flower, Benjamin P; Hodell, David A; Aksu, Ali E (2001): The last occurrence of Proboscia curvirostris in the North Atlantic marine isotope stages 9-8. Marine Micropaleontology, 41(1-2), 9-23, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(00)00054-2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Well-preserved diatoms are present in high sedimentation rate Pleistocene cores retrieved on Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Legs 151, 152, 162 and IMAGES cruises of R/V Marion Dufresne from the North Atlantic. Investigation of the stratigraphic occurrence of diatom species shows that the youngest diatom event observed in the area is the last occurrence (LO) of Proboscia curvirostris (Jousé) Jordan and Priddle. P. curvirostris is a robust species that can easily be identified in the sediments, and therefore can be a practical biostratigraphic tool. We have mapped its areal distribution, and found that it stretches from 40°N to 80°N in the North Atlantic. Further, we have correlated the LO P. curvirostris to the oxygen isotope records of six cores to refine the age of this biostratigraphic event. The extinction of P. curvirostris is latitudinally diachronous through Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 9 to 8 within the North Atlantic. This is closely related to the paleoceanography of the area. P. curvirostris first disappeared within interglacial MIS 9 (324 ka) from the northern areas that are most sensitive to climatic forcing, like the East Greenland current and the sea-ice margin. It survived in mid-North Atlantic until the conditions of the MIS 8 (glaciation) became too severe (260 ka). In the North Pacific at ODP Site 883 the LO P. curvirostris falls within MIS 8. The observed overlap in age between the North Atlantic and the North Pacific strongly suggests that the extinction of P. curvirostris is synchronous between these oceans.
    Keywords: 152-919A; 162-983A; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Greenland Sea; Iceland; IMAGES I; Joides Resolution; Leg152; Leg162; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952014; MD95-2014; MD952027; MD95-2027; Newfoundland Slope; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; South Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 25
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Voelker, Antje H L; de Abreu, Lucia; Schönfeld, Joachim; Erlenkeuser, Helmut; Abrantes, Fatima F (2009): Hydrographic conditions along the western Iberian margin during marine isotope stage 2. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 10, Q12U08, https://doi.org/10.1029/2009GC002605
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The surface water hydrography along the western Iberian margin, as part of the North Atlantic's eastern boundary upwelling system, consists of a complex, seasonally variable system of equatorward and poleward surface and subsurface currents and seasonal upwelling. Not much information exists to ascertain if the modern current and productivity patterns subsisted under glacial climate conditions, such as during marine isotope stage (MIS) 2, and how North Atlantic meltwater events, especially Heinrich events, affected them. To help answer these questions we are combining stable isotope records of surface to subsurface dwelling planktonic foraminifer species with sea surface temperature and export productivity data for four cores distributed along the western and southwestern Iberian margin (MD95-2040, MD95-2041, MD99-2336, and MD99-2339). The records reveals that with the exception of the Heinrich events and Greenland Stadial (GS) 4 hydrographic conditions along the western Iberian margin were not much different from the present. During the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), subtropical surface and subsurface waters penetrated poleward to at least 40.6°N (site MD95-2040). Export productivity was, in general, high on the western margin during the LGM and low in the central Gulf of Cadiz, in agreement with the modern situation. During the Heinrich events and GS 4, on the other hand, productivity was high in the Gulf of Cadiz and suppressed in the upwelling regions along the western margin where a strong halocline inhibited upwelling. Heinrich event 1 had the strongest impact on the hydrography and productivity off Iberia and was the only period when subarctic surface waters were recorded in the central Gulf of Cadiz. South of Lisbon (39°N), the impact of the other Heinrich events was diminished, and not all of them led to a significant cooling in the surface waters. Thus, climatic impacts of Heinrich events highly varied with latitude and the prevailing hydrographic conditions in this region.
    Keywords: 91; 94a; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Gulf of Cádiz, Atlantic Ocean; IMAGES; IMAGES I; IMAGES V; International Marine Global Change Study; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD114; MD952040; MD95-2040; MD952041; MD95-2041; MD99-2336; MD99-2339; Porto Seamount; POS334; POS334_67-1; POS334_68-4; POS334_69-1; POS334_70-0; POS334_71-1; POS334_72-1; Poseidon; South Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 16 datasets
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  • 26
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Arz, Helge Wolfgang; Gerhardt, Sabine; Pätzold, Jürgen; Röhl, Ursula (2001): Millennial-scale changes of surface- and deep-water flow in the western tropical Atlantic linked to Northern Hemisphere high-latitude climate during the Holocene. Geology, 29(3), 239-242, https://doi.org/10.1130/0091-7613(2001)029%3C0239:MSCOSA%3E2.0.CO;2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: There is increasing evidence that the preceding Holocene climate was as unstable as the last glacial period, although variations occurred at much lower amplitudes. However, low-latitude climate records that confirm this variability are sparse. Here we present a radiocarbon-dated Holocene marine record from the tropical western Atlantic. Aragonite dissolution derived from the degree of preservation of the pteropod Limacina inflata records changes in the corrosiveness of the bottom water at the core site due to the changing influence of northern versus southern water masses. The delta18O difference between the shallow-living planktonic foraminifera Globigerinoides sacculifer and the deep-living Globorotalia tumida is used as proxy for changes in the vertical stratification of the surface water, hence the trade wind strength at this latitude. We compared our data to high-latitude records of the North Atlantic region. A good agreement is found between the aragonite dissolution and the strength in the Island-Scotland Overflow Water, which contributes significantly to the North Atlantic Deep Water. This suggests that large-scale variations in the Atlantic thermohaline circulation occurred throughout the Holocene. Concurrently, the comparison of our Delta delta18O with the GISP2 glaciochemical records points to global Holocene atmospheric reorganizations seen in both the tropics and high northern latitudes.
    Keywords: GeoB; GeoB3910-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M34/4; Meteor (1986); Northeast Brasilian Margin; SFB261; SL; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 27
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Brathauer, Uta; Abelmann, Andrea; Gersonde, Rainer; Niebler, Hans-Stefan; Fütterer, Dieter K (2001): Calibration of Cycladophora davisiana events versus oxygen isotope stratigraphy in the subantarctic Atlantic Ocean - a stratigraphic tool for carbonate-poor Quaternary sediments. Marine Geology, 175(1-4), 167-181, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(01)00141-4
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: We calibrated the Cycladophora davisiana abundances versus oxygen isotope stratigraphy back to 220 ka for the subantarctic Atlantic Ocean. The relative abundances of C. davisiana and delta18O measurements of benthic and planktic foraminifera have been determined in two sediment cores. Oxygen isotope stratigraphy has been used to date the C. davisiana records and to assign SPECMAP ages to the C. davisiana events. Comparisons with an existing calibration from the subantarctic Indian Ocean show, that the C. davisiana events 'b2, c1, c2, d, e1, e2, e3, f, h, i1 and i2' occur synchronous within the errors of the oxygen isotope stratigraphy in the Indian and the Atlantic sectors of the Southern Ocean. Larger deviations occur only for events 'b1' and 'g'. Furthermore, the long-term fluctuations in C. davisiana abundances have been studied in a sediment core covering the last 700 kyr. Based on biostratigraphic extinction levels, ages for early Brunhes C. davisiana events have been estimated. Major C. davisiana abundance maxima occur approximately every 100 ka in conjunction with glacial/interglacial cycles over the entire record.
    Keywords: Agulhas Basin; ANT-IX/4; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-XI/2; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS16; PS16/271; PS1752-1; PS18; PS18/238; PS2082-1; PS2498-1; PS28; PS28/304; SL; South Atlantic
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 28
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Volkmann, Renate; Mensch, Manfred (2001): Stable isotope composition (d18O, d13C) of living planktic foraminifers in the outer Laptev Sea and Fram Strait. Marine Micropaleontology, 42(3-4), 163-188, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(01)00018-4
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The upper water column in the Fram Strait and the outer Laptev Sea was sampled for water column isotopes and living planktic foraminifer species Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sinistral coiling) (Ehrenberg), 1861 and Turborotalita quinqueloba (Natland),1938. Their shell delta18O and delta13C values are compared to water oxygen and dissolved inorganic carbon isotope data to determine the environmental influence on the foraminifers' isotopic ratio. Major controls on the oxygen isotope composition of both species are the shallow depth habitat under permanent ice coverage, the low salinity surface layer, and the rate of metabolic activity. None of the specimens precipitated its shell in isotopic equilibrium with the ambient sea water. They are all depleted in 13C and 18O, attributed to a species-specific vital effect. For nonencrusted N. pachyderma (sin.) in the 125-250 µm size class, this vital effect amounts to 1.3 per mil in delta18O and 2.0 per mil in delta13C. It increases to higher values in waters under permanent ice cover. T. quinqueloba reveals a mean vital effect of about 1.3 per mil in delta18O and 2.6 per mil in delta13C. The general isotopic trends are similar for N. pachyderma (sin.) and T. quinqueloba. Differences in the species' isotope ratio at the same sites are caused by different calcification depths and metabolic activity. The oxygen isotope composition of N. pachyderma (sin.) shows a relationship to salinity measurements and indicates that it is a good quantitative proxy for salinity reconstructions, while no relationship exists in this region between N. pachyderma (sin.) oxygen isotopes and water temperature.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-XI/1; ARK-XIII/2; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; East Greenland continental slope; gcmd1; Laptev Sea; MSN; Multiple opening/closing net; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS36; PS36/021-1; PS36/022-1; PS36/023-1; PS36/024-1; PS36/024-4; PS36/025-1; PS36/031-1; PS36/032-1; PS36/033-1; PS36/044-1; PS36/047-1; PS44; PS44/039-1; PS44/052-1; PS44/058-1; PS44/060-1; PS44/063-1; PS44/064-1; PS44/069-1; PS44/072; PS44/072-2; PS44/074-1; PS44/076-1; PS44/077-1; PS44/079-1; PS44/084-1; PS44/089-1; PS44/091-1; PS44/094-1; PS44/096-1; PS44/098-1; PS44/099-1; W Spitzbergen; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 29
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Eberwein, Astrid; Mackensen, Andreas (2006): Regional primary productivity differences off Morocco (NW-Africa) recorded by modern benthic foraminifera and their stable carbon isotopic composition. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 53(8), 1379-1405, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2006.04.001
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The influence of different primary productivity regimes on live (Rose Bengal stained) and dead benthic foraminiferal distribution, as well as on the stable carbon isotopic composition of foraminiferal tests, was investigated in sediment surface samples (0-1 cm) from the upwelling region off Morocco between Cape Ghir (31°N) and Cape Yubi (27°N). A combination of factor analysis, detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) and canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) was applied to the benthic foraminiferal data sets. Five major assemblages for both the live and dead fauna were revealed by factor analysis. In the cape regions organic matter fluxes are enhanced by high chlorophyll-a concentrations in the overlying surface waters. Here, benthic foraminiferal faunas are characterized by identical live and dead assemblages, high standing stocks, and low species delta13C values, indicating constant year-round high productivity. Bulimina marginata dominates the unique fauna at the shallowest station off Cape Ghir indicating highest chlorophyll-a concentrations. Off both capes, the succession of the Bulimina aculeata/Uvigerina mediterranea assemblage, the Sphaeroidina bulloides/Gavelinopsis translucens assemblage, and the Hoeglundina elegans assemblage from the shelf to the deep sea reflects the decrease in chlorophyll-a concentrations, hence the export flux. In contrast, the area between the capes is characterized by differently composed live and dead assemblages, low standing stocks, and less depleted delta13C values, thus reflecting low primary productivity. High foraminiferal numbers of Epistominella exigua, Eponides pusillus, and Globocassidulina subglobosa in the dead fauna indicate a seasonally varying primary productivity signal. Significantly lower mean delta13C values were recorded in Bulimina mexicana, Cibicidoides kullenbergi, H. elegans, U. mediterranea and Uvigerina peregrina. Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi is a faithful recorder of bottom water delta13C in the Canary Islands regions. The mean delta13C signal of this species is not significantly influenced by constant high organic matter fluxes. The species-specific offset between live and dead specimens is the same.
    Keywords: Agadir Canyon; AWI_Paleo; GeoB4207-1; GeoB4212-3; GeoB4213-1; GeoB4214-3; GeoB4215-1; GeoB4216-2; GeoB4217-1; GeoB4223-1; GeoB4225-3; GeoB4226-1; GeoB4227-1; GeoB4228-1; GeoB4229-2; GeoB4230-1; GeoB4231-2; GeoB4232-1; GeoB4233-2; GeoB4234-1; GeoB4235-1; GeoB4236-2; GeoB4237-1; GeoB5539-2; GeoB5540-3; GeoB5541-2; GeoB5542-3; GeoB5546-3; GeoB6005-1; GeoB6006-2; GeoB6007-1; GeoB6008-2; Giant box corer; GKG; M37/1; M42/4b; M45/5a; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 30
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Israelson, C; Buchardt, B (1999): Strontium and oxygen isotope composition of East Greenland rivers and surface waters: Implication for palaeoenvironmental interpretation. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 153(1-4), 93-104, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(99)00068-1
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Isotopic composition of strontium and oxygen and strontium concentrations from 4 hydrographic sites in Scoresby Sund Fjord and 6 rivers draining the adjacent Jameson Land have been investigated. Schuchert Flod, the major river on Jameson Land, erodes a large celestite (SrSO4) deposit. Dissolved Sr in Schuchert Flod has 87Sr/86Sr = 0.7137 and is responsible for most of the continental Sr flux to the fjord. The Sr isotope data have been used to construct a mixing model for the surface water in Scoresby Sund Fjord. Salinity (S) and Sr concentrations (CSr) of brackish water from the fjord show conservative mixing between river water and seawater. Results of the 87Sr/86Sr–salinity mixing model of seawater and fresh water were used to interpret the isotopic composition of Sr (87Sr/86Sr) and oxygen (d18Oc) of recent and interglacial (Eemian ~120 ka) shallow-water bivalve shells from the coast of Jameson Land. Because of the high CSr in some of the rivers draining Jameson Land, a correlation exists between 87Sr/86Sr and d18Oc of recent and interglacial shallow water bivalve shells from the coast of Jameson Land. Higher-than-seawater 87Sr/86Sr values in shells from the Langelandselv interglaciation can be explained only if the shells were formed close to a Sr-rich fresh water source which is not present in the Langelandselv area today. These results suggest that there was a different river and drainage system on the Jameson Land peninsula during the Last Interglacial. The 87Sr/86Sr values indicate that shell formation took place in waters with salinities between 20 and 31‰ in a fjord with less glacial melt-water than seen today.
    Keywords: ARK-VII/1; ARK-VII/3b; AWI_Paleo; Bio-Rosette; BRO; Giant box corer; GKG; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS17; PS17/271; PS17/276; PS17/277; PS17/282; PS1936-1; PS1936-2; PS1941-1; PS1941-2; PS1942-1; PS1942-2; PS1944-1; PS1944-2; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Scoresby Sund
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 12 datasets
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  • 31
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Nam, Seung-Il (1997): Late Quaternary glacial history and paleoceanographic reconstructions along the East Greenland continental margin: Evidence from high-resolution records of stable isotopes and ice-rafted debris (Spätquartäre Vereisungsgeschichte und paläozeanographische Rekonstruktionen am ostgrönlandischen Kontinentalrand). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 241, 257 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0241_1997
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: High-resolution stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses and detailed sedimentological and geochemical investigations were performed in order to i) reconstruct the paleoclimate and paleoceanography of the Greenland Sea associated with late Quaternary glacial-interglacial cycles, and ii) to link the terrestrial and deep-sea climatic records. The reconstruction of the paleoenvironmental history of the East Greenland margin and the correlation between the terrestrial and deep sea records are major objectives of the ESF-PONAM-Programme (European Science Foundation - Polar North Atlantic Margins). For this study 16 gravity and 2 box cores were recovered along the East Greenland continental margin between 69°N and 72°N on three W-E transects running from the shelf to the deep sea. The glaciomarine sediments recovered from the heavily ice-covered East Greenland continental margin reflect changes associated with the glacial/interglacial climatic cycles of the last 240 ka. The glaciomarine sediments are characterised by a dominance of terrestrially derived components and a lower content of biogenic components. Glaciomarine sedimentation processes, terrigenous sediment input, and biogenic productivity in the study area are strongly influenced by fluctuations in the extent of the Greenland Ice Sheet, extent of the sea-ice cover, rate of iceberg drifting, meltwater input, and changes in the East Greenland Current (EGC). The relatively low carbonate content (〈10 %) and the dominant occurrence of N. pachyderma sin. (〉95 %) throughout the sediment sequences indicate a low biological productivity in the surface water resulting from the extensive sea-ice cover and the strong influence of cold and low-saline polar waters of the EGC. An increase in the surface-water productivity, on the other hand, occurred during certain periods within interglacial and glacial stages. This indicates that the sea ice along the Western margin of the Greenland Sea was at least seasonally reduced during these time intetvals. Based on the accumulation rates of the coarse terrigenous matter (〉63 µm) and amounts of IRD, the advance and retreat of East Greenland glaciers over the past 200 ka can be correlated with those postulated from the terrestrial records. At least five repeated advances and retreats of glaciers beyond the coastline are proposed between the late Early to Middle Weichselian (65-61, 59-51, 48-42, 35-31, and 28-25 ka). Maximum fluxes of IRD recorded along the continental margin between 21 and 16 ka, reflect the maximum extent of East Greenland glaciers probably reaching the shelf break at that time. The stable oxygen isotope records measured on the planktonic foraminifer N. pachyderma sin. reveal some excursions from the global climate record due to a local andlor regional overprint through meltwater supply andlor cold water masses of the EGC. Distinct meltwater events are documented during Terminations II and l and at the beginning of Stage 3 resulting from the collapse of the Greenland Ice Sheet. The early period of all glacial stages (i.e. 716, 514, and 312) was subjected to an abrupt and rapid build-up of a sea-ice cover. Hence, a distinct decrease in the carbonate content, the low number of planktonic foraminifers, and light d13C values reflect the strong reduction in the C02 exchange between the atmosphere and ocean, and the surface-water productivity, resulting from a meltwater cap andlor an extensive sea-ice cover. The onset of Termination l is characterised by a distinct shift towards light d180 values, a dramatic decrease in the IRD-flux, and a marked increase in organic matter, indicating the rapid retreat of East Greenland glaciers and a reduced sea-ice cover. According to distinct shifts toward light d180 and heavy d13C values of N. pachyderma sin. and O. umbonatus, the present-day circulation Patterns of surface- and deep-water masses were probably established between 7.4 and 6.1 ka. This is very similar to the timing estimated from studies On microfossil assemblages of the Greenland Sea. In particular, the distinct IRD peaks correlate with the fluctuations of the Greenland Ice Sheet during the last two glacial-interglacial cycles. Most of the major IRD peaks correspond to periods of cooling of air temperatures over Greenland. During the interval between 225 and 60 ka, the IRD peaks are in phase (at the 23-kyr orbital processional cycle) with maximum Summer Insolation at 70°N This suggests that the Greenland Ice Sheet may have experienced a predominantly 23-kyr cycle of growth and decay, and therefore, collapsed and discharged large volumes of icebergs to the Greenland Sea when Summer insolation reached its maxima. During the last glacial period, there is a strong correlation between major pulses in the supply of IRD, and the Bond Cycles and the Heinrich Events recorded in the GRIP ice core and North Atlantic deep-sea sediments. Furthermore, the higher frequency of IRD events on millennial scales matches the cooling phase of the abrupt Dansgaard-Oeschger Cycles recorded in the GRIP ice core. Consequently, the apparent evidence of millennial scale IRD events in the North Atlantic and the GIN Sea suggests coherent fluctuations of the large northern hemisphere ice sheets (i.e. the Fennoscandian/Barents Sea and Laurentide/Greenland ice sheets) during the last glacial period.
    Keywords: ARK-V/3b; ARK-VII/3b; AWI_Paleo; Giant box corer; GIK21723-1 PS13/187; GIK21724-2 PS13/191; GIK21725-2 PS13/192; GIK21726-1 PS13/193; GIK21726-2 PS13/193; GIK21730-1 PS13/224; GIK21730-2 PS13/224; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Greenland Shelf; Greenland Slope; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS13 GRÖKORT; PS17; PS17/247; PS17/248; PS17/249; PS17/250; PS17/251; PS17/285; PS17/286; PS17/287; PS17/288; PS17/289; PS17/290; PS1723-1; PS1724-2; PS1725-2; PS1726-1; PS1726-2; PS1730-1; PS1730-2; PS1923-2; PS1924-1; PS1925-2; PS1926-1; PS1927-2; PS1946-2; PS1947-1; PS1948-2; PS1949-1; PS1950-2; PS1951-1; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Scoresby Sund; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 63 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 32
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Seiter, Katherina; Hensen, Christian; Zabel, Matthias (2005): Benthic carbon mineralization on a global scale. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 19, GB1010, https://doi.org/10.1029/2004GB002225
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: In this study we present a global distribution pattern and budget of the minimum flux of particulate organic carbon to the sea floor (J POC alpha). The estimations are based on regionally specific correlations between the diffusive oxygen flux across the sediment-water interface, the total organic carbon content in surface sediments, and the oxygen concentration in bottom waters. For this, we modified the principal equation of Cai and Reimers [1995] as a basic monod reaction rate, applied within 11 regions where in situ measurements of diffusive oxygen uptake exist. By application of the resulting transfer functions to other regions with similar sedimentary conditions and areal interpolation, we calculated a minimum global budget of particulate organic carbon that actually reaches the sea floor of ~0.5 GtC yr**-1 (〉1000 m water depth (wd)), whereas approximately 0.002-0.12 GtC yr**-1 is buried in the sediments (0.01-0.4% of surface primary production). Despite the fact that our global budget is in good agreement with previous studies, we found conspicuous differences among the distribution patterns of primary production, calculations based on particle trap collections of the POC flux, and J POC alpha of this study. These deviations, especially located at the southeastern and southwestern Atlantic Ocean, the Greenland and Norwegian Sea and the entire equatorial Pacific Ocean, strongly indicate a considerable influence of lateral particle transport on the vertical link between surface waters and underlying sediments. This observation is supported by sediment trap data. Furthermore, local differences in the availability and quality of the organic matter as well as different transport mechanisms through the water column are discussed.
    Keywords: 0021PG; 0026PG; 0029PG; 0032PG; 0036PG; 0038PG; 0044PG; 0050PG; 0055PG; 0058PG; 0066PG; 0071PG; 0075PG; 0091PG; 104-642B; 104-643A; 104-644A; 105-646A; 108-663A; 10BC35-2; 10GC1; 11.5BC46-2; 112-688; 117-723; 11B; 11BC39; 11TW1; 12BC47-2; 13B; 151-908A; 151-909A; 159-959C; 15B; 167-1011; 167-1020; 167-1021; 175-1077B; 1BC1-2; 21B; 22B; 26B; 28B; 2B; 2BC5-1; 3BC8-1; 4B; 4BC14-2; 5B; 6B; 6BC20-2; 75-532_Site; 7BC26-1; 8B; 8BC27-3; A150/180; A180-74; A210709-0131PG; A4/3_287; A4/3_296; ADS; AG-1994; AG94/08; AG94/60; AG94/64; Agulhas Basin; Akademik Golitsyn; also published as VM28-122; Amazon Fan; Amerasian Basin; Angola Basin; Antarctic Ocean; ANT-IV/1c; ANT-IX/4; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-X/5; ANT-XI/2; APSARA2; APSARA4; Arabian Sea; Arctic Ocean; ARK-I/3; ARK-II/5; ARK-III/3; ARK-IV/3; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VI/2; ARK-VII/1; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; ARK-XI/1; Atlantic Ocean; Barents Sea; BC; BC713; BCR; Bear Island Fan; Benguela Current, South Atlantic Ocean; BIOTRANS; BNTH-3-CBC; BNTH-3-SBC; Box corer; Box corer (Reineck); Brazil Basin; BT4; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Cap_Verde_AP; Cape Basin; Cardno Seamount; CD92A; CD92A_N1500; CD92A_N2000; CD92A_R1000; CD92A_S700; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CEPAG; CH182-36; CH73-013; CH75-03; CH75-04; CH7X; Charles Darwin; COMPCORE; Composite Core; CONDOR-Ia; Congo Fan; DOS1; DOS2; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; East Atlantic; Eastern Equatorial Pacific; eastern Romanche Fracture Zone; EN06601; EN066-21PG; EN066-24PG; EN066-26PG; EN066-29PG; EN066-32PG; EN066-34PG; EN066-36PG; EN066-38PG; EN066-39GGC; EN066-44PG; EN066-45PG; EN066-47PG; EN066-51PG; Endeavor; Equatorial Atlantic; ERDC; ERDC-077BX; ERDC-079BX; ERDC-083BX; ERDC-092BX; ERDC-108BX; ERDC-112BX; ERDC-120BX; ERDC-123BX; ERDC-125BX; ERDC-128BX; ERDC-129BX; ERDC-131BX; ERDC-135BX; ERDC-136BX; ERDC-139BX; ERDC-141BX; EW9209-1JPC; EW9504-17PC; FA-527-3; FGGE-Equator 79 - First GARP Global Experiment; FL-124; Fram Strait; G-255; GC; GeoB1008-3; GeoB1028-5; GeoB1113-4; GeoB1117-2; GeoB1118-3; GeoB1209-2; GeoB1401-4; GeoB1408-2; GeoB1515-1; GeoB1523-1; GeoB1706-2; GeoB1707-1; GeoB1711; GeoB1711-4; GeoB1719-7; GeoB1720-2; GeoB1721-7; GeoB1722-1; GeoB2202-4; GeoB2810-2; GeoB2811-1; GeoB2812-3; GeoB3302-1; GeoB3606-1; GeoB3718-10; GeoB3720-3; GeoB3722-2; GEOTROPEX 83, NOAMP I; Giant box corer; GIK10127-2; GIK10132-1; GIK10140-1; GIK10141-1; GIK10145-1; GIK10147-1; GIK10175-1; GIK12310-3; GIK12327-4; GIK12328-4; GIK12329-4; GIK12336-1; GIK12337-4; GIK12344-3; GIK12345-4; GIK12347-1; GIK12392-1; GIK13519-1; GIK13521-1; GIK15612-2; GIK16067; GIK16365-1; GIK16408-2; GIK16415-1; GIK16453-2; GIK16455-1; GIK16457-1; GIK16458-2; GIK16459-1; GIK16771-2; GIK16772-1; GIK16773-1; GIK16856-2; GIK16867-1; GIK17728-1; GIK21294-4 PS07/584; GIK21295-4 PS07/586; GIK21295-5 PS07/586; GIK21297-4 PS07/588; GIK21311-4 PS07/605; GIK21320-2 PS07/620; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK21745-5 PS15/054-5; GIK21906-1 PS17/081; GIK21906-2 PS17/081; GIK21911-1 PS17/086; GIK23062-1; GIK23065-2; GIK23068-3; GIK23071-2; GIK23199-1 PS03/199; GIK23243-1 PS05/431; GIK23244-2 PS05/449; GIK23245-1 PS05/450; GIK23256-1; GIK23259-2; GIK23341-1; GIK23342-3; GIK23352-2; GIK23400-3; GIK23411-5; GIK23414-6; GIK23414-7; GIK23414-9; GIK23424-3; GKG; Glomar Challenger; Goban_Spur; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Gulf of Guinea; H-238; HU91-045-090; Iceland Sea; IMAGES I; INMD; INMD-097BX; INMD-101BX; INMD-104BX; INMD-109BX; INMD-110BX; INMD-111BX; INMD-113BX; INMD-115BX; Island_Becken; J-208; Jean Charcot; Joides Resolution; K-218; K51_D; K51_E; K51_F; K51_G; K51_H; K51_I; K51_J; K51_K; K51_L; K51_M; K708-007; K90_I(2); KAL; KAL15; Kasten corer; Kasten corer 15 cm; KL; KN11002; KN11002-0043; Knorr; KNR110-50; KNR110-55; KNR110-58; KNR110-66; KNR110-71; KNR110-75; KNR110-91; KOL; Labrador Sea; Laptev Sea; Laptev Sea, Taymyr Island; Leg104; Leg105; Leg108; Leg112; Leg117; Leg151; Leg159; Leg167; Leg175; Leg75; Le Suroît; LGC02; LGC05; Lofoten; M12/1; M12392-1; M13/2; M13/2_543; M13/2_547; M13/2_562; M13/2_576; M13/2_586; M13/2_593; M13/2_596; M13/2_598; M16/1; M16/2; M17/1; M17/2; M17/2_533; M17/2_538; M17/2_541; M17/2_548; M17/2_551; M17/2_554; M2/1; M2/1_66; M2/1_91; M2/2; M2/2_103; M2/2_108; M2/2_111; M2/2_114; M2/2_117; M20/2; M21/4; M23/3; M-231; M23414; M25; M26/2; M26/2_D2; M26/2_E2; M26/2_L1; M29/2; M34/1; M34/2; M39; M51; M57; M6/5; M6/6; M65; M7/2; M7/3; M7/3_400; M7/3_402; M7/3_413; M7/3_415; M7/3_431; M7/3_434; M7/3_437; M7/3_439; M7/3_444; M7/3_448; M7/3_449; M7/3_450; M7/3_452; M7/3_460; M7/5; M7/5_549; M7/5_552; M7/5_554; M7/5_556; M7/5_564; M7/5_568; M7/5_574; M7/5_576; M7/5_579; M9/4; MANOP; Marion Dufresne (1972); Marion Dufresne (1995); MARUM; MD101; MD38; MD84-551; MD88-770; MD952011; MD95-2011; MD952012; MD95-2012; MD952039; MD95-2039; Melville; Meteor (1964); Meteor (1986); Meteor Rise; MIC; MiniCorer; MM; MUC; MULT; MultiCorer; Multiple investigations; Namibia continental slope; New Horizon; NIOP-D2; NIOP-D2_451; NIOP-D2_452; NIOP-D2_453; NIOP-D2_454; NIOP-D2_455; NIOP-D2_463; NIOP-D2_464; NIOP-D2_466; NIOZ78; NIOZ80; NN; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; Northern Cape Basin; North Greenland Sea; North Pacific/Gulf of California/SLOPE; North Pacific Ocean; Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Norwegian Sea; off Gabun; off Nigeria; PACFLUX-I_PFSC-1; Pacific; PC; Piston corer; Piston corer (BGR type); Piston corer (Kiel type); PLDS-066BX; PLDS-068BX; PLDS-070BX; PLDS-072BX; PLDS-074BX; PLDS-077BX; PLDS-079BX; PLDS-081BX; PLDS-083BX; PLDS-085BX; PLDS-089BX; PLDS-090BX; PLDS-092BX; PLDS-107BX; PLDS-3; Pleiades; PLTO; PLTO-003HBC; PLTO-003MBC; PO142A; Polarstern; Porcupine_AP; Porto Seamount; POS137; POS137_186; POS142; POS142_1184; Poseidon; PS03; PS05; PS07; PS08; PS11; PS1113-1; PS1243-1; PS1244-2; PS1245-1; PS1294-4; PS1295-4; PS1295-5; PS1297-4; PS1311-4; PS1320-2; PS15; PS1533-3; PS16; PS16/278; PS16/284; PS16/311; PS17; PS1745-5; PS1754-1; PS1754-2; PS1756-6; PS1768-1; PS1768-8; PS18; PS18/238; PS19/091; PS19/094; PS19/100; PS19/111; PS19/112; PS19/113; PS19/114; PS19/117; PS19/150; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19/252; PS1906-1; PS1906-2; PS1911-1; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS2082-1; PS2125-1; PS2127-1; PS2129-2; PS2137-1; PS2138-1; PS2139-1; PS2140-1; PS2143-1; PS2157-3; PS22/814; PS22/817; PS22/818; PS22/826; PS22 06AQANTX_5; PS2212-6; PS2213-4; PS2214-1; PS2215-1; PS2316-4; PS2319-1; PS2320-3; PS2328-4; PS2446-2; PS2446-4; PS2447-3; PS2448-3; PS2453-2; PS2455-2; PS2456-1; PS2458-2; PS2459-1; PS2460-2; PS2462-2; PS2480-2; PS2515-3; PS27; PS27/020; PS27/024; PS27/025; PS27/031; PS27/033; PS27/034; PS27/038; PS27/039; PS27/040; PS27/043; PS27/067; PS2723-4; PS2731-6; PS2732-5; PS2733-5; PS2734-4; PS2735-5; PS2736-5; PS2737-4; PS2747-7; PS2748-2; PS2749-3; PS2750-6; PS2752-8; PS2753-1; PS2755-5; PS2756-6; PS2757-6; PS2758-2; PS2759-7; PS2760-5; PS2761-8; PS2762-4; PS2763-8; PS2764-7; PS2765-6; PS2767-6; PS2768-3; PS2770-6; PS2771-5; PS28; PS28/378; PS36; PS36/007; PS36/018; PS36/019; PS36/020; PS36/021; PS36/022; PS36/023; PS36/024; PS36/040a; PS36/042; PS36/044; PS36/045; PS36/047; PS36/048a; PS36/050; PS36/051; PS36/052; PS36/053; PS36/055; PS36/056; PS36/057; PS36/059; PS36/060; PS36/062; PS36/064; PS36/066; PS36/067; PS36/071; PS36/072; RC08; RC08-18; RC11; RC1112; RC11-210; RC13; RC13-184; RC13-189; RC13-228; RC13-229; RC15; RC15-93; RC16; RC16-66; RC17; RC17-177; RC24; RC24-1; RC24-12; RC24-27; RC24-7; Reimers_G-255_BC; Reimers_H-238_BC; Reimers_J-208_BC; Reimers_K-218_BC; Reimers_M-231_BC; Robert Conrad; Sampling/drilling ice; SC; Scotia Sea; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; Shona Ridge; Sierra Leone Basin/Guinea Basin; SL; Slope9102079; SO101; SO101/3_2-1; Soil combustion; Sonne; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; South-East Pacific; South Indian Ocean; South Pacific; South Pacific Ocean; St. Anna Trough, Kara Sea; SU81-14; SU81-18; Svalbard; T-3; T78-42; T78-46; T80-11; TC; TC05; TGT013-#058; TGT013-#063; TGT013-#066; TGT013-#088; TGT013-#093; TGT013-#104; TGT013-#113;
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 33
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hüls, Matthias; Zahn, Rainer (2000): Millennial-scale sea surface temperature variability in the western tropical North Atlantic from planktonic foraminiferal census counts. Paleoceanography, 15(6), 659-678, https://doi.org/10.1029/1999PA000462
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Planktonic foraminiferal census counts are used to construct high-resolution sea surface temperature (SST) and subsurface (thermocline) temperature records at a core site in the Tobago Basin, Lesser Antilles. The record is used to document climatic variability at this tropical site in comparison to middle- and high-latitude sites and to test current concepts of cross-equatorial heat transports as a major player in interhemispheric climate variability. Temperatures are estimated using transfer function and modern analog techniques. Glacial - maximum cooling of 2.5°-3°C is indicated; maximum cooling by 4°C is inferred for isotope stage 3. The SST record displays millennial-scale variability with temperature jumps of up to 3°C and closely tracks the structure of ice-core Dansgaard/Oeschger cycles. SST variations in part of the record run opposite to the SST evolution at high northern latitude sites, pointing to thermohaline circulation and marine heat transport as an important factor driving SST in the tropical and high-latitude Atlantic, both on orbital and suborbital timescales.
    Keywords: GEOMAR; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel; M35/1; M35003-4; Meteor (1986); SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 34
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Walter, Hans-Jürgen; Rutgers van der Loeff, Michiel M; Hoeltzen, H; Bathmann, Ulrich (2000): Reduced scavenging of 230Th in the Weddell Sea: implications for paleoceanographic reconstructions in the South Atlantic. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 47(7), 1369-1387, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-0637(99)00094-1
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The scavenging of 230Th and 231Pa was investigated in the central Weddell Sea by combining results from a sediment trap and three sediment cores. Scavenging of both radionuclides is closely coupled with the annual cycle of particle fluxes. For 230Th the mean radionuclide flux measured in the trap is only 40% of its expected flux from production in the water column. This value is in excellent agreement with the long-term record in the sediment cores (33-43%). Similar results were obtained for 231Pa, although burial fluxes are generally higher. The data suggest that during the last 130 ka the Weddell Sea has been a net source for both radionuclides, with more than half of the 230Th and about half of the 231Pa being exported. As a consequence, 230Th normalized rain rates (assuming a constant flux equal to the production rate) overestimate the true rain rate in the Weddell Sea by 150%. The laterally transported 230Th and 231Pa activity exits the Weddell Sea to the north, where it is incorporated into the eastward flowing Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC). There it is scavenged in addition to local production. During its residence time in the S-Atlantic sector of the ACC about 3/4 of the dissolved 230Th imported from the Weddell Sea is transferred onto particles. Whether this particulate 230Th is entirely deposited in the S-Atlantic or is distributed over a larger area extending into the Indian and Pacific sectors of the ACC remains an open question. In the ACC, Th-normalization therefore leads to an underestimation of fluxes, but the effect is probably less than 50%. Interglacial-glacial shifts in the position of the productive belt are believed to cause temporal and regional variations in the depositon rate for 230Th.
    Keywords: ANT-V/4; ANT-VIII/2; AWI_MarGeoChem; AWI_Paleo; AWI208; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Marine Geochemistry @ AWI; Mooring (long time); MOORY; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS10; PS10/818; PS10/820; PS10/824; PS1507-3; PS1508-1; PS1509-2; PS16 06AQANTVIII_2; SL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 35
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bauch, Henning A; Erlenkeuser, Helmut; Spielhagen, Robert F; Struck, Ulrich; Matthiessen, Jens; Thiede, Jörn; Heinemeier, Jan (2001): A multiproxy reconstruction of the evolution of deep and surface waters in the subarctic Nordic seas over the last 30,000 years. Quaternary Science Reviews, 20(4), 659-678, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0277-3791(00)00098-6
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: On the basis of various lithological, mircopaleontological and isotopic proxy records covering the last 30,000 calendar years (cal kyr) the paleoenvironmental evolution of the deep and surface water circulation in the subarctic Nordic seas was reconstructed for a climate interval characterized by intensive ice-sheet growth and subsequent decay on the surrounding land masses. The data reveal considerable temporal changes in the type of thermohaline circulation. Open-water convection prevailed in the early record, providing moisture for the Fennoscandian-Barents ice sheets to grow until they reached the shelf break at ~26 cal. kyr and started to deliver high amounts of ice-rafted debris (IRD) into the ocean via melting icebergs. Low epibenthic delta18O values and small-sized subpolar foraminifera observed after 26 cal. kyr may implicate that advection of Atlantic water into the Nordic seas occurred at the subsurface until 15 cal. kyr. Although modern-like surface and deep-water conditions first developed at ~13.5 cal. kyr, thermohaline circulation remained unstable, switching between a subsurface and surface advection of Atlantic water until 10 cal. kyr when IRD deposition and major input of meltwater ceased. During this time, two depletions in epibenthic delta13C are recognized just before and after the Younger Dryas indicating a notable reduction in convectional processes. Despite an intermittent cooling at ~8 cal. kyr, warmest surface conditions existed in the central Nordic seas between 10 and 6 cal. kyr. However, already after 7 cal. kyr the present day situation gradually evolved, verified by a strong water mass exchange with the Arctic Ocean and an intensifying deep convection as well as surface temperature decrease in the central Nordic seas. This process led to the development of the modern distribution of water masses and associated oceanographic fronts after 5 cal. kyr and, eventually, to today's steep east-west surface temperature gradient. The time discrepancy between intensive vertical convection after 5 cal. kyr but warmest surface temperatures already between 10 and 6 cal. kyr strongly implicates that widespread postglacial surface warming in the Nordic seas was not directly linked to the rates in deep-water formation.
    Keywords: ARK-II/4; ARK-II/5; Fram Strait; GEOMAR; Giant box corer; GIK23230-1 PS05/416; GIK23230-2 PS05/416; GIK23243-1 PS05/431; GKG; GLAMAP; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel; Norwegian Sea; Polarstern; PS05; PS1230-1; PS1230-2; PS1243-1; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 36
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Volbers, Andrea N A; Henrich, Rüdiger (2004): Calcium carbonate corrosiveness in the South Atlantic during the Last Glacial Maximum as inferred from changes in the preservation of Globigerina bulloides: A proxy to determine deep-water circulation patterns? Marine Geology, 204(1-2), 43-57, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(03)00372-4
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: The modern Atlantic Ocean, dominated by the interactions of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW), plays a key role in redistributing heat from the Southern to the Northern Hemisphere. In order to reconstruct the evolution of the relative importance of these two water masses, the NADW/AABW transition, reflected by the calcite lysocline, was investigated by the Globigerina bulloides dissolution index (BDX?). The depth level of the Late Glacial Maximum (LGM) calcite lysocline was elevated by several hundred metres, indicating a more corrosive water mass present at modern NADW level. Overall, the small range of BDX? data and the gradual decrease in preservation below the calcite lysocline point to a less stratified Atlantic Ocean during the LGM. Similar preservation patterns in the West and East Atlantic demonstrate that the modern west–east asymmetry did not exist due to an expansion of southern deep waters compensating for the decrease in NADW formation.
    Keywords: 06MT15_2; 06MT41_3; Amazon Fan; Angola Basin; Ascencion Island; Brazil Basin; Cape Basin; Cardno Seamount; Ceara Rise; Continental Slope off Rio Paraiba do Sul; East Brazil Basin; Eastern Rio Grande Rise; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB; GeoB1028-5; GeoB1031-4; GeoB1032-3; GeoB1041-3; GeoB1047-3; GeoB1048-2; GeoB1101-5; GeoB1105-4; GeoB1112-4; GeoB1114-3; GeoB1117-2; GeoB1117-3; GeoB1118-2; GeoB1119-2; GeoB1120-3; GeoB1214-1; GeoB1220-1; GeoB1309-2; GeoB1310-1; GeoB1311-2; GeoB1315-2; GeoB1408-2; GeoB1417-1; GeoB1418-1; GeoB1419-1; GeoB1419-2; GeoB1420-1; GeoB1421-1; GeoB1501-4; GeoB1503-1; GeoB1505-1; GeoB1508-4; GeoB1515-1; GeoB1523-1; GeoB1523-2; GeoB1701-4; GeoB1706-2; GeoB1711; GeoB1711-4; GeoB1722-1; GeoB1802-10; GeoB1809-10; GeoB1901-1; GeoB1903-3; GeoB1905-3; GeoB2004-2; GeoB2016-1; GeoB2019-1; GeoB2021-5; GeoB2102-1; GeoB2104-1; GeoB2108-1; GeoB2111-2; GeoB2116-2; GeoB2116-4; GeoB2117-1; GeoB2117-4; GeoB2118-1; GeoB2119-1; GeoB2122-1; GeoB2123-1; GeoB2124-1; GeoB2125-1; GeoB2125-2; GeoB2126-1; GeoB2127-1; GeoB2130-1; GeoB2201-1; GeoB2202-4; GeoB2202-5; GeoB2204-1; GeoB2204-2; GeoB2206-1; GeoB2208-1; GeoB2212-1; GeoB2803-1; GeoB2804-2; GeoB2806-6; GeoB2817-3; GeoB2819-1; GeoB2825-3; GeoB2829-3; GeoB2904-11; GeoB2910-2; GeoB3104-1; GeoB3117-1; GeoB3175-1; GeoB3176-1; GeoB3218-1; GeoB3229-1; GeoB3603-2; GeoB3722-2; GeoB3801-6; GeoB3802-3; GeoB3808-6; GeoB3812-2; GeoB3813-3; GeoB4411-1; GeoB4420-1; GeoB5002-1; GeoB5007-1; GeoB5112-5; GeoB5115-2; GeoB5116-1; GeoB5117-2; GeoB5138-2; GeoB5139-1; GeoB5140-3; GeoB5142-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Giant box corer; GIK17836-1; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Guinea Basin; JOPSII-6; JOPSII-8; KOL; M12/1; M15/2; M16/1; M16/2; M20/2; M22/1; M23/1; M23/2; M23/3; M29/2; M29/3; M34/1; M34/2; M34/3; M38/2; M41/2; M41/3; M6/6; M9/4; Meteor (1986); Mid Atlantic Ridge; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; MUC; MultiCorer; Namibia continental slope; NE-Brazilian continental margin; Niger Sediment Fan; Northern Brasil-Basin; Northern Cape Basin; Northern Rio Grande Rise; off Canary Islands; Piston corer (Kiel type); Rio Grande Rise; Romanche fracture zone; Santos Plateau; SFB261; Sierra Leone Rise; SL; SO84; Sonne; South African margin; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents; Southern Cape Basin; south of Abrolhos Bank; Southwest Walvis Ridge; ST. HELENA HOTSPOT; Uruguay continental margin; van Veen Grab; VGRAB; Victor Hensen; Walvis Ridge; Walvis Ridge, Southeast Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 37
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    In:  Supplement to: Walter, Hans-Jürgen; Hegner, Ernst; Diekmann, Bernhard; Kuhn, Gerhard; Rutgers van der Loeff, Michiel M (2000): Provenance and transport of terrigenous sediment in the South Atlantic Ocean and their relations to glacial and interglacial cycles: Nd and Sr isotopic evidence. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 64(22), 3813-3827, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0016-7037(00)00476-2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of Late Quaternary surface sediment and sediment cores from the south Atlantic and southeast Pacific sectors of the Southern Ocean are used to constrain the provenance and transport mechanisms of their terrigenous component. We report isotopic and mineralogical data for core samples from three localities, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 41°S and the northern and southern Scotia Sea. In addition, data for surface sediment samples from the south Atlantic and southeast Pacific sectors of the Southern Ocean are presented. The variations of Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of the bulk sediment samples in all cores were correlated with the magnetic susceptibility of the sediment and with the inferred glacial-interglacial stages. The isotopic data indicate that, during glacial periods, sediment was delivered from continental crust with a shorter residence time than that supplying material during interglacial periods. At the core site near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Nd isotopic, combined with mineralogical evidence indicates interglacial period deposition of a relatively high amount of kaolinite and silt with low epsilon-Nd values 〈 -8. The material was probably supplied by North Atlantic Deep Water from low latitudes. For glacial periods, a high contribution of silt and clay with epsilon-Nd 〉 -4.5, probably derived from southern South America, was indicated. The glacial-interglacial shift in sources may be due to either a decreasing influence of North Atlantic Deep Water during glacial times or by a larger contribution of glaciogenic detritus from southern South America. At the core site in the northern Scotia Sea, sediment of interglacial periods is dominated by smectite with epsilon-Nd 〈 - 6 and silt with epsilon-Nd 〉 -4. We suggest that smectite was derived from the Falkland shelf and silt was derived from the Argentinian shelf. During glacial periods, the Argentinian shelf was an important source for silt and chlorite with epsilon-Nd 〉 -4. The contribution from the Falkland shelf seems to have remained similar during glacial and interglacial periods. Hydrographic transport by bottom currents and turbidites could account for the high glacial detrital flux. An evaluation of the significance of an aeolian contribution to deep sea sediment suggests that it plays only a minor role. In the southern Scotia Sea, the Antarctic Peninsula is considered an important source for young material with epsilon-Nd 〉 -4, in particular during glacial periods. During interglacial periods, sediment supply from the Antarctic Peninsula was lower than during glacial times, resulting in a relatively high contribution of old material (epsilon-Nd 〈 -8) from East Antarctica. Deep water currents and icebergs could account for the transport of the old component to the southern Scotia Sea. The accumulation rates of material from the various source regions for glacial times are in agreement with an increase in the strength of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. The production rate and the circulation pattern of bottom water in the Weddell Sea appear to have remained similar over most of the last 150 kyr.
    Keywords: Antarctic Peninsula; ANTARTIDA8611; ANT-I/2; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/2; ANT-X/5; ANT-XI/2; ANT-XII/4; ANT-XIV/3; AWI_MarGeoChem; AWI_Paleo; BC; Box corer; D-ORC-015; Filchner Shelf; Filchner Trough; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); HAND; KL; Marine Geochemistry @ AWI; MUC; MultiCorer; Nuevo Alcocero; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS01; PS01/177; PS10; PS10/738; PS1016-1; PS12; PS12/116; PS12/199; PS1490-2; PS1537-2; PS1563-1; PS22/817; PS22 06AQANTX_5; PS2319-1; PS2495-3; PS2515-3; PS2659-2; PS2684-1; PS2697-1; PS2716-2; PS28; PS28/293; PS28/378; PS2805-1; PS35/009; PS35/103; PS35/166; PS35/218; PS35 06AQANTXII_4; PS43; PS43/027; Puerto_Mont; Punta_Arenas; Punta Arenas, Chile; Quito; Sampling by hand; Santiago; Scotia Sea; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; SL; S-Orkney; South Atlantic; Southeast Pacific; Southern Ocean; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 38
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    In:  Supplement to: Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Ehrmann, Werner (2005): Late Neogene to Quaternary environmental changes in the Antarctic Peninsula region: evidence from drift sediments. Global and Planetary Change, 45, 165-191, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2004.09.006
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Clay-mineral composition and biogenic opal content in upper Miocene to Quaternary drift sediments recovered at two Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) sites from the continental rise in the Bellingshausen Sea had been analyzed in order to reconstruct the climatic and glacial history of the Antarctic Peninsula. The clay mineral composition at both sites is dominated by smectite, illite, and chlorite, and alternates between a smectite-enriched and a chlorite-enriched assemblage throughout the last 9.3 my. The spatial distribution of clay minerals in Holocene sediments west of the Antarctic Peninsula facilitates the identification of particular source areas, and thus the reconstruction of transport pathways. The similarity to clay mineral variations reported from upper Quaternary sequences suggests that the short-term clay-mineralogical fluctuations in the ODP cores reflect glacial-interglacial cyclicity. Thus, repeated ice advances and retreats in response to a varying size of the Antarctic Peninsula ice cap are likely to have occurred throughout the late Neogene and Quaternary. The clay minerals in the drift sediments exhibit only slight long-term variations, which are caused by local changes in glacial erosion and in supply of source rocks, rather than by major climatic changes. The opal records at the ODP sites are dominated by long-term variations since the late Miocene. We infer that the opal content in the drift sediments, although it is influenced by dissolution in the water column and the sediment column and by the burial with lithogenic detritus, provides a signal of paleoproductivity. Because the annual sea-ice coverage is regarded as the main factor controlling biological productivity, the opal signal helps to reconstruct paleoceanographic changes in the Bellingshausen Sea. Slightly enhanced opal deposition during the late Miocene indicates slightly warmer climatic conditions in the Antarctic Peninsula area than at present. During the early Pliocene, enhanced opal deposition in the Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean and coinciding high opal concentrations in sedimentary sequences from the Atlantic and Indian sectors document a strong reduction of sea-ice cover and relatively warm climatic conditions. Thereby, the early onset of the Pliocene warmth in the Bellingshausen Sea points to a positive feedback of regional Antarctic climate on the global thermohaline circulation. A decrease of opal deposition between 3.1 and 2.6 Ma likely reflects sea-ice expansion in response to reduced supply of northern-sourced deep-waters to the Southern Ocean, caused by the onset of Northern Hemisphere glaciation. Throughout the Quaternary, a relatively constant level of opal deposition on the Antarctic continental margin indicates relatively stable climatic conditions.
    Keywords: 178-1095; 178-1096; 178-1101A; ANT-IV/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/6; Atka Bay; COMPCORE; Composite Core; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Fram Strait; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Joides Resolution; Leg178; Maud Rise; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Polarstern; PS08; PS08/564; PS12; PS12/291; PS1451-1; PS1588-1; PS1588-3; PS16; PS16/541; PS1824-1; PS1824-2; SL; South Pacific Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 11 datasets
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  • 39
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    In:  Supplement to: Breitzke, Monika (2000): Acoustic and elastic characterization of marine sediments by analysis, modeling, and inversion of ultrasonic P wave transmission seismograms. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 105(B9), 21411-21430, https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JB900153
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Ultrasonic P wavc transmission seismograms recorded on sediment cores have been analyzed to study the acoustic and estimate the clastic properties of marine sediments from different provinces dominated by terrigenous, calcareous, amI diatomaceous sedimentation. Instantaneous frequencies computed from the transmission seismograms are displayed as gray-shaded images to give an acoustic overview of the lithology of each core. Ccntirneter-scale variations in the ultrasonic waveforms associated with lithological changes are illustrated by wiggle traces in detail. Cross-correlation, multiple-filter, and spectral ratio techniques are applied to derive P wave velocities and attenuation coefficients. S wave velocities and attenuation coefficients, elastic moduli, and permeabilities are calculated by an inversion scheme based on the Biot-Stoll viscoelastic model. Together wilh porosity measurements, P and S wave scatter diagrams are constructed to characterize different sediment types by their velocity- and attenuation-porosity relationships. They demonstrate that terrigenous, calcareous, and diatomaceous sediments cover different velocity- and attenuation-porosity ranges. In terrigcnous sediments, P wave vclocities and attenuation coefficients decrease rapidly with increasing porosity, whereas S wave velocities and shear moduli are very low. Calcareous sediments behave similarly at relatively higher porosities. Foraminifera skeletons in compositions of terrigenous mud and calcareous ooze cause a stiffening of the frame accompanied by higher shear moduli, P wave velocities, and attenuation coefficients. In diatomaceous ooze the contribution of the shear modulus becomes increasingly important and is controlled by the opal content, whereas attenuation is very low. This leads to the opportunity to predict the opal content from nondestructive P wave velocity measurements at centimeter-scale resolution.
    Keywords: ANT-XI/4; AWI_Paleo; Bay of Bengal; BENGAL FAN; GeoB2821-1; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KL; M29/2; Meteor (1986); Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS2567-2; PS30; PS30/097; Rio Grande Rise; SFB261; SL; SO93/2; SO93/2_40KL; SO93/2_47KL; Sonne; South Atlantic; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 40
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    In:  Supplement to: Nørgaard-Pedersen, Niels; Spielhagen, Robert F; Erlenkeuser, Helmut; Grootes, Pieter Meiert; Heinemeier, Jan; Knies, Jochen (2003): Arctic Ocean during the Last Glacial Maximum: atlantic and polar domains of surface water mass distribution and ice cover. Paleoceanography, 18(3), 1063, https://doi.org/10.1029/2002PA000781
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: On the basis of 52 sediment cores, analyzed and dated at high resolution, the paleoceanography and climate of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) were reconstructed in detail for the Fram Strait and the eastern and central Arctic Ocean. Sediment composition and stable isotope data suggest three distinct paleoenvironments: (1) a productive region in the eastern to central Fram Strait and along the northern Barents Sea continental margin characterized by Atlantic Water advection, frequent open water conditions, and occasional local meltwater supply and iceberg calving from the Barents Sea Ice Sheet; (2) an intermediate region in the southwestern Eurasian Basin (up to 84-85°N) and the western Fram Strait characterized by subsurface Atlantic Water advection and recirculation, a moderately high planktic productivity, and a perennial ice cover that breaks up only occasionally; and (3) a central Arctic region (north of 85°N in the Eurasian Basin) characterized by a low-salinity surface water layer and a thick ice cover that strongly reduces bioproduction and bulk sedimentation rates. Although the total inflow of Atlantic Water into the Arctic Ocean may have been reduced during the LGM, its impact on ice coverage and halocline structure in the Fram Strait and southwestern Eurasian Basin was strong.
    Keywords: 41; Amundsen Basin; Antarctic Ocean; Arctic Ocean; ARK-II/4; ARK-III/3; ARK-IV/3; ARK-IX/3; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VII/1; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; ARK-XIII/2; ARK-XIII/3; Barents Sea; Fram-I; FramI/4; FramI/7; Fram Strait; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; GC; Giant box corer; GIK21294-4 PS07/584; GIK21295-4 PS07/586; GIK21297-4 PS07/588; GIK21308-3 PS07/601; GIK21314-3 PS07/608; GIK21527-10 PS11/371-10; GIK21528-7 PS11/372-7; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK21535-5 PS11/430-5; GIK21535-8 PS11/430-8; GIK21894-7 PS17/069; GIK21906-1 PS17/081; GIK21906-2 PS17/081; GIK23230-1 PS05/416; GKG; Glacial Atlantic Ocean Mapping; GLAMAP; GLAMAP2000; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Ice drift station; KAL; Kasten corer; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Makarov Basin; Morris Jesup Rise; MUC; MultiCorer; Nansen Basin; Northeast Greenland; NP90-12; NP90-36; NP90-39; OD-009-11; OD-010-04; OD-031-03; OD-036-04; OD-041-04; Oden; ODEN-96; Polarstern; PS05; PS07; PS11; PS1230-1; PS1294-4; PS1295-4; PS1297-4; PS1308-3; PS1314-3; PS1527-10; PS1528-7; PS1533-3; PS1535-5; PS1535-8; PS17; PS1894-7; PS19/084; PS19/086; PS19/100; PS19/112; PS19/157; PS19/160; PS19/165; PS19/167; PS19/175; PS19/176; PS19/178; PS19/181; PS19/186; PS19/189; PS19/200; PS19/206; PS19/210; PS19/218; PS19/228; PS19/234; PS19/241; PS19/245; PS1906-1; PS1906-2; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS2122-2; PS2123-2; PS2129-1; PS2138-1; PS2163-1; PS2166-2; PS2170-4; PS2172-2; PS2177-1; PS2178-2; PS2179-1; PS2180-1; PS2185-3; PS2186-5; PS2193-2; PS2195-4; PS2196-2; PS2200-2; PS2206-4; PS2208-1; PS2210-3; PS2212-3; PS2423-4; PS2424-1; PS2446-4; PS26/148; PS26/149; PS26 NEW; PS27; PS27/020; PS2837-5; PS2837-6; PS2876-1; PS2876-2; PS2887-1; PS2887-2; PS44; PS44/065; PS45; PS45/029; PS45/058; SL; Svalbard; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 12 datasets
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  • 41
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    In:  Supplement to: Kim, Jung-Hyun; Schneider, Ralph R; Mulitza, Stefan; Müller, Peter J (2003): Reconstruction of SE trade wind intensity based on sea-surface temperature gradients in the SE Atlantic over the last 25 kyr. Geophysical Research Letters, 30(22), 2144, https://doi.org/10.1029/2003GL017557
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: A prominent feature in the Southeast Atlantic is the Angola-Benguela Front (ABF), the convergence between warm tropical and cold subtropical upwelled waters. At present, the sea-surface temperature (SST) gradient across the ABF and its position are influenced by the strength of southeasterly (SE) trade winds. Here, we present a record of changes in the ABF SST gradient over the last 25 kyr. Variations in this SST contrast indicate that periods of strengthened SE trade-wind intensity occurred during the Last Glacial Maximum, the Younger Dryas, and the Mid to Late Holocene, while Heinrich Event 1, the early part of the Bølling-Allerød, and the Early Holocene were periods of weakened SE trade-winds.
    Keywords: 175-1078C; Benguela Current, South Atlantic Ocean; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Joides Resolution; Leg175; M35/1; M35003-4; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 42
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    In:  Supplement to: Dolven, J K; Cortese, Giuseppe; Bjorklund, Kjell R (2002): A high-resolution radiolarian-derived paleotemperature record for the Late Pleistocene-Holocene in the Norwegian Sea. Paleoceanography, 17(4), 1072, https://doi.org/10.1029/2002PA000780
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Polycystine radiolarians are used to reconstruct summer sea surface temperatures (SSSTs) for the Late Pleistocene-Holocene (600-13,400 14C years BP) in the Norwegian Sea. At 13,200 14C years BP, the SSST was close to the average Holocene SSST (~12°C). It then gradually dropped to 7.1°C in the Younger Dryas. Near the Younger Dryas-Holocene transition (~10,000 14C years BP), the SSST increased 5°C in about 530 years. Four abrupt cooling events, with temperature drops of up to 2.1°C, are recognized during the Holocene: at 9340, 7100 ("8200 calendar years event"), 6400 and 1650 14C years BP. Radiolarian SSSTs and the isotopic signal from the GISP2 ice core are strongly coupled, stressing the importance of the Norwegian Sea as a mediator of heat/precipitation exchange between the North Atlantic, the atmosphere, and the Greenland ice sheet. Radiolarian and diatom-derived SSSTs display similarities, with the former not showing the recently reported Holocene cooling trend.
    Keywords: 79-4; AWI_Paleo; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Håkon Mosby; HM79; HM79-4; IMAGES; IMAGES I; International Marine Global Change Study; Late Pleistocene-Holocene; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952011; MD95-2011; Norwegian Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; PC; Piston corer; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Radiolarians; Voring Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 43
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    In:  Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research | Supplement to: Risebrobakken, Bjørg; Jansen, Eystein; Andersson, Carin; Mjelde, Eirik; Hevroy, Kjersti (2003): A high-resolution study of Holocene paleoclimatic and paleoceanographic changes in the Nordic Seas. Paleoceanography, 18(1), 1017, https://doi.org/10.1029/2002PA000764
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: High-resolution records from IMAGES core MD95-2011 in the eastern Norwegian Sea provide evidence for relatively large- and small-scale high-latitude climate variability throughout the Holocene. During the early and mid-Holocene a situation possibly driven by consistent stronger westerlies increased the eastward influence of Arctic intermediate and near-surface waters. For the late Holocene a relaxation of the atmospheric forcing resulted in increased influence of Atlantic water. The main changes in Holocene climate show no obvious connection to changing solar irradiance, and spectral analysis reveals no consistent signature for any periodic behavior of Holocene climate at millennial or centennial timescales. There are, however, indications of consistent multidecadal variability.
    Keywords: CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Giant box corer; GKG; IMAGES; IMAGES I; International Marine Global Change Study; JM97-948/2A; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952011; MD95-2011; Voring Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 44
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    In:  Supplement to: Xu, Jian; Kuhnt, Wolfgang; Holbourn, Ann E; Andersen, Nils; Bartoli, Gretta (2006): Changes in the vertical profile of the Indonesian Throughflow during Termination 2: Evidence from the Timor Sea. Paleoceanography, 21(4), PA4202, https://doi.org/10.1029/2006PA001278
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: We use a multiproxy approach to monitor changes in the vertical profile of the Indonesian Throughflow as well as monsoonal wind and precipitation patterns in the Timor Sea on glacial-interglacial, precessional, and suborbital timescales. We focus on an interval of extreme climate change and sea level variation: marine isotope (MIS) 6 to MIS 5e. Paleoproductivity fluctuations in the Timor Sea follow a precessional beat related to the intensity of the Australian (NW) monsoon. Paired Mg/Ca and d18O measurements of surface- and thermocline-dwelling planktonic foraminifers (G. ruber and P. obliquiloculata) indicate an increase of 〉4°C in both surface and thermocline water temperatures during Termination II. Tropical sea surface temperature changed synchronously with ice volume (benthic d18O) during deglaciation, implying a direct coupling of high- and low-latitude climate via atmospheric and/or upper ocean circulation. Substantial cooling and freshening of thermocline waters occurred toward the end of Termination II and during MIS 5e, indicating a change in the vertical profile of the Indonesian Throughflow from surface- to thermocline-dominated flow.
    Keywords: Giant piston corer; GIK18460-2; GIK18462-2; GIK18480-2; GPC; IMAGES; IMAGES VII - WEPAMA; Indian Ocean; International Marine Global Change Study; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD012378; MD01-2378; MD122; MD122-MC01; MD122-MC02; MD122-MC03; MUC; MultiCorer; SO185; Sonne; Timor Sea; VITAL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 45
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    In:  Supplement to: Fischer, Gerhard; Gersonde, Rainer; Wefer, Gerold (2002): Organic carbon, biogenic silica and diatom fluxes in the marginal winter sea ice zone and in the Polar Front Region: interannual variation and changes in composition. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49(9-10), 1721-1745, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-0645(02)00009-7
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Particle fluxes and composition were examined over 5 years at two mooring sites in the Polar Front Region (site PF: 50°09.S, 5°50.E) and in the marginal winter sea-ice zone (site BO: 54°30.S, 3°20.W) in the eastern Atlantic Sector of the Southern Ocean. Seasonality, interannual variability and the magnitude of total mass fluxes were higher at site BO compared to PF. Five-year averages and standard deviations (1Sigma) of total mass fluxes were 19.6±18.5 and 24.8±29.9 g m**-2 at PF and BO, respectively. Peak fluxes at site BO occurred in January 1995, but the highest peak was measured in February 1991 (almost 1300 mg m**-2 d**-1) followed by post-bloom sedimentation in March through May. This would imply a time shift of several months between the onset of sea-ice retreat in October and major sedimentation events recorded in January/February with the upper BO traps. At site PF, highest fluxes of about 500 mg m**-2 d**-1 were found between December and March. Blooms at site BO, influenced by sea ice as indicated by diatom species composition, seem to occur more sporadically (e.g., in 1991 and 1995). Annual diatom fluxes were 11.8x10**6 and 20x10**6 valves m**-2 during the deployments PF3 (1990) and BO1 (1991), respectively. At PF3, Fragilariopsis kerguelensis (37%) and Thalassionema nitzschioides fo1 (26.5%) dominated diatom flux, while F. kerguelensis (29%) and sea-ice-related algae (40%) were the main contributors to total diatom flux at site BO. During deployment BO1, the bloom collected in February was characterized by a very high molar Si:C of 8.8 that decreased almost continuously during the post-bloom phase, reaching a value of 1 in May. This change, however, was not documented in diatom species composition. We obtained a significant linear increase of biogenic opal with organic carbon fluxes at site PF and a highly significant but exponential relationship at site BO. Higher annual total mass fluxes were recorded at site BO, primarily due to elevated opal and lithogenic fluxes, corresponding to a higher silicate availability in the southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current. In contrast, higher mean organic carbon fluxes were obtained at site PF in accordance with elevated primary production and biomass. We obtained a three-fold higher molar Si:C ratio (5-year mean) for sinking particles collected with the upper BO traps (Si:C=4.0) compared to the PF (Si:C=1.3), consistent with the general pattern of Si and Fe availability. In particular at site BO, the Si:C ratios were usually high, even when accounting for organic carbon decay and biogenic silica (BSi) dissolution in the upper water column. At this study site, the Si:C ratios increased with lithogenic fluxes.
    Keywords: ANT-V/4; ANT-XII/2; ANT-XII/4; BO1; BO1_trap; BO3; BO3_trap; BO5; Bouvet Island; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM; MOOR; Mooring; Mooring (long time); MOORY; PF1; PF3; PF5_trap; PF7; PF8; Polar Front; Polarstern; PS10; PS33; PS35 06AQANTXII_4; South Atlantic Ocean; Trap; TRAP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 46
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    In:  Supplement to: Weber, Michael E; von Stackelberg, Ulrich; Marchig, Vesna; Wiedicke-Hombach, Michael; Grupe, B (2000): Variability of surface sediments in the Peru Basin: dependence on water depth, productivity, bottom water flow, and seafloor topography. Marine Geology, 163(1-4), 169-184, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(99)00103-6
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: We investigated surficial sediments for physico-chemical composition from numerous sites of seven study areas in the manganese nodule field of the northern Peru Basin as part of a deep-sea environmental study. Major results from this study are strong variability with respect to water depth, productivity in surface waters, locality, bottom water flow, and seafloor topography. Sediment sites are located mostly in 3900 to 4300 m water depth between the lysocline and the carbonate compensation depth (CCD). Large fluctuations in carbonate content (0% to 80%) determine sediment density and compressional-wave velocity, and, by dilution, contents of opal and non-biogenic material. Mass accumulation rates of biogenic components as well as geochemical proxies (barium and phosphorus) distinguish areas of higher productivity in the northwest near equatorial upwelling and in the northeast close to coastal upwelling, from areas of lower productivity in the west and south. Comparisons between the central Peru Basin area (Discol) and western Peru Basin area (Sediperu) reveals, for the Sediperu area, a shallower CCD, more carbonate but less opal, organic carbon, and non-biogenic material in sediments at the same water depth as well as larger down-core fluctuations of organic carbon and MnO2. Bottom water flow in the abyssal hill topography causes winnowing of material from summits of seamounts and ridges, where organic carbon preservation is poor, to basins where organic carbon preservation is better. Down-core measurements in box cores indicate a three-fold division in the upper 50 cm of the sediment column. An uppermost semi-liquid top layer is dark brown, 5-15 cm thick and contains most of the ferro-manganese nodules. A 5-15 cm thick transition zone of light sediment color has increasing shear strength, lowest opal contents and compressional-wave velocities, but highest carbonate contents and sediment densities. The lowermost layer contains stiffer light gray sediments.
    Keywords: 178KG; 179KG; 183KG; 185KG; 186KG; 188KG; 190KG; 193KG; 194KG; 197KG; 201MX; 202KG; 204KG; 207KG; 209KG; 210MX; 212KG; 215KG; 216KG; 220KG; 221KG; 223MX; 226KG; 227KG; 230KG; 231KG; 234KG; 236KG; 237KG; 242KG; 246KG; 247KG; 248KG; 252KG; 255KG; 260KG; 262KG; 264KG; 265KG; 277KG; 287KG; 290KG; 292KG; ATESEPP; BCR; Box corer (Reineck); MAXC; MaxiCorer; SO106/1; SO106/1_1516KG; SO106/1_1518KG; SO106/1_16KG; SO106/1_178KG; SO106/1_178KG2; SO106/1_179KG; SO106/1_183KG; SO106/1_183KG2; SO106/1_185KG; SO106/1_186KG; SO106/1_188KG; SO106/1_190KG; SO106/1_193KG; SO106/1_194KG; SO106/1_197KG; SO106/1_201MX; SO106/1_202KG; SO106/1_204KG; SO106/1_207KG; SO106/1_209KG; SO106/1_210MX; SO106/1_212KG; SO106/1_215KG; SO106/1_216KG; SO106/1_220KG; SO106/1_221KG; SO106/1_223KG; SO106/1_223MX; SO106/1_226KG; SO106/1_227KG; SO106/1_230KG; SO106/1_231KG; SO106/1_234KG; SO106/1_236KG; SO106/1_237KG; SO106/1_242KG; SO106/1_53KG; SO106/1_88KG; SO106/2; SO106/2_246KG; SO106/2_247KG; SO106/2_248KG; SO106/2_252KG; SO106/2_255KG; SO106/2_260KG; SO106/2_262KG; SO106/2_264KG; SO106/2_265KG; SO106/2_277KG; SO106/2_287KG; SO106/2_290KG; SO106/2_292KG; SO106/2_515KG; SO106/2_537KG; SO106/2_556KG; SO106/2_558KG; SO106/2_563KG; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 200 datasets
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  • 47
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    In:  Supplement to: Knies, Jochen; Nowaczyk, Norbert R; Müller, Claudia; Vogt, Christoph; Stein, Ruediger (2000): A multiproxy approach to reconstruct the environmental changes along the Eurasian continental margin over the last 150 000 years. Marine Geology, 163(1-4), 317-344, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(99)00106-1
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Sediment cores located along the Eurasian continental margin (Arctic Ocean) have been studied to reconstruct the environmental changes in terms of waxing and waning of the Barents/Kara Sea ice-sheets, Atlantic water inflow, and sea-ice distribution over the last 150 kyr. The stratigraphy of the cores is based on stable oxygen isotopes, AMS 14C, and paleomagnetic data. We studied variations in marine and terrigenous input by a multiproxy approach, involving direct comparison of sedimentological and organo-geochemical data. Extensive episodes of northern Barents Sea ice-sheet growth during marine isotope stages (MIS) 6 and 2 have been supported by, at least, subsurface Atlantic water inflow, moisture-bearing storms, low summer insolation, and minimal calving of ice. Ice advance during MIS 4 was probably restricted to the shallow shelf. Between MIS 4 and MIS 2, large ice-sheet fluctuations correspond to contemporary Laurentide surging events and indicate short-term climatic changes in the Arctic Ocean as has been recorded in lower latitudes. In contrast, in low precipitation areas in eastern Eurasia, glacial activity was rather limited. Only distinct ice-rafted debris (IRD) input during Termination II and early MIS 3 reflects severe glaciations on the northern Severnaya Semlya margin during MIS 6 and MIS 4. We conclude that (1) oscillations of ice-sheets are less frequent along the eastern Eurasian margin than in areas with continuous moisture supply like the western Eurasian margins and that (2) major fluctuations of the Kara Sea ice-sheet during the last 150 kyr apparently followed the major interglacial/glacial MIS 5/4 and MIS 7/6 transitions rather than the precession (23 kyr) and the tilt (41 kyr) cyclicity of the Earth's orbit as observed for the Scandinavian (SIS) and the Svalbard ice-sheets, respectively [Mangerud, J., Jansen, E., Landvik, J.Y., 1996. Late Cenozoic history of the Scandinavian and Barents Sea ice-sheets. In: Solheim, A., Riis, F., Elverhøi, A., Faleide, J.J., Jensen, L.N., Cloetingh, S. (Eds.), Impact of Glaciations on Basin Evolution: Data and Models from the Norwegian Margins and Adjacent Basins. Global and Planetary Chance, Special Issue 12, pp. 11-26.]. Surface and/or subsurface Atlantic water masses coupled with seasonally ice-free conditions penetrated continuously to at least the Franz Victoria Trough during the last 150 kyr. However, sustained periods of open water were largely restricted to substages 5.5, 5.1, and the Holocene as indicated by distinct carbonate dissolution and higher accumulation of marine organic matter (MOM). Signals of periodic open-water conditions along the northern margin of Severnaya Semlya are of less importance. Higher production of foraminifera, probably due to Atlantic water inflow occurred between 38 and 12 14C kyr and corresponds to periodic Atlantic water advection penetrating into the Arctic Ocean. However, marine organic proxies indicate a continuous decrease of surface-water productivity from the western to the eastern Eurasian continental margin due to a more extensive sea-ice cover over the last 150 kyr.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-XI/1; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Laptev Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/112; PS19 EPOS II; PS2138-1; PS2741-1; PS2782-1; PS36; PS36/028; PS36/086; SL; Svalbard
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 48
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    In:  Supplement to: Nowaczyk, Norbert R; Antonow, Martin; Knies, Jochen; Spielhagen, Robert F (2003): Further rock magnetic and chronostratigraphic results on reversal excursions during the last 50 ka as derived from northern high latitudes and discrepancies in precise AMS 14C dating. Geophysical Journal International, 155(3), 1065-1080, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.2003.02115.x
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: A total of five sediment cores from three sites, the Arctic Ocean, the Fram Strait and the Greenland Sea, yielded evidence for geomagnetic reversal excursions and associated strong lows in relative palaeointensity during oxygen isotope stages 2 and 3. A general similarity of the obtained relative palaeointensity curves to reference data can be observed. However, in the very detail, results from this high-resolution study differ from published records in a way that the prominent Laschamp excursion is clearly characterized by a significant field recovery when reaching the steepest negative inclinations, whereas only the N-R and R-N transitions are associated with the lowest values. Two subsequent excursions also reach nearly reversed inclinations but without any field recovery at that state. A total of 41 accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) 14C ages appeared to allow a better age determination of these three directional excursions and related relative palaeointensity variations. However, although the three sites yielded more or less consistent chronological as well as palaeomagnetic results a comparison to another site, PS2644 in the Iceland Sea, revealed significant divergences in the ages of the geomagnetic field excursions of up to 4 ka even on basis of uncalibrated AMS 14C ages. This shift to older 14C ages cannot be explained by a time-transgressive character of the excursions, because the distance between the sites is small when compared with the size of and the distance to the geodynamo in the Earth's outer core. The most likely explanation is a difference of reservoir ages and/or mixing with old 14C-depleted CO2 from glacier ice expelled from Greenland at site PS2644.
    Keywords: ARK-IV/3; ARK-VII/1; ARK-VIII/2; Fram Strait; GIK21535-8 PS11/430-8; GIK21878-3 PS17/050; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Norwegian Sea; Polarstern; PS11; PS1535-8; PS17; PS1878-3; PS19/112; PS19 EPOS II; PS2138-1; SL; Svalbard
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 49
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    In:  Supplement to: Teichert, Barbara M A; Eisenhauer, Anton; Bohrmann, Gerhard; Haase-Schramm, Alexandra; Bock, Barbara; Linke, Peter (2003): U/Th systematics and ages of authigenic carbonates from Hydrate Ridge, Cascadia Margin: Recorders of fluid flow variations. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 67(20), 3845-3857, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0016-7037(03)00128-5
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Uranium (U) concentrations and activity ratios (d234U) of authigenic carbonates are sensitive recorders of different fluid compositions at submarine seeps of hydrocarbon-rich fluids ("cold seeps") at Hydrate Ridge, off the coast of Oregon, USA. The low U concentrations (mean: 1.3 ± 0.4 µg/g) and high 234U values (165-317 per mil) of gas hydrate carbonates reflect the influence of sedimentary pore water indicating that these carbonates were formed under reducing conditions below or at the seafloor. Their 230Th/234U ages span a time interval from 0.8 to 6.4 ka and cluster around 1.2 and 4.7 ka. In contrast, chemoherm carbonates precipitate from marine bottom water marked by relatively high U concentrations (mean: 5.2 ± 0.8 µg/g) and a mean d234U ratio of 166 ± 3 per mil. Their U isotopes reflect the d234U ratios of the bottom water being enriched in 234U relative to normal seawater. Simple mass balance calculations based on U concentrations and their corresponding d234U ratios reveal a contribution of about 11% of sedimentary pore water to the bottom water. From the U pore water flux and the reconstructed U pore water concentration a mean flow rate of about 147 ± 68 cm/a can be estimated. 230Th/234U ages of chemoherm carbonates range from 7.3 to 267.6 ka. 230Th/234U ages of two chemoherms (Alvin and SE-Knoll chemoherm) correspond to time intervals of low sealevel stands in marine isotope stages (MIS) 2, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8. This observation indicates that fluid flow at cold seep sites sensitively reflects pressure changes of the hydraulic head in the sediments. The d18OPDB ratios of the chemoherm carbonates support the hypothesis of precipitation during glacial times. Deviations of the chemoherm d18O values from the marine d18O record can be interpreted as to reflect temporally and spatially varying bottom water and/or vent fluid temperatures during carbonate precipitation between 2.6 and 8.6°C.
    Keywords: 3424-4-A; 3428-6-A; 3429-3-A; 36/4TV-G; AT3-35B; Atlantis (1997); Bottom water sampler; BWS; Gravity corer (Kiel type); HYDROTRACE; Manipulator arm; Multicorer with television; Ocean Floor Observation System; OFOS; OFOS-6; Oregon Vent; Remote operated vehicle; ROV; ROV_MA; SL; SO109/1; SO109/1_36-4; SO143_21-2; SO143_221-2; SO143_222; SO143_55-2; SO143_55-5; SO143_56-1; SO143_60-1; SO143/1b; SO143/3; SO148/1; SO148/1_26; SO148/1_565-7; SO148/1_566-1; SO148/1_570-1; SO148/2; SO148/2_570-9; SO148/2_571-1; SO148/2_571-2; SO148/2_571-3; Sonne; TECFLUX I; TECFLUX II; Television-Grab; TVG; TVMUC
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 50
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    In:  Supplement to: Rommerskirchen, Florian; Eglinton, Geoffrey; Dupont, Lydie M; Güntner, Ute; Wenzel, Claudia; Rullkötter, Jürgen (2003): A north to south transect of Holocene southeast Atlantic continental margin sediments: Relationship between aerosol transport and compound-specific d13C land plant biomarker and pollen records. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 4(12), 1101, https://doi.org/10.1029/2003GC000541
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: We examined near-surface, late Holocene deep-sea sediments at nine sites on a north-south transect from the Congo Fan (4°S) to the Cape Basin (30°S) along the Southwest African continental margin. Contents, distribution patterns and molecular stable carbon isotope signatures of long-chain n-alkanes (C27-C33) and n-alkanols (C22-C32) are indicators of land plant vegetation of different biosynthetic types, which can be correlated with concentrations and distributions of pollen taxa in the same sediments. Calculated clusters of wind trajectories and satellite Aerosol Index imagery afford information on the source areas for the lipids and pollen on land and their transport pathways to the ocean sites. This multidisciplinary approach on an almost continental scale provides clear evidence of latitudinal differences in lipid and pollen composition paralleling the major phytogeographic zonations on the adjacent continent. Dust and smoke aerosols are mainly derived from the western and central South African hinterland dominated by deserts, semi-deserts and savannah regions rich in C4 and CAM plants. The northern sites (Congo Fan area and northern Angola Basin), which get most of their terrestrial material from the Congo Basin and the Angolan highlands, may also receive some material from the Chad region. Very little aerosol from the African continent is transported to the most southerly sites in the Cape Basin. As can be expected from the present position of the phytogeographic zones, the carbon isotopic signatures of the n-alkanes and n-alkanols both become isotopically more enriched in 13C from north to south. The results of the study suggest that this combination of pollen data and compound-specific isotope geochemical proxies can be effectively applied in the reconstruction of past continental phytogeographic developments.
    Keywords: 175-1075A; 175-1079A; 175-1082A; 175-1084A; Angola Basin; Benguela Current, South Atlantic Ocean; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; GeoB; GeoB1008-3; GeoB1016-3; GeoB1028-5; GeoB1710-3; GeoB1722-1; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Joides Resolution; Leg175; M20/2; M6/6; Meteor (1986); Namibia continental slope; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; SL; Walvis Ridge, Southeast Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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