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  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven | Supplement to: Grafenauer, Ingo (1998): Terrigener Sedimenteintrag am Ostgrönländischen Kontinentalrand - Rekonstruktion anhand von Schwermineraldaten. Diploma Thesis, Rheinisch-Westfälisch-Technische Hochschule Aachen, 94 pp, hdl:10013/epic.30823.d001
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: During the expeditions ARK-VII/1, ARK-VII/3 and ARK-Xl2 sediment cores were taken by "RV Polarstern" from the shelf and the fjords of East Greenland and the Greenland Sea. The magnetic susceptibility and heavy mineral were determined at 48 surface sediment samples from undisturbed box cores. The main objective of this study was the identification of source areas and transport processes of terrigenous sediments at the East Greenland continental margin. The results can be summarized as lollows: 1a) Magnetic susceptibility in the North Atlantic is useful to detect delivery regions of the material transported by currents. b) The magnetic susceptibility is controlled by the ferromagnetic particles of the silt fraction. c) There are four important source areas: . The ferromagnetic particles of the box core PS2644-2 are transported from the Iceland Archipelago. . The material from the Geiki-Plateau effects the magnetic susceptibility in the Scoresby Sund Basin. . The magnetic susceptibility in the shelf regions in the North are produced by material from the fjords. . The ferromagnetic particles in the Greenland Sea are derived from the Mid Atlantic Ridges in the east. d) It is possible to determine the rock type, which delivers the ferromagnetic material because of differences in magnetic susceptibility of different intensity. . The erosion of the basalts of the Geiki-Plateau and the basalts of the Mid Atlantic ridges produce the high magnetic susceptibility in the south. . The magnetic susceptibility on the shelf in the north are probably produced by erosionproducts of the gneises of East Greenland. (2a) Heavy mineral assemblages show a significant difference between material transported by the Transpolar Drift from the Eurasian shelf regions (amphiboles, clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene) and material derived from East Greenland (garnets and opaque minerals). Transport via ice is dominant. b) lt is also possible to show different petrographic provenances (volcanic and metamorphic provenances). These associations verify the source areas. c) The information of heavy mineral composition gives no more detailed hint on the rock type or rock formation in the source area, due to mixing processes, large area of investigation and the sample quantity.
    Keywords: ARK-VII/1; ARK-VII/3b; ARK-X/2; AWI_Paleo; Denmark Strait; Dickson Fjord, East Greenland; East Greenland Sea; Giant box corer; GIK21845-2 PS17/010; GIK21845-3 PS17/010; GIK21852-1 PS17/018; GIK21857-1 PS17/024; GIK21864-1 PS17/035; GIK21873-1 PS17/044; GIK21875-7 PS17/047; GIK21876-1 PS17/048; GIK21877-1 PS17/049; GIK21882-1 PS17/056; GIK21892-1 PS17/067; GIK21893-1 PS17/068; GIK21894-7 PS17/069; GIK21895-9 PS17/070a; GIK21898-6 PS17/073; GIK21900-7 PS17/075; GIK21901-1 PS17/076; GIK21903-1 PS17/078; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Greenland Shelf; Greenland Slope; Hochstetter Bugten, East Greenland; Kaiser-Franz-Josef-Fjord, East Greenland; KAL; Kasten corer; Kolbeinsey Ridge; Kong-Oskar-Fjord, East Greenland; Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Norwegian Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS17; PS17/241; PS17/245; PS17/247; PS17/248; PS17/250; PS17/251; PS17/252; PS17/260; PS17/266; PS17/274; PS17/281; PS17/285; PS17/286; PS17/289; PS1845-2; PS1845-3; PS1852-1; PS1857-1; PS1864-1; PS1873-1; PS1875-7; PS1876-1; PS1877-1; PS1882-1; PS1892-1; PS1893-1; PS1894-7; PS1895-9; PS1898-6; PS1900-7; PS1901-1; PS1903-1; PS1918-2; PS1922-2; PS1923-1; PS1924-2; PS1926-2; PS1927-1; PS1928-1; PS1931-1; PS1935-1; PS1939-1; PS1943-1; PS1946-1; PS1947-1; PS1947-2; PS1950-1; PS2613-1; PS2616-7; PS2619-6; PS2621-3; PS2622-4; PS2625-1; PS2629-2; PS2631-2; PS2632-7; PS2634-5; PS2638-6; PS2639-2; PS2641-5; PS2643-5; PS2644-2; PS2645-5; PS31; PS31/113; PS31/116; PS31/122; PS31/127; PS31/128; PS31/131; PS31/137; PS31/140; PS31/141; PS31/143; PS31/150; PS31/151; PS31/154; PS31/156; PS31/160; PS31/161; Scoresby Sund; SL; Vesteris Banken
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 20 datasets
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Fütterer, Dieter K; Grobe, Hannes; Frederichs, Thomas (2002): No evidence for a Pleistocene collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet from continental margin sediments recovered in the Amundsen Sea. Geo-Marine Letters, 22(2), 51-59, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00367-002-0097-7
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Records of glaciomarine deposition recovered from the West Antarctic continental margin in the Amundsen Sea allow the reconstruction of the behaviour of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) in response to the natural climatic changes of the last 1.8 million years. Contents of gravel-sized and lithogenic components represent the input and redeposition of glaciogenic debris, whereas variations in the proportions of the calcareous sediment fraction reflect palaeoproductivity changes. All proxies, which are regarded as sensitive to a WAIS collapse, changed markedly during the global climatic cycles, but do not confirm a complete disintegration of the WAIS during the Pleistocene.
    Keywords: Adelaide Island; Amundsen Sea; Antarctic Peninsula; ANT-VI/2; ANT-XI/3; Anvers Island; Argentine Islands; AWI_Paleo; Bellingshausen Sea; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Marguerite Bay; MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS12; PS12/185; PS12/186; PS12/193; PS12/194; PS12/195; PS12/196; PS12/199; PS12/200; PS1554-1; PS1555-1; PS1557-1; PS1558-1; PS1559-1; PS1560-1; PS1563-1; PS1564-1; PS2522-1; PS2524-1; PS2525-1; PS2526-1; PS2527-1; PS2528-1; PS2529-1; PS2531-1; PS2532-2; PS2533-1; PS2534-2; PS2537-1; PS2538-1; PS2539-2; PS2540-1; PS2541-2; PS2542-1; PS2543-3; PS2544-1; PS2545-1; PS2546-1; PS2547-2; PS2547-3; PS2548-2; PS2550-2; PS2551-1; PS2553-2; PS2556-1; PS29; PS29/010; PS29/012; PS29/016; PS29/018; PS29/021; PS29/022; PS29/024; PS29/033; PS29/039; PS29/040; PS29/042; PS29/045; PS29/046; PS29/047; PS29/048; PS29/049; PS29/050; PS29/051; PS29/054; PS29/057; PS29/062; PS29/063; PS29/064; PS29/066; PS29/067; PS29/070; PS29/075; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Rüggeberg, Andres; Dullo, Wolf-Christian; Dorschel, Boris; Hebbeln, Dierk (2007): Environmental changes and growth history of a cold-water carbonate mound (Propeller Mound, Porcupine Seabight). International Journal of Earth Sciences, 96(1), 57-72, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00531-005-0504-1
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: On- and off-mound sediment cores from Propeller Mound (Hovland Mound province, Porcupine Seabight) were analysed to understand better the evolution of a carbonate mound. The evaluation of benthic foraminiferal assemblages from the off-mound position helps to determine the changes of the environmental controls on Propeller Mound in glacial and interglacial times. Two different assemblages describe the Holocene and Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 2 and late MIS 3 (~31 kyr BP). The different assemblages are related to changes in oceanographic conditions, surface productivity and the waxing and waning of the British Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) during the last glacial stages. The interglacial assemblage is related to a higher supply of organic material and stronger current intensities in water depth of recent coral growth. During the last glaciation the benthic faunas showed high abundances of cassidulinid species, implying cold bottom waters and a reduced availability of organic matter. High sedimentation rates and the domination of Elphidium excavatum point to shelf erosion related to sea-level lowering (~50 m) and the progradation of the BIIS onto the shelf. A different assemblage described for the on-mound core is dominated by Discanomalina coronata, Gavelinopsis translucens, Planulina ariminensis, Cibicides lobatulus and to a lower degree by Hyrrokkin sarcophaga. These species are only found or show significantly higher relative abundances in on-mound samples and their maximum contribution in the lower part of the record indicates a higher coral growth density on Propeller Mound in an earlier period. They are less abundant during the Holocene, however. This dataset portrays the boundary conditions of the habitable range for the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa, which dominates the deep-water reefal ecosystem on the upper flanks of Propeller Mound. The growth of this ecosystem occurs during interglacial and interstadial periods, whereas a retreat of corals is documented in the absence of glacial sediments on-mound. Glacial conditions with cold intermediate waters, a weak current regime and high sedimentation rates provide an unfavourable environmental setting for Lophelia corals to grow. A Late Pleistocene decrease is observed in the mound growth for Propeller Mound, which might face its complete burial in the future, as it already happened to the buried mounds of the Magellan Mound province further north.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; ECOMOUND; Environmental controls on mound formation along the european margin; GeoB6725-1; GeoB6730-1; Gravity corer (Kiel type); MARUM; Porcupine Seabight; POS265; POS485-1; POS490-1; Poseidon; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wollenburg, Jutta Erika; Mackensen, Andreas (1998): On the vertical distribution of living (Rose Bengal stained) benthic foraminifers in the Arctic Ocean. Journal of Foraminiferal Research, 28(4), 268-285
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The vertical distribution of living (Rose Bengal stained) benthic foraminifers was determined in the upper 15 cm of sediment cores taken along transects extending from the continental shelf of Spitsbergen through the Eurasian Basin of the Arctic Ocean. Cores taken by a multiple corer were raised from 50 stations with water depths between 94 and 4427 m, from areas with moderate primary production values to areas that are among the least productive ones in the world. We believe, that in the Arctic Ocean the vertical distribution of living foraminifers is determined by the restricted availability of food. Live foraminiferal faunas are dominated by potentially infaunal species or epifaunal species. Species confined to the infaunal microhabitat are absent in Arctic sediments that we examined, and predominantly infaunal living species are nowhere dominant. In general, an infaunal mode of life is restricted to the seasonally ice-free areas and thus to areas with at least moderate primary production during the summer period. Under the permanent ice cover living species are usually restricted to the top centimeter of the sediment surface, even though some are able to dwell deeper in the sediment under ice-free conditions.
    Keywords: ANT-X/4; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Giant box corer; GKG; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; MIC; MiniCorer; MUC; MultiCorer; Nansen Basin; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/111; PS19/113; PS19/114; PS19/117; PS19/150; PS19/152; PS19/154; PS19/157; PS19/175; PS19/178; PS19/190; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19/252; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS21 06AQANTX_4; PS2137-1; PS2139-1; PS2140-1; PS2143-1; PS2157-3; PS2159-3; PS2161-1; PS2163-1; PS2177-3; PS2179-3; PS2187-5; PS2212-6; PS2213-4; PS2214-1; PS2215-1; PS2247-1; PS2445-2; PS2446-2; PS27; PS27/019; PS27/020; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; South Atlantic; Svalbard; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 18 datasets
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schlüter, Michael (1990): Zur Frühdiagenese von organischem Kohlenstoff und Opal in Sedimenten des südlichen und östlichen Weddellmeeres. Geochemische Analyse und Modellierung (Early diagenesis of organic carbon and opal in sediments of the southern and eastern Weddell Sea. Geochemical analysis and modelling). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 73, 156 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0073_1990
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: During the ANT V14 (1986187) and ANT V113 (1987188) cruises of R.V. Polarstern sedirnents from the eastern, southern and central Weddell Sea were sarnpled with a boxcorer andlor a multicorer. The 24 sampling locations are distributed over the whole depth range, from shelf to pelagic environments. Porewater concentrations of aluminium, fluoride, manganese, nitrate, nitrite, oxygen and silicate, the pH and the alkalinity were measured. Of the sediment the opal, calcium carbonate and organic carbon content were quantified. The 210Pb-profile was measured for three sedirnent cores. This investigation deals with the estimation of the amounts of opal and organic carbon (Corg) that are transported into the sediment, the regional distribution of these flux rates and the early diagenetic processes that control the preservation of organic carbon and opal in the sediment. The flux and degradation rates of organic carbon were determined by modelling the rneasured oxygen and nitrate profiles. The highest flux and degradation rates were found in the eastern shelf sediments. Due to the high Corg-flux (〉500 mmol C m**-2 a-1) in this area the oxic environment is restricted to the upper 3 cm of the sediment. In contrast to this, the oxic Zone in the pelagic sedirnents of the Weddell Sea has probably an extension of a few meters. The Corg-flux here, computed from the flux of nitrate throug h the sedimentlwater-interface, is less than 50 mmol C m**-2 a**-1. The flux of organic carbon into the sediments of the continental slope area is usually intermediate between the values computed for the shelf and pelagic sediments. Exceptions are the continental slope region north of Halley Bay. In these sediments the measured oxygen and nitrate profiles indicate a relatively high organic carbon flux. This could be a result of the recurrent development of a coastal polynia in this area. The bioturbation rate determined in this region by a 210Pb-profile is 0,019 cm**2 a**-1. In the Weddell Sea the opal content at the sediment surface (0-1 cm depth) varies between 0,1 and 7 %-wt. These opal concentrations are rnuch lower than the opal contents determined for the sediments of the ROSS Sea by Ledford-Hoffmann et al. (1986 doi:10.1016/0016-7037(86)90263-2). Therefore the importance of the Antarctic shelf regions for the global silica cycle as stated by Ledford-Hoffmann et al. (1986) has to be reconsidered. The regional distribution of the opal content and the computed opal flux rates are correlated with the organic carbon flux rates. The processes controlling the preservation of opal are discussed based On the measured aluminium and silicate concentrations in the Pore water and the opal content of the sediment.The depth distribution of the Si- and Al-concentration of the porewater indicates that the reconstitution of clay minerals takes place in the immediate vicinity of the sediment-water nterface. A characterization of these minerals e.g. the estimation of the Si/AI-ratio (Mackin and Aller, 1984 a doi:10.1016/0016-7037(84)90251-5, 1984 b doi:10.1016/0016-7037(84)90252-7) is not possible. With the program WATEQ2 saturation indices are computed to estimate which minerals could reconstitute. In this context the applicability of programs like WATEQ2 for computations of the species distribution and saturation indices in solutions with the ionic strength of sea water is investigated.
    Keywords: ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; Atka Bay; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; Camp Norway; Eastern Weddell Sea, Southern Ocean; Filchner Trough; Giant box corer; GKG; Halley Bay; Kapp Norvegia; Lyddan Island; Maud Rise; MG; ms_opal; MUC; Multiboxcorer; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS10; PS10/672; PS10/673; PS10/675; PS10/678; PS10/684; PS10/686; PS10/690; PS10/699; PS10/701; PS10/703; PS10/707; PS10/711; PS10/719; PS10/725; PS10/738; PS10/748; PS10/757; PS10/766; PS10/778; PS10/782; PS10/784; PS10/804; PS10/818; PS10/820; PS10/824; PS12; PS12/289; PS12/300; PS12/302; PS12/305; PS12/310; PS12/312; PS12/319; PS12/336; PS12/338; PS12/340; PS12/344; PS12/348; PS12/352; PS12/366; PS12/368; PS12/374; PS12/380; PS12/382; PS12/458; PS12/465; PS12/472; PS12/486; PS12/490; PS12/510; PS12/526; PS1472-4; PS1473-1; PS1474-1; PS1475-1; PS1477-1; PS1478-1; PS1480-2; PS1483-2; PS1484-2; PS1485-1; PS1486-2; PS1487-1; PS1488-2; PS1489-3; PS1490-2; PS1492-1; PS1493-2; PS1496-2; PS1498-1; PS1499-2; PS1500-2; PS1502-1; PS1507-2; PS1508-2; PS1509-2; PS1587-1; PS1590-1; PS1591-2; PS1593-1; PS1595-2; PS1596-1; PS1596-2; PS1599-1; PS1599-2; PS1605-2; PS1605-3; PS1606-1; PS1606-2; PS1607-1; PS1607-2; PS1609-2; PS1611-1; PS1611-4; PS1613-2; PS1613-3; PS1619-1; PS1620-2; PS1622-1; PS1622-2; PS1625-1; PS1625-2; PS1626-1; PS1635-2; PS1635-3; PS1636-1; PS1636-2; PS1637-2; PS1638-1; PS1638-2; PS1638-3; PS1639-1; PS1639-2; PS1643-3; PS1645-1; PS1645-2; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; van Veen Grab; Vestkapp; VGRAB; Weddell Sea; Wegener Canyon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 106 datasets
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  • 6
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Weber, Michael E; Pisias, Nicklas G (1999): Spatial and temporal distribution of biogenic carbonate and opal in deep-sea sediments from the eastern equatorial Pacific: implications for ocean history since 1.3 Ma. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 174(1-2), 59-73, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0012-821X(99)00248-4
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: High-resolution records of glacial-interglacial variations in biogenic carbonate, opal, and detritus (derived from non-destructive core log measurements of density, P-wave velocity and color; r 〉= 0.9) from 15 sediment sites in the eastern equatorial (sampling resolution is ~1 kyr) clear response to eccentricity and precession forcing. For the Peru Basin, we generate a high-resolution (21 kyr increment) orbitally-based chronology for the last 1.3 Ma. Spectral analysis indicates that the 100 kyr cycle became dominant at roughly 1.2 Ma, 200-300 kyr earlier than reported for other paleoclimatic records. The response to orbital forcing is weaker since the Mid-Brunhes Dissolution Event (at 400 ka). A west-east reconstruction of biogenic sedimentation in the Peru Basin (four cores; 91-85°W) distinguishes equatorial and coastal upwelling systems in the western and eastern sites, respectively. A north-south reconstruction perpendicular to the equatorial upwelling system (11 cores, 11°N-°3S) shows high carbonate contents (〉= 50%) between 6°N and 4°S and highly variable opal contents between 2°N and 4°S. Carbonate cycles B-6, B-8, B-10, B-12, B-14, M-2, and M-6 are well developed with B-10 (430 ka) as the most prominent cycle. Carbonate highs during glacials and glacial-interglacial transitions extended up to 400 km north and south compared to interglacial or interglacial^glacial carbonate lows. Our reconstruction thus favors glacial-interglacial expansion and contraction of the equatorial upwelling system rather than shifting north or south. Elevated accumulation rates are documented near the equator from 6°N to 4°S and from 2°N to 4°S for carbonate and opal, respectively. Accumulation rates are higher during glacials and glacial-interglacial transitions in all cores, whereas increased dissolution is concentrated on Peru Basin sediments close to the carbonate compensation depth and occurred during interglacials or interglacial-glacial transitions.
    Keywords: 181KL; 184KL; 189KL; 206KL; 217KL; 222SL; 229KL; 235KL; 243KL; 244KA; 249KL; 251KL; 254KL; 261KA; 268KA; 272KA; 276KL; 278KA; 286KL; ATESEPP; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; KL; Peru Basin; Piston corer (BGR type); SEDIPERU - TUSCH; SL; SO106/1; SO106/1_181KL; SO106/1_184KL; SO106/1_189KL; SO106/1_206KL; SO106/1_217KL; SO106/1_222SL; SO106/1_229KL; SO106/1_235KL; SO106/2; SO106/2_243KL; SO106/2_244KA; SO106/2_249KL; SO106/2_251KL; SO106/2_254KL; SO106/2_261KA; SO106/2_268KA; SO106/2_272KA; SO106/2_276KL; SO106/2_278KA; SO106/2_286KL; SO79; SO79_108KL; SO79_136KL; SO79_164KL; SO79_169KL; SO79_26KL; SO79_48KL; SO79_53KL; SO79_71KL; SO79_77KL; SO79_82KL; SO79_85KL; SO79_9KL; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 37 datasets
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Höll, Christine; Zonneveld, Karin A F; Willems, Helmut (1998): On the ecology of calcareous dinoflagellates: The Quaternary Eastern Equatorial Atlantic. Marine Micropaleontology, 33(1-2), 1-25, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(97)00033-9
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Sediments of the Equatorial Atlantic (core GeoB 1105-4) have been investigated for both calcareous dinoflagellates and organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts. In order to determine the ecological affinity of calcareous dinoflagellates the statistical methods of Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA) and Redundancy Analysis (RDA) were used. Utilising DCA, distribution patterns of calcareous dinoflagellates have been compared with those of the ecologically much better known organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts. This method was also used to determine which environmental gradients have a major influence on the species composition. By using existing environmental information based on benthic and planktic foraminifera, such as Sea Surface Temperature (SST) and stable oxygen and carbon isotopes, as well as information on the amount of Calcium Carbonate and Total Organic Carbon (TOC) in bottom sediments, these gradients could be interpreted in terms of productivity and glacial-interglacial trends. Using RDA, the direct relationships between the distribution patterns of calcareous dinoflagellates with the above mentioned external variables could be determined. For the studied region and time interval (141-6.7 ka) the calcareous dinoflagellates show enhanced abundances in periods with reduced productivity most probably related to decreased divergence and relatively stratified, oligotrophic oceanic conditions.
    Keywords: Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB1105-4; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M9/4; Meteor (1986); SFB261; SL; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London | Supplement to: Cronan, David S (1976): Basal metalliferous sediments from the eastern Pacific. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 87(6), 928-934, https://doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1976)87%3C928:BMSFTE%3E2.0.CO;2
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Analyses by atomic absorption spectrophotometry and spark-source mass spectrography of 25 basal metalliferous sediment units from widely spaced locations on the western flank of the East Pacific Rise show that the deposits are enriched relative to normal pelagic sediment in Fe, Mn, Ni, Cu, Pb, Zn, and many trace elements. The elements are partitioned differently between the various mineralogic constituents of the sediment, with Fe and Mn largely in separate phases and many of the remaining elements primarily associated with reducible ferromanganese oxide minerals but also with iron minerals and other phases. Most of the iron in the deposits is probably of volcanic origin, and much of the manganese and minor elements is derived from sea water. The bulk composition of the deposits varies with age; this is thought to be due to variations in the incidence of volcanic activity at the East Pacific Rise crest where the deposits were formed.
    Keywords: 16-162; 5-37; 5-38; 5-39; 7-66; 8-74; 8-75; 9-77B; 9-78; 9-80; 9-82; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Glomar Challenger; Leg16; Leg5; Leg7; Leg8; Leg9; North Pacific/BASIN; North Pacific/CONT RISE; North Pacific/HILL; South Pacific/BASIN; South Pacific/CONT RISE; South Pacific/VALLEY
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Frank, Martin; Eisenhauer, Anton; Bonn, Wolfgang J; Walter, Peter; Grobe, Hannes; Kubik, Peter W; Dittrich-Hannen, Beate; Mangini, Augusto (1995): Sediment redistribution versus paleoproductivity change: Weddell Sea margin sediment stratigraphy and biogenic particle flux of the last 250,000 years deduced from 230Thex, 10Be and biogenic barium profiles. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 136(3-4), 559-573, https://doi.org/10.1016/0012-821X(95)00161-5
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: High resolution 230Thex and 10Be and biogenic barium profiles were measured at three sediment gravity cores (length 605-850 cm) from the Weddell Sea continental margin. Applying the 230Thex dating method, average sedimentation rates of 3 cm/kyr for the two cores from the South Orkney Slope and of 2.4 cm/kyr for the core from the eastern Weddell Sea were determined and compared to delta18O and lithostratigraphic results. Strong variations in the radionuclide concentrations in the sediments resembling the glacial/interglacial pattern of the delta18O stratigraphy and the 10Be stratigraphy of high northern latitudes were used for establishing a chronostratigraphy. Biogenic Ba shows a pattern similar to the radionuclide profiles, suggesting that both records were influenced by increased paleoproductivity at the beginning of the interglacials. However, 230Thex0 fluxes (0 stands for initial) exceeding production by up to a factor of 4 suggest that sediment redistribution processes, linked to variations in bottom water current velocity, played the major role in controlling the radionuclide and biogenic barium deposition during isotope stages 5e and 1. The correction for sediment focusing makes the 'true' vertical paleoproductivity rates, deduced from the fluxes of proxy tracers like biogenic barium, much lower than previously estimated. Very low 230Thex0 concentrations and fluxes during isotope stage 6 were probably caused by rapid deposition of older, resedimented material, delivered to the Weddell Sea continental slopes by the grounded ice shelves and contemporaneous erosion of particles originating from the water column.
    Keywords: ANT-II/3; ANT-IV/3; ANT-VI/3; Atka Bay; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS04; PS04/257; PS08; PS08/366; PS1170-3; PS12; PS12/248; PS1388-3; PS1575-1; SL; South Atlantic Ocean; South Orkney
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Salisbury, Matthew H; Christensen, Nikolas I (1973): Progressive weathering of submarine basalt with age: further evidence of sea-floor spreading. Geology, 1(2), 63 - 64, https://doi.org/10.1130/0091-7613(1973)1%3C63:PWOSBW%3E2.0.CO;2
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Densities of layer 2 basalt recovered during the Deep Sea Drilling Project have been found to decrease steadily with age, a finding ascribed to progressive submarine weathering in the context of sea-floor spreading. The least-squares solution for 52 density measurements gives a rate of decrease in density of (Delta p)/(Delta t) = -0.0046 g per ccm m.y. = -16 percent per 100 m.y., which is in excellent agreement with earlier estimates based on observed chemical depletion rates of dredged oceanic basalt. Weathering of sea-floor basalt, should it penetrate to any considerable depth in layer 2, will decrease layer 2 seismic refraction velocities, act as a source of geothermal heat, and substantially influence the chemistry of sea water and the overlying column of sediment.
    Keywords: 14-136; 14-137; 14-138; 14-141; 2-10; 3-14; 3-15; 3-18; 3-19; 4-23; 5-32; 5-36; 6-54; 6-57; 7-61; 7-63; 7-66; 9-77B; 9-79; 9-82; 9-83; 9-84; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Glomar Challenger; Leg14; Leg2; Leg3; Leg4; Leg5; Leg6; Leg7; Leg9; North Atlantic/CONT RISE; North Atlantic/DIAPIR; North Atlantic/HILL; North Pacific; North Pacific/BASIN; North Pacific/HILL; North Pacific/Philippine Sea/RIDGE; North Pacific/PLAIN; North Pacific/RIDGE; North Pacific/VALLEY; South Atlantic/CONT RISE; South Atlantic/HILL; South Atlantic/PLAIN; South Atlantic/RIDGE
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 22 datasets
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  • 11
    facet.materialart.
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Cheng, Xinrong; Huang, Baoqi; Jian, Zhimin; Zhao, Quanhong; Tian, Jun; Li, Jianru (2005): Foraminiferal isotopic evidence for monsoonal activity in the South China Sea: a present-LGM comparison. Marine Micropaleontology, 54(1-2), 125-139, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2004.09.007
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The relationship between planktonic and benthic foraminiferal stable-isotope values and oceanographic conditions and factors controlling isotopic variations are discussed on the basis of oxygen and carbon isotopic analyses of 192 modern surface and Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) samples from the South China Sea (SCS). The harmonic variation of benthic delta18O in surface sediments with water depth and temperature implies that the temperature is the main factor influencing benthic delta18O variations. Planktonic delta18O fluctuates with sea surface temperature (SST) and salinity (SSS). The N-S temperature gradient results in planktonic delta18O decreasing from the northeast to the south. Cool, saline waters driven by the winter monsoon are interpreted to have been responsible for the high delta18O values in the northeast SCS. The East Asian monsoons not only bring nutrients into the South China Sea and maintain high nutrient concentration levels at the southwestern and northeastern ends, which cause depleted delta13C both in planktonic (surface) and benthic (bottom) samples but also reduce planktonic/benthic delta18O differences. The distribution of delta18O and delta13C in the surface and LGM samples are strikingly similar, indicating that the impact of SST and SSS has been maintained, and nutrient inputs, mainly from the northeastern and southwestern ends, have been controlled by monsoons since the LGM. Comparisons of the modern and LGM delta18O indicate a difference of about 3.6 °C in bottom-water temperature and a large surface-to-bottom temperature gradient during the LGM as compared to today.
    Keywords: 184-1143; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Giant box corer; GIK17920-1; GIK17921-1; GIK17924-1; GIK17925-2; GIK17926-2; GIK17927-1; GIK17928-2; GIK17929-1; GIK17930-1; GIK17931-1; GIK17932-1; GIK17933-2; GIK17934-1; GIK17935-2; GIK17937-1; GIK17938-1; GIK17939-1; GIK17940-1; GIK17941-1; GIK17942-1; GIK17943-1; GIK17944-1; GIK17945-1; GIK17946-1; GIK17947-2; GIK17948-1; GIK17949-1; GIK17950-1; GIK17951-1; GIK17952-2; GIK17954-1; GIK17955-1; GIK17956-1; GIK17957-1; GIK17958-1; GIK17959-1; GIK17960-1; GIK17961-1; GIK17962-1; GIK17963-2; GIK17964-1; GIK17965-1; GIK18267-1; GIK18268-1; GIK18284-2; GIK18285-1; GIK18286-1; GIK18287-1; GIK18288-1; GIK18289-1; GIK18290-1; GIK18291-1; GIK18292-1; GIK18293-1; GIK18294-1; GKG; Joides Resolution; Leg184; MONITOR MONSUN; MUC; MultiCorer; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; SO115; SO115_20; SO115_21; SO115_37; SO115_38; SO115_39; SO115_40; SO115_41; SO115_42; SO115_43; SO115_44; SO115_45; SO115_46; SO115_47; SO95; Sonne; South China Sea; SUNDAFLUT; Sunda Shelf
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 12
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Boucsein, Bettina; Stein, Ruediger (2008): Black shale formation in the late Paleocene/early Eocene Arctic Ocean and paleoenvironmental conditions: New results from a detailed organic petrological study. Marine and Petroleum Geology, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2008.04.001
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The study of particulate organic matter (OM) in Arctic Ocean sediments from the Late Cretaceous to the Eocene (IODP Expedition 302) has revealed detailed information about the aquatic/marine OM fluxes, biological sources, preservation and export of terrestrial material. Here, we present detailed data from maceral analysis, vitrinite reflectance measurements and organic geochemistry. During the Campanian/Paleocene, fluxes of land-derived OM are indicated by reworked and oxidized macerals (vitrinite, inertinite) and terrigenous liptinite (cutinite, sporinite). In the Early Eocene, drastic environmental changes are indicated by peaks in aquatic OM (up to 40-45%, lamalginite, telalginite, liptodetrinite, dinoflagellate cysts) and amorphous OM (up to 50% bituminite). These events of increased aquatic OM flux, similar to conditions favoring black shale deposition, correlate with the global d13C events "Paleocene/Eocene Thermal Maximum" (PETM) and "Elmo-event". Freshwater discharge and proximity of the source area are documented by freshwater algae material (Pediastrum, Botryococcus) and immature land-plant material (corphuminite, textinite). We consider that erosion of coal-bearing sediments during transgression time lead to humic acids release as a source for bituminite deposited in the Early Eocene black shales.
    Keywords: 302-M0004A; ACEX-M4A; Amundsen Basin; Arctic Coring Expedition, ACEX; Arctic Ocean; ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; CCGS Captain Molly Kool (Vidar Viking); Exp302; Giant box corer; GKG; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program / International Ocean Discovery Program; IODP; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/175; PS19/186; PS19/189; PS19/190; PS19/194; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2177-1; PS2185-3; PS2186-5; PS2187-1; PS2190-3
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 13
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Lindemann, Frank (1998): Sedimente im arktischen Meereis - Eintrag, Charakterisierung und Quantifizierung (Sediments in arctic sea ice - entrainment, characterization and quantification). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 283, 124 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0283_1998
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Sediments in Arctic sea ice are important for erosion and redistribution and consequently a factor for the sediment budget of the Arctic Ocean. The processes leading to the incorporation of sediments into the ice are not understood in detail yet. In the present study, experiments on the incorporation of sediments were therefore conducted in ice tanks of The Hamburg Ship Model Basin (HSVA) in winter 1996/1997, These experiments showed that on average 75 % of the artificial sea-ice sediments were located in the brine-channel system. The sediments were scavenged from the water column by frazil ice. Sediments functioning as a nucleus for the formation of frazil ice were less important for the incorporation. Filtration in grease ice during relatively calm hydrodynamic conditions was probably an effective process to enrich sediments in the ice. Wave fields did not play an important role for the incorporation of sediments into the artificial sea ice. During the expedition TRANSDRIFT III (TDIII, October 1995), different types of natural, newly-formed sea ice (grease ice, nilas and young ice) were sampled in the inner Laptev Sea at the time of freeze-up. The incorporation of sediments took place during calm meteorological conditions then. The characteristics of the clay mineral assemblages of these sedirnents served as references for sea-ice sediments which were sampled from first-year drift ice in the outer Laptev Sea and the adjacent Arctic Ocean during the POLARSTERN expedition ARK-XI/1 (July-September 1995). Based on the clay mineral assemblages, probable incorporation areas for the sedirnents in first-year drift ice could be statistically reconstructed in the inner Laptev Sea (eastern, central, and Western Laptev Sea) as well as in adjacent regions. Comparing the amounts of particulate organic carbon (POC) in sea-ice sediments and in surface sediments from the shelves of potential incorporation areas often reveals higher values in sea-ice sediments (TDIII: 3.6 %DM; ARK-XI/1: 2.3 %DM). This enrichment of POC is probably due to the incorporation process into the sea ice, as could be deducted from maceral analysis and Rock-Eval pyrolysis. Both methods were applied in the present study to particulate organic material (POM) from sea-ice sediments for the first time. It was shown that the POM of the sea-ice sediments from the Laptev Sea and the adjacent Arctic Ocean was dominated by reworked, strongly fragmented, allochthonous (terrigenous) material. This terrigenous component accounted for more than 75 % of all counted macerals. The autochthonous (marine) component was also strongly fragmented, and higher in the sediments from newly-formed sea ice (24 % of all counted macerals) as compared to first-year drift ice (17 % of all counted macerals). Average hydroge indices confirmed this pattern and were in the transition zone between kerogen types II and III (TDIII: 275 mg KW/g POC; ARK-XI/1: 200 mg KW/g POC). The sediment loads quantified in natural sea ice (TDIII: 33.6 mg/l, ARK-XI/1: 49.0 mg/l) indicated that sea-ice sediments are an important factor for the sediment budget in the Laptev Sea. In particular during the incorporation phase in autumn and early winter, about 12 % of the sediment load imported annually by rivers into the Laptev Sea can be incorporated into sea ice and redistributed during calm meteorological conditions. Single entrainment events can incorporate about 35 % of the river input into the sea ice (ca. 9 x 10**6 t) and export it via the Transpolar Drift from the Eurasian shelf to the Fram Strait.
    Keywords: 201; 205b; 208; 209; 210; 219; 221; 228a; 228b; 229; 230; 232b; 234; 237; 239; 240; 241; 242; 246; 283-1; 283-4; 285-1; 286-1; 287-1; 287-2; 288-2; 288-4; 290-1; 291-1; 291-3; 292-1; 292-2; 293-1; 293-2; 293-3; 293-4; 293-5; 293-6; 293-7; 294-1; 294-2; 294-3; 294-4; 294-6; 295-1; 295-2; 295-3; 295-4; 295-5; 295-6; 296-1; 296-2; 296-5; 296-6; Arctic Ocean; ARK-XI/1; ARK-XI/1_201; ARK-XI/1_205b; ARK-XI/1_208; ARK-XI/1_209; ARK-XI/1_210; ARK-XI/1_219; ARK-XI/1_221; ARK-XI/1_228a; ARK-XI/1_228b; ARK-XI/1_229; ARK-XI/1_230; ARK-XI/1_232b; ARK-XI/1_234; ARK-XI/1_237; ARK-XI/1_239; ARK-XI/1_240; ARK-XI/1_241; ARK-XI/1_242; ARK-XI/1_246; East Siberian Sea; ICE; Ice station; Kapitan Dranitsyn; Laptev Sea; Polarstern; PS36; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; TDIII_283-1; TDIII_283-4; TDIII_285-1; TDIII_286-1; TDIII_287-1; TDIII_287-2; TDIII_288-2; TDIII_288-4; TDIII_290-1; TDIII_291-1; TDIII_291-3; TDIII_292-1; TDIII_292-2; TDIII_293-1; TDIII_293-2; TDIII_293-3; TDIII_293-4; TDIII_293-5; TDIII_293-6; TDIII_293-7; TDIII_294-1; TDIII_294-2; TDIII_294-3; TDIII_294-4; TDIII_294-6; TDIII_295-1; TDIII_295-2; TDIII_295-3; TDIII_295-4; TDIII_295-5; TDIII_295-6; TDIII_296-1; TDIII_296-2; TDIII_296-5; TDIII_296-6; Transdrift-III
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 14
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Grobe, Hannes; Fütterer, Dieter K; Spieß, Volkhard (1990): Oligocene to Quaternary sedimentation processes on the Antarctic continental margin, ODP Leg 113, Site 693. In: Barker, PF; Kennett, JP; et al. (eds.), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 113, 121-131, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.113.193.1990
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Oligocene to Quaternary sediments were recovered from the Antarctic continental margin in the eastern Weddell Sea during ODP Leg 113 and Polarstern expedition ANT-VI. Clay mineral composition and grain size distribution patterns are useful for distinguishing sediments that have been transported by ocean currents from those that were ice-rafted. This, in turn, has assisted in providing insights about the changing late Paleogene to Neogene sedimentary environment as the cryosphere developed in Antarctica. During the middle Oligocene, increasing glacial conditions on the continent are indicated by the presence of glauconite sands, that are interpreted to have formed on the shelf and then transported down the continental slope by advancing glaciers or as a result of sea-level lowering. The dominance of illite and a relatively high content of chlorite suggest predominantly physical weathering conditions on the continent. The high content of biogenic opal from the late Miocene to the late Pliocene resulted from increased upwelling processes at the continental margin due to increased wind strength related to global cooling. Partial melting of the ice-sheet occurred during an early Pliocene climate optimum as is shown by an increasing supply of predominantly current-derived sediment with a low mean grain size and peak values of smectite. Primary productivity decreased at ~ 3 Ma due to the development of a permanent sea-ice cover close to the continent. Late Pleistocene sediments are characterized by planktonic foraminifers and biogenic opal, concentrated in distinct horizons reflecting climatic cycles. Isotopic analysis of AT. pachyderma produced a stratigraphy which resulted in a calculated sedimentation rate of 1 cm/k.y. during the Pleistocene. Primary productivity was highest during the last three interglacial maxima and decreased during glacial episodes as a result of increasing sea-ice coverage.
    Keywords: 113-690B; 113-693B; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; AWI_Paleo; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Joides Resolution; Kapp Norvegia; Leg113; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS10; PS10/694; PS12; PS12/302; PS1481-3; PS1591-1; SL; South Atlantic Ocean; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 15
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mix, Alan C; Morey, Ann E; Pisias, Nicklas G; Hostetler, Steven W (1999): Foraminiferal faunal estimates of paleotemperature: Circumventing the no-analog problem yields cool ice age tropics. Paleoceanography, 14(3), 350-359, https://doi.org/10.1029/1999PA900012
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The sensitivity of the tropics to climate change, particularly the amplitude of glacial-to-interglacial changes in sea surface temperature (SST), is one of the great controversies in paleoclimatology. Here we reassess faunal estimates of ice age SSTs, focusing on the problem of no-analog planktonic foraminiferal assemblages in the equatorial oceans that confounds both classical transfer function and modern analog methods. A new calibration strategy developed here, which uses past variability of species to define robust faunal assemblages, solves the no-analog problem and reveals ice age cooling of 5° to 6°C in the equatorial current systems of the Atlantic and eastern Pacific Oceans. Classical transfer functions underestimated temperature changes in some areas of the tropical oceans because core-top assemblages misrepresented the ice age faunal assemblages. Our finding is consistent with some geochemical estimates and model predictions of greater ice age cooling in the tropics than was inferred by Climate: Long-Range Investigation, Mapping, and Prediction (CLIMAP) [1981] and thus may help to resolve a long-standing controversy. Our new foraminiferal transfer function suggests that such cooling was limited to the equatorial current systems, however, and supports CLIMAP's inference of stability of the subtropical gyre centers.
    Keywords: 138-846B; A150/180; A152-84; A153-154; A15-547TW; A15-552TW; A15-558; A15-558P; A15-558TW; A15-559FF; A15-572FF; A15-585GC; A15-586TW; A15-590GC; A15-591GC; A15-592FF; A15-596FF; A15-597A; A15-597B; A15-600FF; A15-602FF; A15-612GC; A15-614TW; A15-618GC; A156-4; A157-3; A164-13; A164-15; A164-16; A164-17; A164-23; A164-24; A164-5; A164-6; A164-61; A167-12; A167-13; A167-14; A167-18TW; A167-1TW; A172-1; A172-2; A173-4; A179-13; A179-15; A179-20; A179-24; A179-6; A179-7; A180-13; A180-15; A180-16; A180-20; A180-32; A180-39; A180-47; A180-47PC; A180-48; A180-48PC; A180-56; A180-69; A180-70; A180-72; A180-73; A180-74; A180-76; A180-78; A180-9; A181/185; A181-7; A181-9; A260210A; Agassiz; AH-1; AH-4; AH-5; AH-7; AH-8; All5402P; All5423P; All5424P; All542P; also published as VM28-122; AMPH-005G; AMPH-007PG; AMPH-011P; AMPH-012G; AMPH-013G; AMPH-016G; AMPH-017G; AMPH-019G; AMPH01AR; AMPH-021G; AMPH-022G; AMPH-023G; AMPH-024G; AMPH-107G; AMPH-130G; AMPH-131G; AMPH-132G; AMPH-133G; AMPH-134G; AMPH-135GV; AMPH-137GV; AMPH-138GV; AMPH-139GV; AMPHITRITE; AR1-117; AR1-119; AR1-144; AR2-113; AR2-117; AR2-128; AR2-136; AR3-25; AR3-38; AR3-45; AR4-52; AR4-55; AR4-56; AR4-63; Argo; ARIES; ARIES-046G; ARIES-049G; Atlantic; Atlantic Ocean; Bay of Bengal; BC; Box corer; BRA-262D; BRA-91AD; BRA-91D; BRA-96D; CAP-1BG; CAP-1HG; CAP-2-1BG; CAP-32HG; CAP-3HG; CAP-42-1; CAP-44BG; CAP-48-2; CAP-48HG; CAP-49BG; CAP-4BG; CAP-50HG; CAP-5HG; CAP-6HG; CAP-8-2; CH10098P; CH10-98; CHA-164B; CHA-296; CHA-300; CHA-302; Challenger1872; CHM-5; CHU-23; CHU-23G; CHU-24; CHU-26; CHU-30; CHU-X1; CIRCE; CIRCE-21; CIRCE-239; CIRCE-24; CIRCE-26; CIRCE-27; CIRCE-32; CIRCE-36; CIRCE-38; CIRCE-42; CIRCE-44; CUS-3G; DIS-385D; DIS-386D; DODO; DODO-117PG; DODO-119PG; DODO-126P; DODO-126PG; DODO-144G; DODO-173G; DODO-191; DODO-192G; DODO-193; DODO-195G; DODO-197; DODO-200V; DODO-201G; DODO-202V; DODO-204; DODO-220V; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DW010; DW013; DW034; DW035; DW036; DW048; DW050; DW058; DW089; DW137; DW147B; DWD-100B; DWD-108B; DWD-10BG; DWD-10HH; DWD-11BG; DWD-12BG; DWD-12HH; DWD-137G; DWD-13BG; DWD-13HH; DWD-143; DWD-147B; DWD-149; DWD-15BG; DWD-16BG; DWD-34HG; DWD-35HH; DWD-36HG; DWD-46BG; DWD-47B; DWD-47BG; DWD-48BG; DWD-48HG; DWD-49BG; DWD-50HG; DWD-54HG; DWD-56BG; DWD-56HG; DWD-58BG; DWD-58HH; DWD-59BG; DWD-60BG; DWD-61BG; DWD-62BG; DWD-63BG; DWD-64BG; DWD-68BG; DWD-70BG; DWD-71BG; DWD-73BG; DWD-74BG; DWD-75BG; DWD-76BG; DWD-77BG; DWD-78BG; DWD-79BG; DWD-83BG; DWD-89HH; DWD-89HH-2; DWD-93BG; East Atlantic; Eastern Equatorial Pacific; ELT11.010; ELT11.064; ELT11.089; ELT-1101; ELT-1110; ELT-1164; ELT-1189; ELT-1246; ELT-1271; ELT44; ELT44.027-PC; ELT45; ELT45.027-PC; ELT45.029-PC; ELT45.070-PC; ELT45.073-PC; ELT45.077-PC; ELT45.078-PC; ELT45.081-PC; ELT48; ELT48.003-PC; ELT48.011-PC; ELT48.022-PC; ELT48.023-PC; ELT48.027-PC; ELT49; ELT49.022-PC; ELT49.023-PC; ELT49.024-PC; ELT49.025-PC; Eltanin; ELT-C100; EN06601; EN066-10GGC; Endeavor; EQA-27; FANHMS2G; FANHMS4G; FFC; Free fall corer; GC; GIK12392-1; Grab; GRAB; Gravity corer; H.M.S. Challenger (1872); Horizon; Indian Ocean; JAPANYON; Joides Resolution; JSB-5P; JSB-6P; JYN2; JYN2-007G; JYN5-019G; K708-001; K708-004; K708-006; K708-007; K708-008; K714-3; KAL; Kasten corer; KM1-41; KNR073-04-003; KNR733P; Knr735P; KNR735P; Leg138; LFGS; LFGS-36G; LFGS-38G; LFGS-45G; LSDA; LSDA-103V; LSDA-106G; LSDA-107GA; LSDA-113G; LSDA-117G; LSDA-128G; LSDA-136G; LSDA-SCS; LSDA-SCS-002G; LSDA-SCS-003G; LSDA-SCS-006G; LSDA-SCS-008G; LSDA-SCS-009G; LSDA-SCS-013D; LSDH; LSDH-009G; LSDH-025V; LSDH-038V; LSDH-076PG; LSDH-077G; LSDH-078PG; LSDH-079P; LSDH-079PG; LSDH-080G; LSDH09; LSDH-093PG; LSDH-104G; LUSIAD-9; LUSIAD-A; LUSIAD-H; M12392-1; M25; M70-68; M70-PC-49; M70-PC-61; Marion Dufresne (1972); MD10; MD13; MD76-131; MD76-132; MD76-135; MD77-168; MD77-169; MD77-170; MD77-171; MD77-174; MD77-176; MD77-179; MD77-180; MD77-181; MD77-185; MD77-191; MD77-194; MD77-196; MD77-199; MD77-202; MD77-203; MD77-204; MDPC03HO-043K; Melville; MEN; MEN-08G; MEN-11G; MEN-12G; Meteor (1964); MIDPAC; MONS01AR-MONS08AR; MONSOON; MPC-0-1; MPC-0-2; MPC-10-1; MPC-1-1; MPC-11-1; MPC-43K; MPC-45; MSN-100G; MSN-103P; MSN-104P; MSN-109P; MSN-10G; MSN-135P; MSN-136G; MSN-137P; MSN-138P; MSN-141G; MSN-14G; MSN-45G; MSN-52G; MSN-55G; MSN-56PG; MSN-63G; MSN-90G; MSN-93G; mt1-gyre; MT1-gyre; mt1-mid; MT1-mid; mt1-nrsh; MT1-nrsh; MUK-19BP; MUK-20BP; MUK-27HG; NEL-394D; NZO-A106; NZO-A181; NZO-A315; OSIRIS II; OSIRIS III; Pacific Ocean; PAP-127V; PAP-14; PAP-19; PC; Piston corer; PLDS-001G; PLDS-1; Pleiades; PROA; PROA-011P; PROA-079PG; PROA-083PG; PROA-084PG; PROA-085PG-1; PROA-086P; PROA-086PG; PROA-087PG; PROA-088PG; PROA-089PG; PROA-103PG; PROA-118G; PROA-122G; PROA-124G1; PROA-146G; PROA-147G; PROA-149G; PROA-151G; PROA-155G; PROA-156G; PROA-160G; RC0-113; RC0-117; RC0-121; RC08; RC08-102; RC08-103; RC08-145; RC08-16; RC08-18; RC08-22; RC08-23; RC08-27; RC08-28; RC08-39; RC08-40; RC08-41; RC08-46; RC08-50; RC08-53; RC08-60; RC08-61; RC08-62; RC08-63; RC08-94; RC09; RC09-124; RC09-126; RC09-139; RC09-14; RC09-143; RC09-150; RC09-155; RC09-160; RC09-161; RC09-162; RC09-163; RC09-212; RC09-222; RC09-225; RC09-49; RC09-61; RC09-67; RC10; RC10-114; RC10-139; RC10-140; RC10-141; RC10-142; RC10-143; RC10-146; RC10-161; RC10-162; RC10-172; RC10-175; RC10-176; RC10-22; RC10-49; RC10-50; RC10-52; RC10-53; RC10-54; RC10-56; RC10-62; RC10-64; RC10-97; RC11; RC11-10; RC11-103; RC11-106; RC11-11; RC11-111; RC11-116; RC11-117; RC1112; RC11-12; RC11-120; RC11-121; RC11-122; RC11-128; RC11-13; RC11-134; RC11-138; RC11-139; RC11-14; RC11-141; RC11-145; RC11-146; RC11-147; RC11-15; RC11-16; RC11-160; RC11-162; RC11-21; RC11-210; RC11-213; RC11-22; RC11-220; RC11-230; RC11-238; RC11-255; RC11-26; RC11-260; RC11-35; RC11-37; RC11-78; RC11-79; RC11-80; RC11-86; RC11-9; RC12; RC12-107; RC12-121; RC12-138; RC12-139; RC12-143; RC12-146; RC12-233; RC12-234; RC12-235; RC12-241; RC12-266; RC12-268; RC12-291; RC12-292; RC12-293; RC12-294; RC12-297; RC12-298; RC12-299; RC12-300; RC12-303; RC12-304; RC12-328; RC12-33; RC12-330; RC12-331; RC12-332; RC12-333; RC12-335; RC12-339; RC12-340; RC12-341; RC12-342; RC12-343; RC12-344; RC12-347; RC12-350; RC12-361; RC12-365; RC12-366; RC12-417; RC12-418; RC12-45; RC13; RC13-108; RC13-110; RC13-113; RC13-115; RC13-122; RC13-136; RC13-138; RC13-140; RC13-151; RC13-152; RC13-153; RC13-158; RC13-159; RC13-17; RC13-184; RC13-189; RC13-190; RC13-195; RC13-196; RC13-197; RC13-199; RC13-205; RC13-209; RC13-210; RC13-227; RC13-229; RC13-242; RC13-253; RC13-275; RC13-81; RC14; RC14-29; RC14-31; RC14-31TW; RC14-33; RC14-33TW; RC14-34; RC14-34TW; RC14-35; RC14-35TW; RC14-36; RC14-37; RC14-37TW; RC14-39; RC14-39TW; RC14-44; RC14-44TW; RC14-7; RC14-79TW; RC14-9; RC14-92; RC14-93; RC14-94; RC14-97; RC15; RC15-115; RC15-143; RC15-145; RC15-151; RC15-91; RC15-93; RC15-94; RC17; RC17-101; RC17-102; RC17-103; RC17-104; RC17-105; RC17-110; RC17-113; RC17-114; RC17-116; RC17-121; RC17-123; RC17-125; RC17-126; RC17-127; RC17-132; RC17-142; RC17-144; RC17-145; RC17-176; RC17-177; RC17-178; RC17-69; RC17-73; RC17-98; RC18; RC18-47; RC24; RC24-1; RC24-16; RC24-27; RC24-7; RE009-7; RE010-002; RE5-034; RE5-036; RE5-054; RE5-057; RIS-101; RIS-103; RIS-104; RIS-105; RIS-106; RIS-108; RIS-121V; RIS-14; RIS-15G; RIS-17; RIS-17G; RIS-21G; RIS-24; RIS-29G; RIS-32; RIS-33; RIS-34; RIS-35; RIS-51G; Robert Conrad; SCAN; SCAN-015P; SCAN-022PG; SCAN-023PG; SCAN-025G; SCAN-026G; SCAN-027G; SCAN-028G; SCAN-059P; SCAN-065G; SCAN-066G; SCAN-067G; SCAN-068G; SCAN-082P; SCAN-083P; SCAN-084P; SCAN-084PG; SCAN-085P; SCAN-086P; SCAN-087P; SCAN-088P; SCAN-088PG; SCAN-091G; SCAN-094P; SCAN-095G; SCAN-096P; SDS-93P; SDS-95P; SDS-97P; SDS-98P; SOB; SOB-009G; SOB-026GA; SOB-031GA; South Atlantic Ocean; Southern Borderland; South Pacific Ocean; SP008-004; SP009-003; SP010-005; Spencer F. Baird; Stranger; STYX_III; STYX_IX; STYX03AZ; STYX09AZ; STYXIII-75G; STYXIII-77P; STYXIII-80FF-34; STYXIII-81FF-41; STYXIII-81FF-44;
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 16
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Winkelmann, Daniel; Schäfer, Christoph J; Stein, Ruediger; Mackensen, Andreas (2008): Terrigeneous events and climate history within the Sophia Basin, Arctic Ocean. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 9, Q07023, https://doi.org/10.1029/2008GC002038
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Periods of enhanced terrigenous input to the ocean's basins of the North Atlantic have been reported for the last glacial period. We present a set of new sediment cores recovered from the Sophia Basin north of Svalbard which exhibit wide spread IRD layers reflecting enhanced terrigenous input throughout the last ~200 kyr. BP. Their consistent stratigraphic position, sedimentological character, high sedimentation rate and geochemical characteristic point to synchronously deposited layers which we name terrigenous input events (TIEs). Due to their higher densities, they generate excellent reflectors for sediment penetrating acoustic devices and prominent acoustic layers in the imagery of sedimentary structures. Therefore TIEs can be used for regional acoustic stratigraphy. Each of the events can be linked to major glacial activity on Svalbard. However, the Early Weichselian glaciation is not recorded as a TIE and, in agreement with other work, might not have occurred on Svalbard as a major glacial advance to the shelf break. Non-synchronous timing of western and northern sources on Svalbard points against sea-level induced iceberg discharge events.
    Keywords: ARK-XX/3; AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; GC; Gravity corer; KAL; Kasten corer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS66; PS66/306-2; PS66/308-3; PS66/309-1; PS66/311-3; PS66/329-3
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 20 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 17
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Pflaumann, Uwe; Sarnthein, Michael; Chapman, Mark R; de Abreu, Lucia; Funnell, Brian M; Hüls, Matthias; Kiefer, Thorsten; Maslin, Mark; Schulz, Hartmut; Swallow, John; van Kreveld, Shirley A; Vautravers, Maryline J; Vogelsang, Elke; Weinelt, Mara (2003): Glacial North Atlantic: Sea-surface conditions reconstructed by GLAMAP 2000. Paleoceanography, 18(3), 1065, https://doi.org/10.1029/2002PA000774
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The response of the tropical ocean to global climate change and the extent of sea ice in the glacial nordic seas belong to the great controversies in paleoclimatology. Our new reconstruction of peak glacial sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the Atlantic is based on census counts of planktic foraminifera, using the Maximum Similarity Technique Version 28 (SIMMAX-28) modern analog technique with 947 modern analog samples and 119 well-dated sediment cores. Our study compares two slightly different scenarios of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the Environmental Processes of the Ice Age: Land, Oceans, Glaciers (EPILOG), and Glacial Atlantic Ocean Mapping (GLAMAP 2000) time slices. The comparison shows that the maximum LGM cooling in the Southern Hemisphere slightly preceeded that in the north. In both time slices sea ice was restricted to the north western margin of the nordic seas during glacial northern summer, while the central and eastern parts were ice-free. During northern glacial winter, sea ice advanced to the south of Iceland and Faeroe. In the central northern North Atlantic an anticyclonic gyre formed between 45° and 60°N, with a cool water mass centered west of Ireland, where glacial cooling reached a maximum of 〉12°C. In the subtropical ocean gyres the new reconstruction supports the glacial-to-interglacial stability of SST as shown by CLIMAP Project Members (CLIMAP) [1981]. The zonal belt of minimum SST seasonality between 2° and 6°N suggests that the LGM caloric equator occupied the same latitude as today. In contrast to the CLIMAP reconstruction, the glacial cooling of the tropical east Atlantic upwelling belt reached up to 6°–8°C during Northern Hemisphere summer. Differences between these SIMMAX-based and published U37[k]- and Mg/Ca-based equatorial SST records are ascribed to strong SST seasonalities and SST signals that were produced by different planktic species groups during different seasons.
    Keywords: 06MT15_2; 122-2; 371; 381; 383; 388; A150/180; A180-72; A180-73; A180-76; A180-78; A181/185; A181-7; A181-9; Aegir Ridge, Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Amazon Fan; Angola Basin; Antarctic Ocean; ANT-IV/1c; Arctic Ocean; ARK-II/4; ARK-II/5; ARK-III/3; ARK-IV/3; ARK-IX/4; ARK-V/2; ARK-V/3b; ARK-VII/3b; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-X/2; Atlantic Ocean; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; BC; BCR; Bear Island Fan; Biscaya; BOFS11882#4; BOFS11886#2; BOFS11896#1; BOFS11902#1; BOFS11905#1; BOFS14K; BOFS16K; BOFS17K; BOFS31/1K; BOFS31#1; BOFS5K; BOFS8K; Bottle, Niskin; Box corer; Box corer (Reineck); Brazil Basin; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Cape Basin; Cardno Seamount; CD53; CEPAG; Charles Darwin; CIRCE; CIRCE-239; Congo Fan; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; D184; Denmark Strait; Discovery (1962); East Atlantic; East Brazil Basin; Eastern Rio Grande Rise; eastern Romanche Fracture Zone; East Greenland Sea; Equatorial Atlantic; FFC; FGGE-Equator 79 - First GARP Global Experiment; Fram Strait; Free fall corer; GeoB1009-3; GeoB1017-3; GeoB1025-2; GeoB1026-2; GeoB1027-2; GeoB1028-4; GeoB1029-1; GeoB1030-3; GeoB1031-2; GeoB1032-2; GeoB1033-3; GeoB1034-2; GeoB1035-3; GeoB1036-3; GeoB1039-1; GeoB1040-3; GeoB1041-3; GeoB1044-3; GeoB1046-2; GeoB1047-3; GeoB1101-4; GeoB1103-3; GeoB1104-4; GeoB1105-4; GeoB1106-4; GeoB1108-7; GeoB1109-3; GeoB1110-4; GeoB1111-3; GeoB1112-4; GeoB1113-4; GeoB1114-4; GeoB1116-2; GeoB1117-2; GeoB1203-2; GeoB1204-3; GeoB1207-2; GeoB1208-1; GeoB1209-1; GeoB1210-3; GeoB1211-1; GeoB1215-1; GeoB1216-2; GeoB1217-1; GeoB1218-1; GeoB1220-2; GeoB1306-1; GeoB1306-2; GeoB1307-2; GeoB1308-1; GeoB1309-3; GeoB1310-1; GeoB1311-2; GeoB1312-3; GeoB1313-1; GeoB1403-2; GeoB1405-7; GeoB1407-7; GeoB1408-3; GeoB1413-2; GeoB1414-2; GeoB1415-1; GeoB1418-1; GeoB1419-1; GeoB1420-1; GeoB1503-2; GeoB1504-1; GeoB1505-3; GeoB1506-1; GeoB1508-1; GeoB1509-2; GeoB1510-1; GeoB1511-6; GeoB1512-2; GeoB1513-2; GeoB1514-4; GeoB1516-1; GeoB1518-1; GeoB1519-2; GeoB1520-1; GeoB1521-2; GeoB1522-1; GeoB1523-2; GeoB1701-1; GeoB1702-6; GeoB1704-1; GeoB1705-2; GeoB1710-2; GeoB1711-5; GeoB1712-2; GeoB1713-6; GeoB1716-2; GeoB1719-5; GeoB1722-3; GeoB1725-1; GeoB1728-3; GeoB1729-1; GEOTROPEX 83, NOAMP I; Giant box corer; GIK10720-1; GIK10737-1; GIK10749-1; GIK12307-4; GIK12309-2; GIK12310-3; GIK12310-4; GIK12326-4; GIK12328-1; GIK12328-5; GIK12329-1; GIK12329-6; GIK12336-1; GIK12337-5; GIK12344-2; GIK12345-5; GIK12347-2; GIK12379-1; GIK12392-1; GIK13255-2; GIK13289-3; GIK13291-1; GIK13519-1; GIK13521-1; GIK13530-1; GIK13534-1; GIK13586-3; GIK13587-1; GIK13588-2; GIK15612-2; GIK15627-1; GIK15627-3; GIK15628-1; GIK15628-4; GIK15634-1; GIK15635-2; GIK15636-1; GIK15637-1; GIK15638-2; GIK15639-1; GIK15640-1; GIK15641-2; GIK15642-1; GIK15644-1; GIK15645-1; GIK15646-1; GIK15651-1; GIK15654-1; GIK15657-1; GIK15659-1; GIK15663-2; GIK15664-1; GIK15666-9; GIK15667-1; GIK15668-1; GIK15669-1; GIK15669-2; GIK15672-2; GIK15673-2; GIK15676-2; GIK15677-1; GIK15678-1; GIK15679-1; GIK16017-2; GIK16396-1; GIK16397-2; GIK16401-2; GIK16402-1; GIK16403-1; GIK16407-1; GIK16408-2; GIK16410-1; GIK16411-1; GIK16412-1; GIK16413-1; GIK16415-1; GIK16415-2; GIK16416-1; GIK16417-1; GIK16419-1; GIK16420-1; GIK16421-1; GIK16430-2; GIK16432-2; GIK16437-3; GIK16453-2; GIK16455-1; GIK16457-1; GIK16457-2; GIK16458-1; GIK16458-2; GIK16756-1; GIK16757-1; GIK16768-1; GIK16771-1; GIK16772-1; GIK16772-2; GIK16773-2; GIK16774-3; GIK16775-2; GIK16776-1; GIK16777-1; GIK16779-1; GIK16780-1; GIK16846-1; GIK16855-1; GIK16856-1; GIK16864-1; GIK16865-1; GIK16867-2; GIK16868-2; GIK16870-1; GIK16871-1; GIK16872-1; GIK17045-2; GIK17045-3; GIK17048-3; GIK17049-6; GIK17050-1; GIK17051-2; GIK17051-3; GIK17052-4; GIK17054-1; GIK17055-1; GIK17056-1; GIK17724-2; GIK17725-1; GIK17730-4; GIK21289-1 PS07/578; GIK21290-3 PS07/579; GIK21291-3 PS07/581; GIK21292-3 PS07/582; GIK21293-3 PS07/583; GIK21294-3 PS07/584; GIK21295-4 PS07/586; GIK21296-3 PS07/587; GIK21298-3 PS07/590; GIK21299-1 PS07/591; GIK21301-2 PS07/593; GIK21309-3 PS07/602; GIK21310-4 PS07/603; GIK21311-3 PS07/605; GIK21312-3 PS07/606; GIK21313-3 PS07/607; GIK21318-4 PS07/615; GIK21529-7 PS11/376-7; GIK21530-3 PS11/382-3; GIK21532-1 PS11/396-1; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK21534-6 PS11/423-6; GIK21535-5 PS11/430-5; GIK21706-1 PS13/147; GIK21707-1 PS13/149; GIK21730-2 PS13/224; GIK23037-2; GIK23039-3; GIK23041-1; GIK23042-1; GIK23043-3; GIK23044-1; GIK23056-2; GIK23058-2; GIK23059-2; GIK23060-2; GIK23065-2; GIK23067-2; GIK23068-2; GIK23070-2; GIK23071-2; GIK23071-3; GIK23073-2; GIK23074-1; GIK23229-1 PS05/414; GIK23230-1 PS05/416; GIK23231-2 PS05/417; GIK23232-1 PS05/418; GIK23235-1 PS05/422; GIK23238-1 PS05/426; GIK23239-1 PS05/427; GIK23241-1 PS05/429; GIK23243-1 PS05/431; GIK23244-1 PS05/449; GIK23246-1 PS05/451; GIK23249-1 PS05/454; GIK23262-2; GIK23266-1; GIK23267-2; GIK23269-2; GIK23270-2; GIK23277-1; GIK23279-1; GIK23289-2; GIK23291-1; GIK23293-1; GIK23294-3; GIK23294-4; GIK23295-2; GIK23295-4; GIK23297-1; GIK23298-2; GIK23300-2; GIK23309-1; GIK23312-2; GIK23313-2; GIK23316-3; GIK23332-4; GIK23335-4; GIK23341-3; GIK23342-3; GIK23343-4; GIK23344-3; GIK23347-4; GIK23351-1; GIK23352-2; GIK23353-2; GIK23354-4; GIK23354-6; GIK23359-2; GIK23361-7; GIK23362-1; GIK23363-1; GIK23364-6; GIK23365-1; GIK23368-1; GIK23369-1; GIK23370-1; GIK23371-1; GIK23373-1; GIK23390-1; GIK23398-1; GIK23398-2; GIK23400-1; GIK23400-3; GIK23402-2; GIK23413-3; GIK23414-7; GIK23417-7; GIK23418-6; GIK23419-8; GIK23467-2; GIK23477-1; GIK23478-2; GIK23480-2; GIK23483-2; GIK23488-2; GIK23489-2; GIK23498-1; GIK23500-1; GIK23502-1; GIK23503-1; GIK23505-1; GIK23506-1; GIK23507-1; GIK23508-1; GIK23509-1; GIK23510-1; GIK23511-2; GIK23512-1; GIK23516-1; GIK23517-3; GIK23518-2; GIK23519-4; GIK23519-5; GIK23522-2; GIK23523-3; GIK23524-2; GIK23525-3; GIK23526-3; GIK23527-3; GIK23528-3; GKG; Glacial Atlantic Ocean Mapping; GLAMAP2000; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Greenland Slope; Guinea Basin; Hunter Channel; Iceland Sea; IMAGES; IMAGES I; Indian Ocean; INMD; INMD-042BX; INMD-050BX; INMD-055BX; INMD-065BX; INMD-068BX; INMD-069BX; International Marine Global Change Study; Jan Mayen Fracture Zone; KAL; Kasten corer; KL; KOL; Le Suroît; M10/3; M11/1; M12/1; M12392-1; M13/2; M15/2; M16/1; M16/2; M17/1; M17/2; M19; M2/1; M2/2; M20/2; M21/5; M23414; M25; M26/3; M30; M30_183; M39; M51; M527; M53; M53_164; M53_166; M53_167; M53_168-1; M53_169; M53_172-1; M53_173-2; M57; M6/5; M6/6; M60; M65; M7/2; M7/3; M7/4; M7/5; M9/4; Marion Dufresne (1995); MD101; MD952011; MD95-2011; MD952012; MD95-2012; MD952039; MD95-2039; MD952040; MD95-2040; Melville; Meteor (1964); Meteor (1986); Mid Atlantic Ridge; MSN; MUC; MultiCorer; Multiple opening/closing net; Namibia Continental Margin; Namibia continental slope; NIS; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; Northern Guinea Basin; Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Norwegian Sea; off eastern Ghana; off Gabun; off Guinea; off Iceland; off Liberia; off Nigeria; off Nigeria-Delta; off Portugal; off West Africa; PALEOCINAT; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; PC; Piston corer; Piston corer (BGR type); Piston corer (Kiel type); PLA; Plankton net; PO158/B; Polarstern; Porto Seamount; POS158/2; POS210/2; Poseidon; PS05; PS07; PS08; PS11; PS1229-1; PS1230-1; PS1231-2; PS1232-1; PS1235-1; PS1238-1; PS1239-1; PS1241-1; PS1243-1; PS1244-1; PS1246-1; PS1249-1; PS1289-1; PS1290-3; PS1291-3; PS1292-3; PS1293-3; PS1294-3; PS1295-4; PS1296-3; PS1298-3; PS1299-1; PS13; PS1301-2; PS1309-3; PS1310-4; PS1311-3; PS1312-3; PS1313-3; PS1318-4; PS13 GRÖKORT; PS1529-7; PS1530-3; PS1532-1; PS1533-3; PS1534-6; PS1535-5; PS17; PS17/242; PS17/245; PS17/251; PS17/290; PS1706-1; PS1707-1; PS1730-2; PS19/100; PS19/112; PS1919-2; PS1922-1; PS1927-2; PS1951-1; PS19 EPOS II; PS2129-1; PS2138-1; PS2446-4; PS2613-1; PS2613-6; PS2616-7; PS2627-5; PS2644-5; PS2656-2; PS27; PS27/020; PS31; PS31/113; PS31/116; PS31/135; PS31/160-5; PS31/182; RC08; RC08-16; RC08-18; RC08-22; RC08-23; RC08-27; RC08-28; RC09; RC09-212; RC09-222; RC09-225; RC09-61; RC10; RC10-22; RC10-
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 18
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hale, Walter; Pflaumann, Uwe (1999): Sea-surface Temperature Estimations using a Modern Analog Technique with Foraminiferal Assemblages from Western Atlantic Quaternary Sediments. In: Fischer, G & Wefer, G (eds.), Use of Proxies in Paleoceanography - Examples from the South Atlantic, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 69-90
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Paleotemperature estimates calculated by the SIMMAX Modern Analog Technique are presented for two gravity cores from the Rio Grande Rise, one from the Brazil Slope, and one from the Ceara Rise. The estimates are based on comparisons between modern and fossil planktonic foraminiferal assemblages and were carried out on samples from Quaternary sediments. Estimated warm-season temperatures from the Rio Grande Rise (at approx. 30° S) range from around 19°C to 24°C, with some coincidence of warm peaks with interglacial stages. The temperature estimates (also warm-season) from the more tropical Brazil Slope (at approx. 8° S) and Ceara Rise (at approx. 4° N) cores are more stable, remaining between 26°C and 28°C throughout most of their lengths. This fairly stable situation in the tropical western Atlantic is interrupted in oxygen isotope stage 6 by a significant drop of 2-3°C in both of these cores. Temperature estimates from the uppermost samples in all cores compare very well to the modern-day measured values. Affinities of some foraminiferal species for warmer or cooler surface temperatures are identified within the temperature range of the examined samples based on their abundance values. Especially notable among the warmer species are, Globorotalia menardii, Globigerinita glutinata, Globigerinoides ruber, and Globigerinoides sacculifer. Species indicative of cooler surface temperatures include Globorotalia inflata, Globigerina bulloides, Neogloboquadrina pachyderma, and Globigerina falconensis. A cluster analysis was carried out to assist in understanding the degree of variation which occurs in the foraminiferal assemblages, and how temperature differences influence the faunal compositions of the samples. It is demonstrated that fairly similar samples may have unexpectedly different estimated temperatures due to small differences in key species and, conversely, quite different assemblages can result in similar or identical temperature estimates which confirms that other parameters than just temperature affect faunal content.
    Keywords: 06MT15_2; Amazon Fan; Angola Basin; Argentine Basin; Brazil Basin; Eastern Rio Grande Rise; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB1007-4; GeoB1105-4; GeoB1309-2; GeoB1312-2; GeoB1523-1; GeoB1701-4; GeoB2109-1; GeoB2204-2; GeoB2819-1; GeoB3808-6; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M15/2; M16/2; M20/2; M23/2; M23/3; M29/2; M34/3; M6/6; M9/4; Meteor (1986); Mid Atlantic Ridge; Niger Sediment Fan; Rio Grande Rise; SFB261; SL; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 17 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 19
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: This collection of 359 data sets represents raw data of physical properties measurements on Polarstern sediment cores from both polar oceans, sampled and measured between 1985 and 1995.
    Keywords: Agulhas Basin; Antarctic Ocean; ANT-II/3; ANT-IV/3; ANT-IV/4; ANT-IX/3; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-VIII/5; ANT-VIII/6; ARK-IV/3; ARK-V/3b; ARK-VII/3b; Astrid Ridge; Atka Bay; Atlantic Indik Ridge; Atlantic Ridge; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; Camp Norway; Filchner Shelf; Filchner Trough; Fram Strait; Giant box corer; GIK21532-6 PS11/396-6; GIK21532-9 PS11/396-9; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK21730-2 PS13/224; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Sea; Greenland Shelf; Greenland Slope; Gunnerus Ridge; Halley Bay; Indian-Antarctic Ridge; Kainan Maru Seamount; KAL; Kapp Norvegia; Kasten corer; KL; Lazarev Sea; Lyddan Island; Maud Rise; Meteor Rise; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS04; PS04/256; PS04/259; PS08; PS08/338; PS08/347; PS08/353; PS08/354; PS08/356; PS08/366; PS08/379; PS08/381; PS08/564; PS08/617; PS08/634; PS08/635; PS08/643; PS10; PS10/686; PS10/688; PS10/699; PS11; PS1169-2; PS1172-1; PS12; PS12/242; PS12/244; PS12/247; PS12/248; PS12/250; PS12/252; PS12/280; PS12/284; PS12/291; PS12/302; PS12/327; PS12/336; PS12/338; PS12/340; PS12/344; PS12/348; PS12/350; PS12/352; PS12/492; PS12/536; PS12/545; PS12/549; PS12/551; PS12/553; PS12/555; PS12/557; PS1370-2; PS1375-3; PS1377-2; PS1378-3; PS1380-3; PS1388-3; PS1396-1; PS1398-1; PS13 GRÖKORT; PS1451-1; PS1458-1; PS1461-1; PS1462-1; PS1465-1; PS1478-2; PS1479-2; PS1483-3; PS1532-6; PS1532-9; PS1533-3; PS1572-2; PS1573-1; PS1574-2; PS1575-1; PS1575-2; PS1576-2; PS1577-1; PS1584-1; PS1585-3; PS1588-1; PS1591-1; PS16; PS16/262; PS16/267; PS16/271; PS16/278; PS16/281; PS16/284; PS16/287; PS16/288; PS16/299; PS16/300; PS16/302; PS16/303; PS16/306; PS16/308; PS16/311; PS16/312; PS16/314; PS16/316; PS16/321; PS16/323; PS16/329; PS16/334; PS16/337; PS16/342; PS16/345; PS16/351; PS16/354; PS16/358; PS16/362; PS16/366; PS16/369; PS16/372; PS16/409; PS16/410; PS16/417; PS16/444; PS16/507; PS16/511; PS16/512; PS16/513; PS16/515; PS16/516; PS16/518; PS16/519; PS16/520; PS16/522; PS16/530; PS16/534; PS16/536; PS16/540; PS16/541; PS16/547; PS16/549; PS16/550; PS16/552; PS16/554; PS16/555; PS16/557; PS16/564; PS16/568; PS1603-1; PS1605-1; PS1606-3; PS1607-3; PS1609-3; PS1611-3; PS1612-2; PS1613-4; PS1640-1; PS1648-1; PS1649-2; PS1650-2; PS1651-1; PS1652-2; PS1653-1; PS1654-2; PS17; PS17/239; PS17/241; PS17/242; PS17/243; PS17/244; PS17/245; PS17/247; PS17/248; PS17/249; PS17/250; PS17/251; PS17/257; PS17/258; PS17/262; PS17/264; PS17/265; PS17/272; PS17/274; PS17/276; PS17/281; PS17/285; PS17/286; PS17/287; PS17/288; PS17/289; PS17/290; PS1730-2; PS1750-6; PS1751-7; PS1752-1; PS1754-1; PS1755-6; PS1756-5; PS1757-1; PS1758-1; PS1761-1; PS1762-1; PS1763-1; PS1764-1; PS1765-2; PS1765-3; PS1766-1; PS1767-1; PS1768-8; PS1769-1; PS1770-1; PS1771-1; PS1772-8; PS1773-1; PS1774-5; PS1775-4; PS1776-8; PS1777-6; PS1778-5; PS1779-2; PS1780-5; PS1781-1; PS1782-5; PS1783-5; PS1784-2; PS1786-1; PS1789-1; PS1790-1; PS1793-1; PS1793-2; PS1799-1; PS18; PS18/126; PS1805-6; PS1808-1; PS1809-1; PS1810-1; PS1811-8; PS1812-6; PS1813-6; PS1814-1; PS1815-1; PS1816-1; PS1820-6; PS1821-6; PS1822-6; PS1823-1; PS1823-6; PS1824-1; PS1825-6; PS1826-1; PS1827-1; PS1828-1; PS1829-6; PS1830-1; PS1831-1; PS1835-1; PS1835-2; PS1836-2; PS1836-3; PS1916-1; PS1916-2; PS1918-1; PS1918-2; PS1919-1; PS1919-2; PS1920-1; PS1920-2; PS1921-2; PS1922-1; PS1922-2; PS1923-1; PS1923-2; PS1924-1; PS1924-2; PS1925-1; PS1925-2; PS1926-1; PS1926-2; PS1927-1; PS1927-2; PS1929-2; PS1930-2; PS1932-2; PS1933-1; PS1934-1; PS1934-2; PS1937-2; PS1939-2; PS1941-3; PS1943-1; PS1946-2; PS1947-1; PS1948-2; PS1949-1; PS1949-2; PS1950-2; PS1951-1; PS1951-2; PS1990-2; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Scoresby Sund; Shona Ridge; SL; South Atlantic Ocean; South Orkney; South Sandwich Basin; South Sandwich Islands; South Sandwich Trough; Svalbard; Van Heesen Ridge; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 268 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 20
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Stein, Ruediger; Fahl, Kirsten (2000): Holocene accumulation of organic carbon at the Laptev Sea continental margin (Arctic Ocean): sources, pathways, and sinks. Geo-Marine Letters, 20(1), 27-36, https://doi.org/10.1007/s003670000028
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Composition and accumulation rates of organic carbon in Holocene sediments provided data to calculate an organic carbon budget for the Laptev Sea continental margin. Mean Holocene accumulation rates in the inner Laptev Sea vary between 0.14 and 2.7 g C cm**2/ky; maximum values occur close to the Lena River delta. Seawards, the mean accumulation rates decrease from 0.43 to 0.02 g C cm**2/ky. The organic matter is predominantly of terrigenous origin. About 0.9*10**6 t/year of organic carbon are buried in the Laptev Sea, and 0.25*10**6 t/year on the continental slope. Between about 8.5 and 9 ka, major changes in supply of terrigenous and marine organic carbon occur, related to changes in coastal erosion, Siberian river discharge, and/or Atlantic water inflow along the Eurasian continental margin.
    Keywords: Amundsen Basin; Arctic Ocean; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; ARK-XI/1; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; BC; Box corer; C-11; C-37; C-4; C-7; C-8; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Gravity corer (Russian type); KAL; KAL_R; Kara Sea/St. Anna Trough; Kasten corer; Kasten corer RUS; Laptev Sea; MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; PL-1994; PL94-07; PL94-08; PL94-60; PL94-64; PL94-67; Polarstern; Professor Logachev; PS19/112; PS19/157; PS19/165; PS19/228; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS2138-1; PS2163-1; PS2170-4; PS2206-4; PS2445-4; PS2446-4; PS2447-4; PS2458-4; PS2471-4; PS2474-3; PS2476-4; PS2485-2; PS27; PS27/019; PS27/020; PS27/024; PS27/038; PS27/054; PS27/059; PS27/062; PS27/072; PS2725-5; PS2741-1; PS2742-5; PS2757-8; PS2761-10; PS2763-7; PS2778-2; PS2782-1; PS36; PS36/009; PS36/028; PS36/030; PS36/052; PS36/057; PS36/060; PS36/082; PS36/086; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; RGC; Siberian River Run-Off; SIRRO; SL; Svalbard; Vilkitsky Strait
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 17 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 21
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Boucsein, Bettina; Fahl, Kirsten; Stein, Ruediger (2000): Variability of river discharge and Atlantic-water inflow at the Laptev Sea continental margin during the past 15,000 years: implications from maceral and biomarker records. International Journal of Earth Sciences, 89(3), 578-591, https://doi.org/10.1007/s005310000111
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: In order to reconstruct the depositional environment from the Laptev Sea continental slope and shelf during the past ~15,000 years BP maceral analysis was carried out on two sediment cores (PS2458-4, PS2725-5) and compared with organic-geochemical parameters. During the transition from the Last Glacial to the Holocene the environment of the Laptev Sea shelf was controlled by the post-glacial sea level rise, variations in river discharge, surface-water productivity, and Atlantic-water inflow along the Eurasian continental margin. Based on our results, we identify the following significant changes of the environment: (a) at approximately 13,500 years BP the first step of deglaciation (Termination 1a) is documented by the deposition of marine and fresh-water organic matter; (b) at approximately 10,400 years BP the first post-glacial influence of Atlantic-water inflow along the Eastern Laptev Sea continental margin is indicated by an increase in marine organic matter; (c) at the beginning of the Holocene an increased fluvial supply is documented by an increase in fresh-water alginite; and (d) since ~9500-8000 years BP modern marine conditions are established at the Laptev Sea continental margin as documented in increased amounts of marine macerals, biomarkers (dinosterol, brassicasterol, short-chain fatty acids), and dinoflagellate cysts.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-IX/4; ARK-XI/1; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Laptev Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2458-4; PS27; PS27/038; PS2725-5; PS36; PS36/009; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 22
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Müller-Lupp, Thomas; Bauch, Henning A; Erlenkeuser, Helmut; Hefter, Jens; Kassens, Heidemarie; Thiede, Jörn (2000): Changes in the deposition of terrestrial organic matter on the Laptev Sea shelf during the Holocene: evidence from stable carbon isotopes. International Journal of Earth Sciences, 89(3), 563-568, https://doi.org/10.1007/s005310000128
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Stable carbon isotope ratios in the organic fraction of surface sediments from the Laptev Sea shelf were analyzed in order to study the modern distribution pattern of terrestrial organic matter. The delta13Corg signature of the surface sediments range from -26.6 per mil near the coastal margin to -22.8 per mil in the north towards the outer shelf. Characterizing the possible sources of organic matter by their delta13Corg signature reveals that the terrestrial influence reaches further north in the eastern than in the western Laptev Sea. Downcore records of the delta13Corg, measured on three AMS 14C-dated cores from water depths between 46 and 77 m, specify the spatial and temporal changes in the deposition of terrestrial organic matter on the Laptev Sea shelf during the past 12.7 ka. The major depositional changes of terrestrial organic matter occurred between 11 and 7 ka and comprised the main phase of the southward retreat of the coastline and of the river depocenters due to the postglacial sea level rise.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-XI/1; ARK-XIV/1b; AWI_Paleo; BC; BCR; Box corer; Box corer (Reineck); CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; GEOMAR; Giant box corer; GKG; Grab; GRAB; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel; IK9301-6; IK9306-6; IK9309-4; IK9313-6; IK9315-1; IK9316-6; IK9318-3; IK9321-5; IK9323-6; IK9324-4; IK9330-2; IK9334-7; IK9338-5; IK9340-6; IK9342-6; IK9344-8; IK9346-4; IK9348-6; IK9353-9; IK9356-2; IK9358-5; IK9365-6; IK9367-2; IK9370-6; IK9371-1; IK9373-8; IK9373A-6; IK9382-6; IK9384-1; IK93K1-1; IK93K2-1; IK93Z3-3; IK93Z4-4; IK93Z5-3; Ivan Kireyev; KAL; Kapitan Dranitsyn; Kasten corer; KD9502-12; KD9502-14; KD9509-6; KD9517-3; KD9523-7; KD9529-11; KD9533-10; KD9541-12; KD9548-11; KD9555-10; KD9560-5; KD9561-3; KD9565-11; KD9568-7; KD9572-1; Laptev Sea; Lena Nordenskøld Station; LN9604-8; LN9604-9; LN9605-8; LN9605-9; LN9606-10; LN9606-9; LN9608-12; LN9609-14; LN9610-11; LN9611-12; LN9612-8; LN9613-8; LN9614-7; LN9615-5; LN9616-7; LN9617-8; LN9618-8; LN9619-9; LN9620-12; LN9621-11; LN9622-8; LN9623-10; LN9624-10; LN9625-10; Mueller-Lupp; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Photo/Video; PM9402-3; PM9417-4; PM9441-4; PM9442-3; PM9462-1; PM9463-8; PM9475-3; PM9481-2; PM9482-1; PM9492-3; PM9494-5; PM9499-1; PM9499-2; Polarstern; Professor Multanovskiy; PS2725-5; PS36; PS36/009; PS51/080-11; PS51/085-2; PS51/092-11; PS51/093-1; PS51/104-14; PS51/105-3; PS51/106-1; PS51/114-13; PS51/117-3; PS51/118-1; PS51/125-12; PS51/126-2; PS51/135-2; PS51/138-10; PS51/154-9; PS51/158-8; PS51/159-8; PS51 Transdrift-V; PV; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; RUS_unspec; SL; TI9902-2; TI9903-9; TI9904-9; TI9907-13; TI9908-14; TI9909-13; TI9916-13; TI9918-13; TI9920-13; TI9924-2; Transdrift-I; Transdrift-II; Transdrift-III; Transdrift-IV; van Veen Grab; VC; VGRAB; Vibro corer
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 23
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Nowaczyk, Norbert R; Frederichs, Thomas; Kassens, Heidemarie; Nørgaard-Pedersen, Niels; Spielhagen, Robert F; Stein, Ruediger; Weiel, Dominik (2001): Sedimentation rates in the Makarov Basin, central Arctic Ocean: a paleo- and rock magnetic approach. Paleoceanography, 16(4), 368-389, https://doi.org/10.1029/2000PA000521
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Three long sediment cores from the Makarov Basin have been subjected to detailed paleomagnetic and rock magnetic analyses. Investigated sediments are dominated by normal polarity including short reversal excursions, indicating that most of the sediments are of Brunhes age. In general, the recovered sediments show only low to moderate variability in concentration and grain size of the remanence-carrying minerals. Estimations of relative paleointensity variations yielded a well-documented succession of pronounced lows and highs that could be correlated to published reference curves. However, together with five accelerator mass spectrometry 14C ages and an incomplete 10Be record, still two different interpretations of the paleomagnetic data are possible, with long-term sedimentation rates of either 1.3 or 4 cm/kyr. However, both models implicate highly variable sedimentation rates of up to 10 cm/kyr, and abrupt changes in rock magnetic parameters might even indicate several hiatuses.
    Keywords: ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; Calculation; Giant piston corer; GPC; INT; KAL; Kasten corer; Makarov Basin; MakarovStack; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/176; PS19/181; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2178-3; PS2178-5; PS2180-2; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 16 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 24
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wollenburg, Jutta Erika; Mackensen, Andreas (1998): Living benthic foraminifers from the central Arctic Ocean: faunal composition, standing stock and diversity. Marine Micropaleontology, 34(3-4), 153-185, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(98)00007-3
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Fifty short sediment cores collected with a multiple corer and five box cores from the central Arctic Ocean were analysed to study the ecology and distribution of benthic foraminifers. To work out living faunal associations, standing stock and diversity, separate analyses of living (Rose Bengal stained) and dead foraminifers were carried out for the sediment surface. The size fractions between 63 and 125 µm and 〉125 µm were counted separately to allow comparison with former Arctic studies and with studies from the adjacent Norwegian-Greenland Sea, Barents Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean. Benthic foraminiferal associations are mainly controlled by the availability of food, and competition for food, while water mass characteristics, bottom current activity, substrate composition, and water depth are of minor importance. Off Spitsbergen in seasonally ice-free areas, high primary production rates are reflected by high standing stocks, high diversities, and foraminiferal associations (〉125 µm) that are similar to those of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. Generally, in seasonally ice-free areas standing stock and diversity increase with increasing food supply. In the central Arctic Ocean, the oligotrophic permanently ice-covered areas are dominated by epibenthic species. The limited food availability is reflected by very low standing stocks and low diversities. Most of these foraminiferal associations do not correspond to those of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. The dominant associations include simple agglutinated species such as Sorosphaerae, Placopsilinellae, Komokiacea and Aschemonellae, as well as small calcareous species such as Stetsonia horvathi and Epistominella arctica. Those of the foraminiferal species that usually thrive under seasonally ice-free conditions in middle bathyal to lower bathyal water depth are found under permanently ice-covered conditions in water depths about 1000 m shallower, if present at all.
    Keywords: Amundsen Basin; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Giant box corer; GKG; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Makarov Basin; MIC; MiniCorer; Morris Jesup Rise; MUC; MultiCorer; Nansen Basin; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/091; PS19/094; PS19/100; PS19/111; PS19/113; PS19/114; PS19/117; PS19/150; PS19/152; PS19/153; PS19/154; PS19/157; PS19/158; PS19/159; PS19/160; PS19/161; PS19/164; PS19/165; PS19/166; PS19/167; PS19/172; PS19/173; PS19/175; PS19/176; PS19/178; PS19/181; PS19/182; PS19/183; PS19/184; PS19/185; PS19/186; PS19/189; PS19/190; PS19/194; PS19/196; PS19/198; PS19/200; PS19/214; PS19/216; PS19/218; PS19/222; PS19/224; PS19/226; PS19/228; PS19/234; PS19/241; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19/252; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS2125-1; PS2125-2; PS2127-1; PS2129-2; PS2137-1; PS2139-1; PS2140-1; PS2143-1; PS2157-3; PS2159-3; PS2160-3; PS2161-1; PS2163-1; PS2164-1; PS2165-5; PS2166-1; PS2167-3; PS2168-3; PS2170-4; PS2171-2; PS2172-3; PS2175-4; PS2176-2; PS2177-3; PS2178-4; PS2179-3; PS2180-1; PS2181-4; PS2182-4; PS2183-3; PS2184-3; PS2185-4; PS2186-3; PS2187-5; PS2190-5; PS2191-1; PS2192-2; PS2193-3; PS2198-4; PS2199-4; PS2200-4; PS2202-4; PS2204-3; PS2205-1; PS2206-4; PS2208-1; PS2210-3; PS2212-6; PS2213-4; PS2214-1; PS2214-4; PS2215-1; PS2445-2; PS2446-2; PS2447-3; PS2448-3; PS27; PS27/019; PS27/020; PS27/024; PS27/025; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Svalbard; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 25
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven (1986-2013)
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Die im Rahmen des zweijährigen Forschungsprojekts über paläomagnetisch-sedimentologische Analysen sedimentärer Zyklen in der Weddell See und ihre stratigraphische Interpretation durchgeführten Arbeiten lieferten Ergebnisse zur Geschichte glaziomariner Sedimentationsprozesse am antarktischen Kontinentalrand. So konnte für ein Kernprofil mit einer außergewöhnlichen Terassenstruktur eine fazielle Gliederung und stratigraphische Einordnung erreicht werden, die auch auf größere Areale in der Weddell See anwendbar sind. Aufgrund der stratigraphischen Randbedingungen konnten die gewonnenen paläo- und gesteinsmagnetischen Messungen in eine Altersstruktur integriert und zusammen mit den sedimentologischen Parametern im Hinblick auf lokale und regionale Umweltveränderungen interpretiert werden. Insbesondere die gesteinsmagnetischen Analysen haben gezeigt, daß die magnetische Kornfraktion als accessorischer Bestandteil im Gesamtsediment dennoch an die Sortierungsprozesse des terrigenen Sedimenteintrags gekoppelt ist. Die ungewöhnlich deutlichen Variationen korngrößenabhängiger Parameter zeigten weiterhin, daß in Verbindung mit einer hochauflösenden Stratigraphie die magnetische Detailanalyse und ein besseres Verständnis der Sedimentationsprozesse in der Nähe der Schelfeiskante und speziell bei Meeresspiegeltiefständen die Möglichkeit eröffnen, unmittelbar Aussagen über die Bewegungen der Schelfeise und die Qualität der Meereisbedeckungen zu machen. Die gezielte Fortsetzung dieser Arbeiten in anderen Arealen am antarktischen Kontinentalrand ist daher wünschenswert. Die verwendeten Verfahren lassen sich mit den derzeit verfügbaren Instrumenten noch erweitern und versprechen durch die sehr sensitive Methodik detaillierte Aussagen zu glaziomarinen Sedimentationsprozessen.
    Keywords: ANT-IV/3; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/5; Atka Bay; AWI_Paleo; Camp Norway; Eastern Weddell Sea, Southern Ocean; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Kapp Norvegia; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS08; PS08/333; PS08/335; PS08/336; PS08/338; PS08/347; PS08/353; PS08/354; PS08/355; PS08/356; PS08/357; PS08/361; PS08/364; PS08/365; PS08/366; PS08/367; PS08/368; PS08/371; PS08/374; PS08/486; PS10; PS10/694; PS10/699; PS10/778; PS10/816; PS12; PS12/291; PS12/302; PS12/536; PS1367-2; PS1368-3; PS1369-2; PS1370-2; PS1375-3; PS1377-2; PS1378-3; PS1379-3; PS1380-3; PS1381-3; PS1385-3; PS1386-2; PS1387-3; PS1388-3; PS1389-3; PS1390-3; PS1392-1; PS1394-4; PS1431-1; PS1481-3; PS1483-3; PS1498-2; PS1506-1; PS1588-1; PS1591-1; PS16; PS16/444; PS1648-1; PS1799-1; SL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 26
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Nürnberg, Christine Caroline; Bohrmann, Gerhard; Frank, Martin; Schlüter, Michael (1997): Barium accumulation in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean - Results from 190,000 year records. Paleoceanography, 12(4), 594-603, https://doi.org/10.1029/97PA01130
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Extensive investigations of sedimentary barium were performed in the southern South Atlantic in order to assess the reliability of the barium signal in Antarctic sediments as a proxy for paleoproductivity. Maximum accumulation rates of excess barium were calculated for the Antarctic zone south of the polar front where silica accumulates at high rates. The correspondence between barium and opal supports the applicability of barium as a proxy for productivity. Within the Antarctic zone north of today's average sea ice maximum, interglacial vertical rain rates of excess barium are high, with a maximum occurring during the last deglaciation and early Holocene and during oxygen isotope chronozone 5.5. During these periods, the maximum silica accumulation was supposedly located south of the polar front. Glacial paleoproductivity, instead, was low within the Antarctic zone. North of the polar front, significantly higher barium accumulation occurs during glacial times. The vertical rain rates, however, are as high as in the glacial Antarctic zone. Therefore there was no evidence for an increased productivity in the glacial Southern Ocean.
    Keywords: Agulhas Basin; Agulhas Ridge; Antarctic Peninsula; ANT-IX/2; ANT-IX/3; ANT-IX/4; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-X/4; ANT-X/5; ANT-X/6; ANT-XI/2; Atka Bay; Atlantic Indik Ridge; Atlantic Ridge; AWI_Paleo; Barents Sea; Camp Norway; Cape Basin; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Eastern Weddell Sea, Southern Ocean; Falkland Islands; Filchner Trough; Giant box corer; Giant gravity corer AWI; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); GSL; Halley Bay; Indian-Antarctic Ridge; Islas Orcadas; Kapp Norvegia; KL; Lazarev Sea; Lyddan Island; Maud Rise; Meteor Rise; MG; MIC; MiniCorer; MUC; Multiboxcorer; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS10; PS10/668; PS10/672; PS10/673; PS10/675; PS10/678; PS10/684; PS10/686; PS10/690; PS10/699; PS10/701; PS10/703; PS10/707; PS10/711; PS10/719; PS10/725; PS10/738; PS10/757; PS10/762; PS10/766; PS10/778; PS10/782; PS10/784; PS10/804; PS10/816; PS10/818; PS10/820; PS10/824; PS12; PS12/242; PS12/244; PS12/247; PS12/248; PS12/250; PS12/252; PS12/271; PS12/273+276; PS12/280; PS12/284; PS12/287; PS12/289; PS12/300; PS12/302; PS12/305; PS12/310; PS12/312; PS12/319; PS12/336; PS12/338; PS12/344; PS12/348; PS12/352; PS12/364; PS12/366; PS12/374; PS12/380; PS12/382; PS12/458; PS12/486; PS12/490; PS12/492; PS12/526; PS12/534; PS12/545; PS12/551; PS12/553; PS12/555; PS12/557; PS1471-2; PS1472-4; PS1473-1; PS1474-1; PS1475-1; PS1477-1; PS1478-1; PS1480-2; PS1483-2; PS1484-2; PS1485-1; PS1486-2; PS1487-1; PS1488-1; PS1489-3; PS1490-2; PS1493-2; PS1495-1; PS1496-2; PS1498-1; PS1499-2; PS1500-2; PS1502-1; PS1506-2; PS1507-2; PS1508-2; PS1509-2; PS1572-1; PS1573-2; PS1574-1; PS1575-2; PS1576-1; PS1577-2; PS1581-2; PS1582-1; PS1584-2; PS1585-1; PS1586-2; PS1587-1; PS1590-1; PS1591-2; PS1593-1; PS1595-2; PS1596-1; PS1599-1; PS16; PS16/267; PS16/271; PS16/278; PS16/281; PS16/284; PS16/303; PS16/306; PS16/311; PS16/316; PS16/321; PS16/323; PS16/334; PS16/342; PS16/345; PS16/351; PS16/354; PS16/362; PS16/372; PS1605-3; PS1606-1; PS1609-2; PS1611-1; PS1613-2; PS1618-1; PS1619-1; PS1622-1; PS1625-1; PS1626-1; PS1635-2; PS1638-1; PS1639-1; PS1640-3; PS1645-1; PS1647-2; PS1649-1; PS1651-2; PS1652-2; PS1653-2; PS1654-1; PS1751-2; PS1752-5; PS1754-2; PS1755-1; PS1756-5; PS1756-6; PS1764-2; PS1765-1; PS1768-1; PS1768-8; PS1771-4; PS1772-6; PS1772-8; PS1773-2; PS1775-5; PS1777-7; PS1778-1; PS1779-3; PS1780-1; PS1782-6; PS1786-2; PS18; PS18/044; PS18/048; PS18/055; PS18/056; PS18/058; PS18/059; PS18/063; PS18/065; PS18/067; PS18/075; PS18/080; PS18/081; PS18/082; PS18/084; PS18/086; PS18/088; PS18/092; PS18/094; PS18/096; PS18/100; PS18/101; PS18/102; PS18/106; PS18/108; PS18/114; PS18/118; PS18/167; PS18/186; PS18/187; PS18/196; PS18/198; PS18/199; PS18/200; PS18/201; PS18/202; PS18/203; PS18/204; PS18/218; PS18/227; PS18/229; PS18/236; PS18/237; PS18/238; PS18/241; PS18/243; PS18/244; PS18/249; PS18/250; PS18/251; PS18/252; PS18/253; PS18/254; PS18/255; PS18/256; PS18/257; PS18/261; PS18/262; PS18/263; PS18/266; PS18/267; PS18 06AQANTIX_2; PS1953-1; PS1954-1; PS1957-1; PS1958-1; PS1960-1; PS1961-1; PS1963-1; PS1964-1; PS1965-1; PS1967-1; PS1969-1; PS1970-1; PS1971-1; PS1973-1; PS1974-1; PS1975-1; PS1977-1; PS1978-1; PS1979-1; PS1981-1; PS1982-1; PS1983-1; PS1985-1; PS1986-1; PS1987-1; PS1988-1; PS2020-1; PS2039-2; PS2040-1; PS2049-3; PS2050-2; PS2051-3; PS2052-3; PS2053-1; PS2054-2; PS2055-3; PS2056-2; PS2065-1; PS2072-1; PS2073-1; PS2080-1; PS2081-1; PS2082-1; PS2084-2; PS2086-3; PS2087-1; PS2091-1; PS2092-1; PS2093-1; PS2094-1; PS2095-1; PS2096-1; PS2097-1; PS2098-1; PS2099-1; PS2103-2; PS2104-1; PS2105-2; PS21 06AQANTX_4; PS2108-1; PS2109-3; PS22; PS22/280; PS22/678; PS22/679; PS22/690; PS22/712; PS22/714; PS22/717; PS22/718; PS22/721; PS22/722; PS22/727; PS22/730; PS22/737; PS22/744; PS22/747; PS22/748; PS22/751; PS22/755; PS22/758; PS22/764; PS22/769; PS22/773; PS22/776; PS22/780; PS22/783; PS22/786; PS22/790; PS22/791; PS22/797; PS22/802; PS22/803; PS22/804; PS22/805; PS22/806; PS22/810; PS22/811; PS22/812; PS22/813; PS22/814; PS22/815; PS22/816; PS22/818; PS22/823; PS22/825; PS22/826; PS22/828; PS22/829; PS22/830; PS22/832; PS22/833; PS22/834; PS22/835; PS22/837; PS22/838; PS22/840; PS22/841; PS22/842; PS22/846; PS22/849; PS22/850; PS22/851; PS22/852; PS22/853; PS22/855; PS22/857; PS22/860; PS22/872; PS22/876; PS22/879; PS22/886; PS22/891; PS22/899; PS22/902; PS22/908; PS22/911; PS22/917; PS22/941; PS22/947; PS22/956; PS22/973; PS22 06AQANTX_5; PS2230-1; PS2231-1; PS2233-1; PS2234-1; PS2235-1; PS2237-1; PS2238-1; PS2239-1; PS2240-1; PS2241-1; PS2242-1; PS2243-1; PS2244-1; PS2245-1; PS2246-1; PS2247-1; PS2248-1; PS2250-6; PS2251-1; PS2254-1; PS2256-4; PS2257-1; PS2258-1; PS2259-1; PS2260-1; PS2262-7; PS2263-1; PS2265-2; PS2266-1; PS2267-2; PS2268-6; PS2269-5; PS2270-5; PS2271-1; PS2272-1; PS2273-1; PS2275-1; PS2276-2; PS2278-5; PS2280-1; PS2283-6; PS2285-3; PS2288-1; PS2292-1; PS2293-1; PS2299-1; PS2302-2; PS2304-2; PS2305-1; PS2306-1; PS2307-2; PS2308-1; PS2312-1; PS2313-1; PS2314-1; PS2315-1; PS2316-1; PS2317-1; PS2318-1; PS2320-1; PS2325-1; PS2327-1; PS2328-1; PS2329-1; PS2330-1; PS2331-1; PS2333-1; PS2334-1; PS2335-4; PS2336-1; PS2338-1; PS2339-1; PS2341-1; PS2342-1; PS2343-1; PS2347-1; PS2350-1; PS2351-1; PS2352-1; PS2353-2; PS2354-1; PS2355-1; PS2356-1; PS2357-2; PS2361-1; PS2362-1; PS2363-1; PS2364-1; PS2365-2; PS2366-1; PS2367-1; PS2368-4; PS2369-4; PS2370-4; PS2371-1; PS2372-1; PS2374-2; PS2376-1; PS2487-2; PS2488-1; PS2489-4; PS2489-7; PS2491-5; PS2492-1; PS2493-3; PS2494-1; PS2498-2; PS2499-1; PS2501-4; PS2502-1; PS2503-1; PS2505-2; PS2506-1; PS2507-1; PS2508-1; PS2509-2; PS2511-3; PS2512-1; PS2513-1; PS2514-3; PS2515-2; PS2516-1; PS2517-5; PS2518-2; PS2519-1; PS2520-1; PS28; PS28/236; PS28/243; PS28/256; PS28/264; PS28/277; PS28/280; PS28/289; PS28/304; PS28/314; PS28/329; PS28/334; PS28/337; PS28/342; PS28/345; PS28/347; PS28/350; PS28/352; PS28/361; PS28/367; PS28/373; PS28/375; PS28/378; PS28/385; PS28/390; PS28/395; PS28/404; PS28/408; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; Shona Ridge; SL; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; South Orkney; South Sandwich; South Sandwich Basin; South Sandwich Trough; van Veen Grab; Vestkapp; VGRAB; Weddell Sea; Wegener Canyon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 27
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Holzwarth, Ulrike; Meggers, Helge; Esper, Oliver; Kuhlmann, Holger; Freudenthal, Tim; Hensen, Christian; Zonneveld, Karin A F (2010): NW African climate variations during the last 47,000 years: Evidence from organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 291(3-4), 443-455, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2010.03.013
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: NW African climate shows orbital and millenial-scale variations, which are tightly connected to changes in marine productivity. We present an organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst (dinocyst) record from a sediment core off Cape Yubi at about 27°N in the Canary Basin covering the time period from 47 to 3ka before present (BP). The dinocyst record reflects differences in upwelling intensity and seasonality as well as the influence of fluvial input. Sea-level changes play an important role for the upwelling pattern and productivity signals at the core site. Within the studied time interval, four main phases were distinguished. (1) From 45 to 24ka BP, when sea-level was mostly about 75m lower than today, high relative abundances of cysts of heterotrophic taxa point to enhanced upwelling activity, especially during Heinrich Events, while relatively low dinocyst accumulation rates indicate that filament activity at the core location was strongly reduced. (2) At sea-level lowstand during the LGM to H1, dinocyst accumulation rates suggest that local filament formation was even more inhibited. (3) From the early Holocene to about 8ka BP, extraordinary high accumulation rates of most dinocyst species, especially of Lingulodinium machaerophorum, suggest that nutrient supply via fluvial input increased and rising sea-level promoted filament formation. At the same time, the upwelling season prolongated. (4) A relative increase in cysts of photoautotrophic taxa from about 8ka BP on indicates more stratified conditions while fluvial input decreased. Our study shows that productivity records can be very sensitive to regional features. From the dinocyst data we infer that marine surface productivity off Cape Yubi during glacial times was within the scale of modern times but extremely enhanced during deglaciation.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB5546-2; KL; M42/4b; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Piston corer (BGR type)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 28
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    In:  Supplement to: Birgel, Daniel; Hass, H Christian (2004): Oceanic and atmospheric variations during the last deglaciation in the Fram Strait (Arctic Ocean): a coupled high-resolution organic-geochemical and sedimentological study. Quaternary Science Reviews, 23(1-2), 29-47, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2003.10.001
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: From a high sedimentation rate core, obtained from the Yermak slope (Arctic Ocean), we deduced short-term climatic fluctuations of the last deglaciation lasting from 17,000 to 9,000 years BP. By using a coupled organic-geochemical and sedimentological approach, we reconstructed near-bottom current conditions and assessed their significance in relation with comparable global thermohaline circulation patterns and surface water conditions. Highest concentrations and fluctuations of specific marine phytoplankton biomarkers were obtained in the Bølling-Allerød, when the major deglaciation of the Svalbard-Barents-Sea-Ice-Sheet (SBIS) occurred. The marine biomarker record and the sedimentological record are consistent with climate reconstructions obtained from Greenland ice cores and thermohaline circulation variations. However, beginning with the Younger Dryas (YD) episode, bottom currents decreased during this time period, but surface waters remained very productive. The atmospheric conditions of the western Fram Strait (reconstructed from biomarker data) and thermohaline circulation signals (reconstructed from sedimentological data) were decoupled in the YD. Maximum insolation values of solar radiation and ''Föhn''-like winds enabled open water conditions and increased productivity values in the northern Fram Strait, at least in summer.
    Keywords: ARK-XIII/2; AWI_Paleo; KAL; Kasten corer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2837-5; PS44; PS44/065; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 29
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    In:  MARUM - Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University Bremen
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Organic and inorganic components from terrestrial origin can be transported into the marine system by wind and rivers. In the study region wind transport forms the major transport mechanism by episodically transporting large amounts of particles into the upper water column. Recent studies have revealed that these particles are most probably not transported down through the water column immediately but that there are several layers within the water column where these particles remain in suspension. It is suggested that the residence time of these particles within these so called nepheloid layers might be up to several thousands of years. For adequate subsampling of these layers with the help of in-situ pumps and a Rosette containing 18 Niskin bottles (10 l volume), the temperature, density, chlorophyll and oxygen differences of the upper 600m of the water column was determined using a CTD (seabird 911+).
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; GeoB13031-1; GeoB13031-2; GeoB13032-1; GeoB13032-2; GeoB13033-2; GeoB13033-3; GeoB13034-1; GeoB13034-2; GeoB13035-2; GeoB13035-3; GeoB13036-1; GeoB13036-3; GeoB13037-2; GeoB13037-3; MARUM; POS366/2; Poseidon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
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  • 30
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    In:  Supplement to: Winkelmann, Daniel; Geissler, Wolfram H; Schneider, Julia; Stein, Ruediger (2008): Dynamic and timing of the Hinlopen/Yermak Megaslide north of Spitsbergen, Arctic Ocean. Marine Geology, 250(1-2), 34-50, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2007.11.013
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Integrated interpretation of multi-beam bathymetric, sediment-penetrating acoustic (PARASOUND) and seismic data show a multiple slope failure on the northern European continental margin, north of Spitsbergen. The first slide event occurred during MIS 3 around 30 cal. ka BP and was characterised by highly dynamic and rapid evacuation of ca. 1250 km**3 of sediment from the lower to the upper part of the continental slope. During this event, headwalls up to 1600 m high were created and ca. 1150 km**3 material from hemi-pelagic sediments and from the lower pre-existing trough mouth fan has been entrained and transported into the semi-enclosed Sophia Basin. This megaslide event was followed by a secondary evacuation of material to the Nansen Basin by funnelling of the debris through the channel between Polarstern Seamount and the adjacent continental slope. The main slide debris is overlain by a set of fining-upward sequences as evidence for the associated suspension cloud and following minor failure events. Subsequent adjustment of the eastern headwalls led to failure of rather soft sediments and creation of smaller debris flows that followed the main slide surficial topography. Discharge of the Hinlopen ice stream during the Last Glacial Maximum and the following deglaciation draped the central headwalls and created a fan deposit of glacigenic debris flows.
    Keywords: ARK-VIII/2; ARK-XX/3; AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; GC; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/098; PS19 EPOS II; PS2128-2; PS66; PS66/308-3; PS66/309-1; PS66/311-3; PS66/312-2; PS66/313-1; PS66/319-1; PS66/329-3; PS66/330-2; SL; Svalbard
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
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  • 31
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    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: 2024-07-01
    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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  • 32
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    In:  Supplement to: Ó Cofaigh, Colm; Dowdeswell, Julian A; Grobe, Hannes (2001): Holocene glacimarine sedimentation, inner Scoresby Sund, East Greenland: the influence of fast-flowing ice-sheet outlet glaciers. Marine Geology, 175(1-4), 103-129, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(01)00117-7
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Holocene glacimarine sedimentation associated with fast-flowing outlet glaciers draining the Greenland Ice Sheet is investigated using sedimentary and acoustic data from inner Scoresby Sund, East Greenland. Sedimentation in inner Scoresby Sund is dominated by three processes which are influenced by differences in proximity to fast-flowing outlet glaciers, extent of glacier-ice cover and fjord bathymetry: (1) sediment-gravity flow, principally in the form of turbidity currents and debris flows; (2) suspension sedimentation from turbid meltwater plumes; and (3) iceberg rafting. These processes result in texturally and sedimentologically heterogeneous lithofacies. Proportionally, fine-grained muds (laminated, stratified and massive facies) dominate cores recovered from inner Scoresby Sund, accounting for 80% of the total, whereas diamict facies account for only 15%. Abundant fine-grained muds demonstrate that meltwater flux and sedimentation is significant in this high Arctic glacimarine environment, in settings proximal to fast-flowing outlet glaciers. With increasing distance from these glacier termini, muds are replaced progressively by iceberg-rafted, coarse-grained sediment. The dominance of this iceberg-rafted sediment in outer Scoresby Sund reflects both its more distal location from fast-flowing glacier termini, and the high calving flux associated with these ice masses. Laminated muds deposited by turbidity currents and suspension settling from overflow plumes in inner Scoresby Sund are similar to lithofacies produced in temperate and subpolar glacimarine systems. This implies a similarity in sedimentation processes and resulting facies across a wide spectrum of climatically-, glaciologically- (fast-flowing and non fast-flowing ice-masses) and oceanographically-variable glacimarine settings. Recognition of laminated, fine-grained facies in the geological record therefore does not necessarily indicate a temperate palaeo-glacial setting. However, the predominance of iceberg-rafted diamict facies in ice-distal sedimentary records suggests the former presence of relatively cold environmental conditions in which iceberg-sedimentation played a dominant role.
    Keywords: ARK-VII/1; ARK-VII/3b; AWI_Paleo; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Greenland Shelf; Greenland Slope; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS17; PS17/244; PS17/251; PS17/252; PS17/257; PS17/258; PS17/260; PS17/262; PS17/264; PS17/265; PS17/266; PS17/271; PS17/272; PS17/273; PS17/274; PS17/275; PS17/276; PS17/277; PS17/281; PS17/282; PS17/283; PS17/285; PS17/288; PS17/290; PS1921-1; PS1927-1; PS1928-1; PS1929-2; PS1930-1; PS1930-2; PS1931-1; PS1932-1; PS1932-2; PS1933-1; PS1934-1; PS1935-1; PS1936-1; PS1937-2; PS1938-1; PS1939-1; PS1939-2; PS1940-1; PS1941-1; PS1942-1; PS1943-1; PS1944-1; PS1945-1; PS1946-1; PS1949-2; PS1951-1; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; Scoresby Sund; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 33
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    In:  Supplement to: Bonn, Wolfgang J (1995): Biogenopal und biogenes Barium als Indikatoren für spätquartäre Produktivitätsänderungen am antarktischen Kontinentalhang, atlantischer Sektor (Biogenic opal and barium: Indicators for late Quarternary changes in productivity at the Antarctic continental margin, Atlantic Sector). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 180, 186 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0180_1995
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Sedimentological, geochemical (in particular biogenic content) and physical properties from the Weddell, Lazarev and Cosmonaut seas along the Antarctic continental margin were analysed in order to reconstruct the late Quaternary productivity and sedimentary processes of this region. Seven undisturbed sediment cores were chosen. The sediments represent a depositional period from 400,000 years to the recent time. The late Quaternary climatic changes influence changes in the paleoenvironmental and the geological conditions, directly forced by the behaviour of the Antarctic ice sheet. All investigated cores are positioned within the oscillating ice sheet area and reflect the influence of the ice sheet in response to the climatic cycles. The organic carbon, carbonate, biogenic opal, and barium contents were measured, andlor calculated, together with the determination by XRD of the terrigenous components such as quartz and plagioclase (expressed as relative to corundum standard). The contents of organic carbon and carbonate in general are very low. The results provide an indication that organic carbon content is a preservation signal and not a productivity signal. Carbonate is not correlated with biogenic opal and biogenic barium. Profiles of biogenic opal and barium were measured within the sediment cores providing a qualitative and quantitative tool to estimate changes in paleoproductivity over the investigated time. Generally, good correlations between the barium and opal records of the sediment cores indicate that dissolution of opal in the water column and the sediment does not obscure the surface productivity signal. Therefore, opal can be used in combination with other proxies for paleoproductivity discussions in this area. Maximum paleoproductivity rates (PPmax) during peak warm stages reach values between 82-345 gC/m2/a and maximum export productivity rates (Pnew, max) between 14-177 gC/m2/a, that are representative of high-productivity areas. They are drastically reduced during glacial times (PPmax = 14-107 gC/m2/a, Pnew, max = 1-25 gC/m2/a). The results allow the development of a model for paleoproductivity processes for the last 400,000 years at the Antarctic continental margin of the Atlantic sector. Following the estimated productivity rates it can be concluded that during the last 400,000 years, North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) heat flux into the southernmost South Atlantic Ocean was restricted to interglacial periods with stronger input of NADW driven deep water circulation during interglacial stages 1, 5 (5.5) and 7.
    Keywords: ANT-IX/3; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/6; Atka Bay; AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Lazarev Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS12; PS12/248; PS12/536; PS1575-1; PS16; PS16/534; PS16/541; PS1648-1; PS18; PS18/184; PS18/185; PS18/186; PS18/187; PS18/191; PS18/192; PS18/193; PS18/194; PS18/196; PS18/198; PS18/203; PS18/204; PS1821-6; PS1824-1; PS2037-3; PS2038-2; PS2039-1; PS2040-2; PS2044-1; PS2045-3; PS2046-1; PS2047-3; PS2049-4; PS2050-1; PS2055-2; PS2056-1; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; SL; South Orkney
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 44 datasets
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  • 34
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    In:  Supplement to: Verplanck, Emily P; Farmer, G Lang; Andrews, John T; Dunhill, Gita; Millo, Christian (2009): Provenance of Quaternary glacial and glacimarine sediments along the southeast Greenland margin. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 286(1-2), 52-62, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2009.06.012
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The Nd and Sr isotopic compositions of Quaternary glacial and glacimarine siliciclastic sediments deposited along the margin of southeast Greenland were determined to assess the roles of the Greenland, Iceland, and more distal ice sheets in delivering detritus to this portion of the northern North Atlantic. The isotopic compositions of detritus generated by portions of the southern Greenland Ice Sheet were defined through measurements of till and trough mouth fan sediments. Massive diamicts from the Scoresby Sund trough mouth fan show a restricted range of e-Nd (-11.8 to -16.6) and 87Sr/86Sr (0.7192-0.7246) consistent with their derivation from mixtures of sediments derived from Paleoproterozoic and/or Caledonian basement and Tertiary Greenland basalts. Further south at Kangerlussuaq, till isotopic compositions covary with the underlying basement type, with low e-Nd values in the inner fiord (-18.1) reflecting the erosion of the local Precambrian gneisses, but with higher e-Nd values (-2.3 to 2.5) found where the trough crosses East Greenland Tertiary basalts. Fine-grained (〈 63 µm) sediments deposited along the southeast Greenland margin also show regular spatial isotopic variations. Ambient sediments and ice-rafted detritus in the southern Irminger Basin trend towards low e-Nd values (to ~ -28) and 87Sr/86Sr ratios (~ 0.711 to ~ 0.715) and are likely derived from proximal Archean gneisses of SE Greenland. Further north in the northern Irminger and Blosseville Basins, sediments trend toward much higher e-Nd (〉 -4) and low 87Sr/86Sr (〈 0.709) reflecting a component derived from the local Iceland volcanic rocks and/or the East Greenland Tertiary basalts. In all three regions, the locally-derived detritus is intermixed with sediment with an intermediate e-Nd value (~ -10) and 87Sr/86Sr (~ 0.718) that was likely delivered by icebergs emanating from the Eurasian Ice Sheets and not from eastern Greenland. Deposition of glacial sediments from both proximal and distal (Eurasian) sources occurred adjacent to SE Greenland throughout the past 50 Ka, with periodic increases in IRD deposition at various times including those of Heinrich events 1, 2 and 4. These results suggest that at least the southern portions of the Greenland Ice Sheet experienced periodic instabilities during the Last Glacial period.
    Keywords: ARK-XVIII/1; Bjarni Saemundsson; BS11/91; BS1191-K6A; GC; Gravity corer; Greenland Sea; HU91-045-052; HUD91/45; Hudson; Iceland Sea; James Clark Ross; Jan Mayen; JM96; JM96-1213/1-GC; JM96-1216/1-GC; JR20000727; JR51; JR51GC-31; JR51GC-32; PC; Piston corer; Polarstern; PS62; PS62/017-4; South Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 35
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    In:  Supplement to: Schubert, Carsten J (1995): Organischer Kohlenstoff in spätquartären Sedimenten des Arktischen Ozeans: Terrigener Eintrag und marine Produktivität (Organic carbon in late Quaternary Arctic Ocean sediments: Terrigenous supply and marine productivity). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 177, 178 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0177_1995
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: During the ARCTIC '91-Expedition with RV 'Polarstern', several Multicorer and Kastenlot-cores were recovered along a profile crossing the eastern part of the Arctic Ocean. The investigated cores consist mainly of clayey-silty sediments, and some units with a higher sand content. In this thesis, detailed sedimentological and organic-geochemical investigations were performed. In part, the near surface sediments were AMS-14C dated making it possible to Interpret the results of the organic-geochemical investigations in terms of climatic changes (isotopic stage 2 to the Holocene). The more or less absence of foraminifers within the long cores prevented the development of an oxygen isotope stratigraphy. Only the results of core PS2174-5 from the Amundsen-Basin could be discussed in terms of the climatic change that could be dated back to oxygen isotope stage 7. Detailed organic-geochemical investigations in the central Arctic Ocean are rare. Therefore, several different organic-geochemical methods were used to obtain a wide range of data for the Interpretation of the organic matter. The high organic carbon content of the surface sediments is derived from a high input of terrigenous organic matter. The terrigenous organic material is most likely entrained within the sea-ice On the Siberian shelves and released during ice-drift over the Arctic Ocean. Other factors such as iceberg-transport and turbidites are also responsible for the high input of terrigenous organic matter. Due to the more or less closed sea-ice Cover, the Arctic Ocean is known as a low productivity system. A model shows, that only 2 % of the organic matter in central Arctic Ocean sediments is of a marine origin. The influence of the West-Spitsbergen current increases the marine organic matter content to 16 %. Short chain n-alkanes (C17 and C19) can be used as a marker of marine productivity in the Arctic Ocean. Higher contents of short chain n-alkanes exist in surface sediments of the Lomonosov-Ridge and the Makarov-Basin, indicating a higher marine productivity caused by a reduced sea-ice Cover. The Beaufort-Gyre and Transpolar-Drift drift Patterns could be responsible for the lower sea-ice distribution in this region. The sediments of Stage 2 and Stage 3 in this region are also dominated by a higher content of short chain-nalkanes indicating a comparable ice-drift Pattern during that time. The content and composition of organic carbon in the sediments of core PS2174-5 reflect glaciallinterglacial changes. Interglacial stages 7 and 5e show a low organic carbon content (C 0,5 %) and, as indicated by high hydrogen-indices, low CIN-ratios, higher content of n-alkanes (C17 and C19) and a higher opal content, a higher marine productivity. In the Holocene, a high content of foraminifers, coccoliths, ostracodes, and sponge spicules indicate higher surface-water productivity. Nevertheless, the low hydrogenindices reveal a high content of terrigenous organic matter. Therefore, the Holocene seems to be different from interglacials 7 and 5e. During the glacial periods (stages 6, upper 5, and 4), TOC-values are significantly higher (0.7 to 1.3 %). In addition, low hydrogen-indices, high CIN-ratios, low short chain n-alkanes and opal contents provide evidence for a higher input of terrigenous organic matter and reduced marine productivity. The high lignin content in core sections with high TOC-contents, substantiates the high input of terrigenous organic matter. Changes in the content and composition of the organic carbon is believed to vary with the fluctuations in sea-level and sea-ice coverage.
    Keywords: Amundsen Basin; ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Giant box corer; GKG; KAL; Kasten corer; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Makarov Basin; MUC; MultiCorer; Nansen Basin; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/152; PS19/153; PS19/154; PS19/157; PS19/159; PS19/165; PS19/166; PS19/171; PS19/172; PS19/173; PS19/175; PS19/176; PS19/178; PS19/182; PS19/183; PS19/185; PS19/186; PS19/190; PS19/194; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2159-3; PS2160-3; PS2161-1; PS2163-1; PS2165-5; PS2170-4; PS2171-2; PS2171-4; PS2174-2; PS2174-5; PS2175-4; PS2176-2; PS2176-3; PS2177-3; PS2177-5; PS2178-4; PS2178-5; PS2179-3; PS2181-4; PS2182-4; PS2184-3; PS2185-3; PS2185-6; PS2187-4; PS2187-5; PS2190-1; PS2190-5; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 27 datasets
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  • 36
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    In:  Supplement to: Melles, Martin (1991): Paläoglaziologie und Paläozeanographie im Spätquartär am Kontinentalrand des südlichen Weddellmeeres, Antarktis (Late Quaternary paleoglaciology and paleoceanography at the continental margin of the southern Weddell Sea, Antarctica). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 81, 190 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0081_1991
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: During four expeditions with RV "Polarstern" at the continental margin of the southern Weddell Sea, profiling and geological sampling were carried out. A detailed bathymetric map was constructed from echo-sounding data. Sub-bottom profiles, classified into nine echotypes, have been mapped and interpreted. Sedimentological analyses were carried out on 32 undisturbed box grab surface samples, as well as on sediment cores from 9 sites. Apart from the description of the sediments and the investigation of sedimentary structures on X-radiographs the following characteristics were determined: grain-size distributions; carbonate and Corg content; component distibutions in different grain-size fractions; stable oxygen and carbon isotopes in planktic and, partly, in benthic foraminifers; and physical properties. The stratigraphy is based On 14C-dating, oxygen isotope Stages and, at one site, On paleomagnetic measurements and 230Th-analyses The sediments represent the period of deposition from the last glacial maximum until recent time. They are composed predominantly of terrigenous components. The formation of the sediments was controlled by glaciological, hydrographical and gravitational processes. Variations in the sea-ice coverage influenced biogenic production. The ice sheet and icebergs were important media for sediment transport; their grounding caused compaction and erosion of glacial marine sediments on the outer continental shelf. The circulation and the physical and chemical properties of the water masses controlled the transport of fine-grained material, biogenic production and its preservation. Gravitational transport processes were the inain mode of sediment movements on the continental slope. The continental ice sheet advanced to the shelf edge and grounded On the sea-floor, presumably later than 31,000 y.B.P. This ice movement was linked with erosion of shelf sediments and a very high sediment supply to the upper continental slope from the adiacent southern shelf. The erosional surface On the shelf is documented in the sub-bottom profiles as a regular, acoustically hard reflector. Dense sea-ice coverage above the lower and middle continental slope resulted in the almost total breakdown of biogenic production. Immediately in front of the ice sheet, above the upper continental slope, a 〈50 km broad coastal polynya existed at least periodically. Biogenic production was much higher in this polynya than elsewhere. Intense sea-ice formation in the polynya probably led to the development of a high salinity and, consequently, dense water mass, which flowed as a stream near bottom across the continental slope into the deep sea, possibly contributing to bottom water formation. The current velocities of this water mass presumably had seasonal variations. The near-bottom flow of the dense water mass, in combination with the gravity transport processes that arose from the high rates of sediment accumulation, probably led to erosion that progressed laterally from east to West along a SW to NE-trending, 200 to 400 m high morphological step at the continental slope. During the period 14,000 to 13,000 y.B.P., during the postglacial temperature and sea-level rise, intense changes in the environmental conditions occured. Primarily, the ice masses on the outer continental shelf started to float. Intense calving processes resulted in a rapid retreat of the ice edge to the south. A consequence of this retreat was, that the source area of the ice-rafted debris changed from the adjacent southern shelf to the eastern Weddell Sea. As the ice retreated, the gravitational transport processes On the continental slope ceased. Soon after the beginning of the ice retreat, the sea-ice coverage in the whole research area decreased. Simultaneously, the formation of the high salinity dense bottom water ceased, and the sediment composition at the continental slope then became influenced by the water masses of the Weddell Gyre. The formation of very cold Ice Shelf Water (ISW) started beneath the southward retreating Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf somewhat later than 12,000 y.B.P. The ISW streamed primarily with lower velocities than those of today across the continental slope, and was conducted along the erosional step on the slope into the deep sea. At 7,500 y.B.P., the grounding line of the ice masses had retreated 〉 400 km to the south. A progressive retreat by additional 200 to 300 km probably led to the development of an Open water column beneath the ice south of Berkner Island at about 4,000 y.B.P. This in turn may have led to an additional ISW, which had formed beneath the Ronne Ice Shelf, to flow towards the Filcher Ice Shelf. As a result, increased flow of ISW took place over the continental margin, possibly enabling the ISW to spill over the erosional step On the upper continental slope towards the West. Since that time, there is no longer any documentation of the ISW in the sedimentary Parameters on the lower continental slope. There, recent sediments reflect the lower water masses of the Weddell Gyre. The sea-ice coverage in early Holocene time was again so dense that biogenic production was significantly restricted.
    Keywords: ANT-I/2; ANT-II/4; ANT-III/3; ANT-IV/3; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; Atka Bay; AWI_Paleo; Camp Norway; Cape Fiske; Dredge; DRG; Eastern Weddell Sea, Southern Ocean; Filchner Shelf; Filchner Trough; Giant box corer; GKG; Gould Bay; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Kapp Norvegia; Lyddan Island; MG; Multiboxcorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS01; PS01/154; PS01/155; PS01/156; PS01/161; PS01/162; PS01/177; PS01/184; PS01/186; PS01/189; PS04; PS04/477; PS04/481; PS04/484; PS04/495; PS04/500; PS04/508; PS04/509; PS06/301; PS06/302; PS06/303; PS06/304; PS06/306; PS06 SIBEX; PS08; PS08/321; PS08/324; PS08/327; PS08/333; PS08/335; PS08/336; PS08/338; PS08/340; PS08/344; PS08/345; PS08/346; PS08/347; PS08/350; PS08/353; PS08/354; PS08/355; PS08/356; PS08/357; PS08/358; PS08/359; PS08/360; PS08/361; PS08/364; PS08/365; PS08/366; PS08/367; PS08/368; PS08/369; PS08/374; PS08/375; PS08/379; PS08/380; PS08/381; PS08/382; PS08/384; PS08/385; PS08/386; PS08/387; PS08/394; PS08/396; PS08/397; PS08/401; PS08/402; PS08/410; PS08/428; PS08/430; PS08/432; PS08/438; PS08/439; PS08/440; PS08/442; PS08/444; PS08/445; PS08/449; PS08/450; PS08/452; PS08/480; PS08/482; PS08/483; PS10; PS10/725; PS10/738; PS10/740; PS10/748; PS10/757; PS10/760; PS10/762; PS10/766; PS10/768; PS10/778; PS10/782; PS1010-1; PS1011-1; PS1012-1; PS1013-1; PS1014-1; PS1016-1; PS1017-1; PS1018-1; PS1019-1; PS12; PS12/336; PS12/338; PS12/340; PS12/342; PS12/344; PS12/346; PS12/348; PS12/350; PS12/352; PS12/354; PS12/356; PS12/382; PS12/384; PS1215-2; PS1216-1; PS1217-1; PS1219-1; PS1220-3; PS1222-1; PS1223-1; PS1275-1; PS1276-1; PS1277-1; PS1278-1; PS1279-1; PS1363-3; PS1364-1; PS1366-1; PS1367-1; PS1368-1; PS1369-1; PS1370-1; PS1371-1; PS1372-2; PS1373-2; PS1374-2; PS1375-2; PS1376-2; PS1377-1; PS1378-1; PS1379-1; PS1380-1; PS1381-1; PS1382-1; PS1383-1; PS1384-1; PS1385-1; PS1386-1; PS1387-1; PS1388-1; PS1389-1; PS1390-1; PS1391-1; PS1394-1; PS1395-1; PS1396-1; PS1397-1; PS1398-2; PS1399-1; PS1400-1; PS1400-4; PS1401-1; PS1401-2; PS1402-2; PS1403-1; PS1405-1; PS1406-1; PS1407-1; PS1410-1; PS1411-1; PS1412-1; PS1414-1; PS1415-1; PS1416-1; PS1417-1; PS1418-1; PS1419-1; PS1420-1; PS1420-2; PS1421-1; PS1422-1; PS1423-1; PS1424-1; PS1425-1; PS1427-1; PS1428-1; PS1489-3; PS1490-2; PS1491-3; PS1492-1; PS1493-2; PS1494-2; PS1494-3; PS1495-1; PS1496-2; PS1497-1; PS1498-1; PS1498-2; PS1499-2; PS1605-3; PS1606-1; PS1606-3; PS1607-1; PS1607-3; PS1608-1; PS1609-1; PS1609-2; PS1609-3; PS1610-3; PS1610-4; PS1611-1; PS1611-2; PS1611-3; PS1612-1; PS1612-2; PS1613-2; PS1613-4; PS1614-1; PS1615-2; PS1626-1; PS1627-1; SL; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 209 datasets
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  • 37
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    In:  Supplement to: Lamy, Frank; Hebbeln, Dierk; Wefer, Gerold (1999): High-Resolution Marine Record of Climatic Change in Mid-latitude Chile during the Last 28,000 Years Based on Terrigenous Sediment Parameters. Quaternary Research, 51(1), 83-93, https://doi.org/10.1006/qres.1998.2010
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Marine sediment cores from the continental slope off mid-latitude Chile (33°S) were studied with regard to grain-size distributions and clay mineral composition. The data provide a 28,000-yr14C accelerator mass spectrometry-dated record of variations in the terrigenous sediment supply reflecting modifications of weathering conditions and sediment source areas in the continental hinterland. These variations can be interpreted in terms of the paleoclimatic evolution of mid-latitude Chile and are compared to existing terrestrial records. Glacial climates (28,000-18,000 cal yr B.P.) were generally cold-humid with a cold-semiarid interval between 26,000 and 22,000 cal yr B.P. The deglaciation was characterized by a trend toward more arid conditions. During the middle Holocene (8000-4000 cal yr B.P.), comparatively stable climatic conditions prevailed with increased aridity in the Coastal Range. The late Holocene (4000-0 cal yr B.P.) was marked by more variable paleoclimates with generally more humid conditions. Variations of rainfall in mid-latitude Chile are most likely controlled by shifts of the latitudinal position of the Southern Westerlies. Compared to the Holocene, the southern westerly wind belt was located significantly farther north during the last glacial maximum. Less important variations of the latitudinal position of the Southern Westerlies also occurred on shorter time scales.
    Keywords: CONDOR-Ia; East Pacific; GeoB; GeoB3302-1; Geosciences, University of Bremen; GIK17748-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); HOTLINE, HYGAPE; SL; SO101; SO101/3_2-1; SO80_4; SO80a; Sonne; South-East Pacific
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 38
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    In:  Supplement to: Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Ehrmann, Werner (2001): Distribution of clay minerals in drift sediments on the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula, ODP Leg 178, Sites 1095 and 1096. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-29, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.178.224.2001
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The clay mineral compositions of upper Miocene to Quaternary sediments recovered at Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 178, Sites 1095 and 1096, from the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula were analyzed in order to reconstruct the Neogene and Quaternary Antarctic paleoclimate and ice dynamics. The clay mineral assemblages are dominated by smectite, illite, and chlorite. Kaolinite occurs only in trace amounts. Analysis of a surface-sample data set facilitates the assignment of these clay minerals to particular source areas on the Antarctic Peninsula and, thus, the reconstruction of transport pathways. In the ODP cores, clay mineral composition cyclically alternates between two end-member assemblages. One assemblage is characterized by 〈20% smectite and 〉40% chlorite. The other assemblage has 〉20% smectite and 〈40% chlorite. Illite fluctuates between 30% and 50% without a significant affinity to one end-member assemblage. By comparison with a Quaternary sediment sequence from gravity core PS1565, the clay mineral fluctuations can be ascribed to glacial and interglacial periods, respectively. The cyclic changes in the clay mineral composition suggest that glacial-interglacial cycles, repeated ice advances and retreats, and changes in the Antarctic ice volume were already a main control of the global climate in late Miocene time. Throughout the late Neogene and Quaternary, the clay mineral records in the drift sediments exhibit only slight long-term changes predominantly attributed to local changes in glacial erosion and supply of source rocks. The absence of clear long-term trends associated with major climatic or glaciological changes points to an onset of vast glaciation in the Antarctic Peninsula region before ~9 Ma and to relative stability of the Antarctic ice sheet since then.
    Keywords: 178-1095A; 178-1095B; 178-1096A; 178-1096B; 178-1096C; 178-1097A; Antarctic Peninsula; ANT-VI/2; AWI_Paleo; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Joides Resolution; Leg178; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS12; PS12/201; PS1565-2; SL; South Pacific Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 39
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    In:  Supplement to: Keigwin, Lloyd D; Boyle, Edward A (1989): Late Quaternary paleochemistry of high-latitude surface waters. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 73(1-2), 85-106, https://doi.org/10.1016/0031-0182(89)90047-3
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Recent studies have stressed the role of high latitude nutrient levels and productivity in controlling the carbon isotopic composition of the deep sea and the CO2 content of the atmosphere. We undertook a study of the chemical composition of the polar planktonic foraminifer Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (s., sinistral coiling) from 30 late Holocene samples and 49 down core records from the high-latitude North and South Atlantic Oceans to evaluate the history of sea surface chemical change from glacial to interglacial time. Stable isotopic analysis of coretop samples from the Atlantic, Pacific and Southern Oceans shows no significant correlation between the delta13C of N. pachyderma and either delta13C or PO4 in seawater. Conversely, Cd/Ca ratios in planktonic foraminifera are consistent with the PO4 content of surface waters. The level of maximum glaciation (18,000 yr B.P.), identified by CLIMAP and delta18O, was chosen for mapping. Isopleths of delta18O on N. pachyderma (s.) in the North Atlantic reveal a pattern largely influenced by sea surface temperature (S.S.T.) and generally support the S.S.T. reconstruction of CLIMAP. Differences between the two suggest significantly lower salinity in North Atlantic surface waters at high latitudes than in lower latitudes. Down core delta13C records of N. pachyderma confirm that low delta13C values occurred in the northeast Atlantic during the latest glacial maximum (Labeyrie and Duplessy, 1985, doi:10.1016/0031-0182(85)90069-0). However, a map of delta13C for the 18,000 yr B.P. level for a much larger region in the North Atlantic shows that minimum N. pachyderma delta13C occurred in temperate waters. N. pachyderma delta13C decreased toward the southwest, reaching a minimum of -1 per mil at 37°N. Despite the variability seen in delta13C records of N. pachyderma, none of our cores show significant temporal variability in Cd/Ca. From the combined Cd/Ca and delta13C data we can see no evidence for an upwelling gyre in the eastern North Atlantic during the latest glacial maximum, nor evidence that the southern and northern oceans had significantly different levels of preformed nutrients than today.
    Keywords: 94-606_Site; AT_II-107_19; AT_II-107_22; ATII_USA; Atlantic Ocean; Atlantis II (1963); CEPAG; CH67-19; CH69-32; CH69-69; CH6X; CH70-K11; CH72-101; CH72-104; CH73-110; CH73-136; CH73-139; CH73-139C; CH77-07; CH7X; CH8X; CHN115-26PG; CHN115-27PG; CHN115-36PG; CHN82-04; CHN82-15; CHN82-20; CHN83-20; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Core; CORE; Fram-I; FramI/7; FramII/4; GC; GEOGAS; Glomar Challenger; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); HU75-41; HU75-42; Ice drift station; Jean Charcot; K708-006; Keigwin_31-33; KN708-1; KN708-6; KN714-15; KNR54-16BC; Leg94; Le Noroit; Le Suroît; NO77/79; NO79-06; North Atlantic; North Atlantic/FLANK; PC; Piston corer; RAMA; RAMA03WT; RAMA-44P; RC09; RC09-225; Robert Conrad; ROMANCHA; SL; South Atlantic; SU81-47; Thomas Washington; V23; V23-23; V23-42; V23-81; V23-82; V23-83; V27; V27-114; V27-116; V27-17; V27-19; V27-20; V27-60; V27-86; V28; V28-14; V28-56; V29; V29-177; V29-178; V29-179; V29-180; V29-183; V29-206; V30; V30-101; V30-108; V30-96; V30-97; Vema
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
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  • 40
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    In:  Supplement to: Cronin, Thomas M; Holtz, Thomas R; Whatley, Robin C (1994): Quaternary paleoceanography of the deep Arctic Ocean based on quantitative analysis of Ostracoda. Marine Geology, 119(3-4), 305-332, https://doi.org/10.1016/0025-3227(94)90188-0
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Ostracodes were studied from deep Arctic Ocean cores obtained during the Arctic 91 expedition of the Polarstern to the Nansen, Amundsen and Makarov Basins, the Lomonosov Ridge, Morris Jesup Rise and Yermak Plateau, in order to investigate their distribution in Arctic Ocean deep water (AODW) and apply these data to paleoceanographic reconstruction of bottom water masses during the Quaternary. Analyses of coretop assemblages from Arctic 91 boxcores indicate the following: ostracodes are common at all depths between 1000 and 4500 m, and species distribution is strongly influenced by water mass characteristics and bathymetry; quantitative analyses comparing Eurasian and Canada Basin assemblages indicate that distinct assemblages inhabit regions east and west of the Lomonosov Ridge, a barrier especially important to species living in lower AODW; deep Eurasian Basin assemblages are more similar to those living in Greenland Sea deep water (GSDW) than those in Canada Basin deep water; two upper AODW assemblages were recognized throughout the Arctic Ocean, one living between 1000 and 1500 m, and the other, having high species diversity, at 1500-3000 m. Downcore quantitative analyses of species' abundances and the squared chord distance coefficient of similarity reveals a distinct series of abundance peaks in key indicator taxa interpreted to signify the following late Quaternary deep water history of the Eurasian Basin. During the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), a GSDW/AODW assemblage, characteristic of cold, well oxygenated deep water 〉 3000 m today, inhabited the Lomonosov Ridge to depths as shallow as 1000 m, perhaps indicating the influence of GSDW at mid-depths in the central Arctic Ocean. During Termination 1, a period of high organic productivity associated with a strong inflowing warm North Atlantic layer occurred. During the mid-Holocene, several key faunal events indicate a period of warming and/or enhanced flow between the Canada and Eurasian Basins. A long-term record of ostracode assemblages from kastenlot core PS2200-5 (1073 m water depth) from the Morris Jesup Rise indicates a quasi-cyclic pattern of water mass changes during the last 300 kyr. Interglacial ostracode assemblages corresponding to oxygen isotope stages 1, 5, and 7 indicate rapid changes in dissolved oxygen and productivity during glacial-interglacial transitions.
    Keywords: 80PB50; 81-APB-13; AC-71-36; AC-71-38; AC-71-48; Amundsen Basin; ARK-VIII/3; AW-2375; AW-2839; AW-2904; AW-2905; AW-3101A; AW-3143; AW-3154; AW-3161; AW-57-328-46; AW-62-160-10; AW-62-160-7; AW-62-160-8; AW-62-160-9; AWI_Paleo; AW-IH25; AW-NN; AW-V6-33-78-21; Barnes26-80; Barnes27-80; Barnes56-80; Bart.30; Bart.46; Bart.49; Bart.55; Bart.LT23Hazel3; Bart.LT26Hazel2; Bart.LT30; Bart.LT35Hazel5; Bart.N.Omenolu; Beaufort Sea; Canadian Beaufort; Cape Martineau; Chest.Inlet1; Chest.Inlet2; Chest.Inlet5; Chest.Inlet8; Chest.Inlet9; Chikchi Sea; DC1-79-EG-1; DC2-80-EG-186; DC2-80-EG-73; EGAL-75-KC-53; E Greenland; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Giant box corer; GKG; Gulf of Alaska; GV8202745; GV82027-67; GV83033#44; GV83033#45; HU69-050.830; HU69-050.836; HU85-027-76; Hudson Bay; Hudson Strait; Hurd Channel; Ikerssauk15; Ikerssauk2; Ikerssauk4; Ikerssauk5; KAL; Kara Sea; Kasten corer; Labrador; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Makarov Basin; Melville Penin.; Morris Jesup Rise; Nansen Basin; Northwind5; Northwind65#106; Northwind65#112; Northwind65#115; Northwind65#41; Norton Sound; N Star Bay, Greenl.; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Penney274101; PenneyIkerss.#1; Polarstern; PRZO70-22-130; PRZO72-44; PS19/150; PS19/151; PS19/152; PS19/155; PS19/157; PS19/158; PS19/159; PS19/160; PS19/161; PS19/164; PS19/165; PS19/166; PS19/167; PS19/171; PS19/172; PS19/173; PS19/175; PS19/176; PS19/178; PS19/181; PS19/182; PS19/183; PS19/184; PS19/185; PS19/186; PS19/189; PS19/190; PS19/192; PS19/194; PS19/198; PS19/200; PS19/204; PS19/206; PS19/210; PS19/214; PS19/218; PS19/239; PS19/241; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19/252; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2157-4; PS2158-1; PS2159-4; PS2162-1; PS2163-2; PS2164-4; PS2165-3; PS2166-2; PS2167-2; PS2168-1; PS2170-1; PS2171-1; PS2172-1; PS2174-4; PS2175-3; PS2176-4; PS2177-1; PS2178-2; PS2179-1; PS2180-1; PS2181-3; PS2182-1; PS2183-1; PS2184-1; PS2185-3; PS2186-5; PS2187-1; PS2189-1; PS2190-3; PS2192-1; PS2193-2; PS2194-1; PS2195-4; PS2196-2; PS2198-1; PS2200-2; PS2200-5; PS2209-1; PS2210-1; PS2212-5; PS2213-1; PS2214-1; PS2215-2; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; S5-77-BS-17; SEA5-125A; SEA-5-76-174; Svalbard; SW Greenland; Ungava Bay; W Greenland; WhiteBearHazel18; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 41
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    In:  Supplement to: Weber, Michael E; Bonani, Georges; Fütterer, Dieter K (1994): Sedimentation processes within channel-ridge systems, southeastern Weddell Sea, Antarctica. Paleoceanography, 9(6), 1027-1048, https://doi.org/10.1029/94PA01443
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: On the continental margin of the southeastern Weddell Sea, Antarctica, several channel-ridge systems can be traced on the eastern side of the Crary Fan. Swath mapping of the bathymetry reveals three southwest-northeast trending ridges up to 300 m high with channels on their southeastern side. The structures occur on a terrace of the continental slope in water depths of 2000 - 3300 m. We carried out sedimentological studies on cores from three sites. Two of the studied cores are from ridges, one is from the northwestern part of the terrace. The stratigraphy of the recovered sediments is based on accelerator mass spectrometer 14C determinations, stable oxygen and carbon isotopes analyses and paleomagnetic measurements. The sediments represent a period from the last glacial maximum (LGM) to recent time. They are composed predominantly of terrigenous components. We distinguish four different sedimentary facies and assign them to processes controlling sedimentation. Microlaminated muds and cross-stratified coarse-silty sediments originated from contour currents. Bioturbated sediments reflect the increasing influence of hemipelagic sedimentation. Structureless sediments with high contents of ice-rafted debris characterize slumps. The inferred contour currents shaping the continental slope during the LGM were canalized within the channels and supplied microlaminated mud to the western sedimentary ridges due to deflection to the left induced by the Coriolis force. The lamination of the sediments is attributed to seasonal variations of current velocities. The thermohaline bottom currents were directed to the northeast and hence opposite to the Weddell Gyre. Cross-stratified coarse-silty contourites on the ridges are intercalated with the muds and indicate spillover of faster thermohaline flows. Average sedimentation rates on the terrace of the continental slope were unusually high (250 cm/ka) during the LGM, indicating active growth phases of the Crary Fan during glacial intervals. A substantial environmental change at 19.5 - 20 ka is documented in the sediments by a gradual change from lamination to bioturbation. During the recent interglacial, bioturbated sediments were deposited in all parts of the terrace. Because of a reduction of the contour current velocities (4-7 cm/s), the water masses of the Weddell Gyre, supplying fine-grained sediments from northeast, gain a greater influence on sedimentation on the continental slope. Higher percentages of microfossils indicate enhanced biogenic productivity. Increased iceberg activity is documented by greater amounts of ice-rafted debris. The interglacial sedimentation rates decrease to a few cm/ka and indicate that the Crary Fan became relatively sediment-starved during interglacial intervals.
    Keywords: ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/5; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Halley Bay; Lyddan Island; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS12; PS12/319; PS1599-3; PS16; PS16/409; PS16/410; PS1789-1; PS1790-1; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 42
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    In:  Supplement to: Diekmann, Bernhard; Fütterer, Dieter K; Grobe, Hannes; Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Kuhn, Gerhard; Michels, Klaus; Petschick, Rainer; Pirrung, Michael (2004): Terrigenous sediment supply in the polar to temperate South Atlantic: land-ocean links of environmental changes during the late Quaternary. In: Wefer, G; Mulitza, S & Ratmeyer, V (eds.), The South Atlantic in the Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Material Budget and Current Systems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, 375-399, hdl:10013/epic.15597.d001
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Terrigenous sediment parameters in modern sea-bottom samples and sediment cores of the South Atlantic are used to infer variations in detrital sources and modes of terrigenous sediment supply in response to environmental changes through the late Quaternary climate cycles. Massaccumulation rates of terrigenous sediment and fluxes of ice-rafted detritus are discussed in terms of temporal variations in detrital sediment input from land to sea. Grain-size parameters ofterrigenous mud document the intensity of bottom-water circulation, whereas clay-mineral assemblages constrain the sources and marine transport routes of suspended fine-grained particulates, controlled by the modes of sediment input and patterns of ocean circulation. The results suggest low-frequency East Antarctic ice dynamics with dominant 100-kyr cycles and high rates of Antarctic Bottom Water formation and iceberg discharge during interglacial times. In contrast, the more subpolar ice masses of the Antarctic Peninsula also respond to short-term climate variability with maximum iceberg discharges during glacial terminations related to the rapid disintegration of advanced ice masses. In the northern Scotia Sea, increased sediment supply from southern South America points to extended ice masses in Patagonia during glacial times. In the southeastern South Atlantic, changes in regional ocean circulation are linked to global thermohaline ocean circulation and are in phase with northern-hemispheric processes of ice build-up and associated formation of North Atlantic Deep Water, which decreased during glacial times and permitted a wider extension of southern-source water masses in the study area.
    Keywords: Agulhas Basin; ANT-IX/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/3; ANT-VIII/6; ANT-X/5; ANT-XI/2; ANT-XI/4; Atlantic Ridge; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KL; Lazarev Sea; Meteor Rise; MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS12; PS12/248; PS1575-1; PS16; PS16/271; PS16/278; PS16/284; PS16/311; PS16/321; PS16/345; PS16/534; PS1752-1; PS1754-1; PS1756-5; PS1768-8; PS1772-8; PS1778-5; PS18; PS18/238; PS1821-6; PS2082-1; PS2082-3; PS22/773; PS22/817; PS22 06AQANTX_5; PS2278-3; PS2319-1; PS2495-3; PS2498-1; PS2515-3; PS2564-3; PS28; PS28/293; PS28/304; PS28/378; PS30; PS30/048; Scotia Sea; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; Shona Ridge; SL; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; South Orkney
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 16 datasets
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  • 43
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    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The 1 : 1,500,000 AWI Bathymetric Chart of the Gakkel Ridge (AWI BCGR) has been developed from multibeam data measured during the Arctic Mid-Ocean Ridge Expedition in 2001 (AMORE 2001, ARK-XVII/2). This expedition was conducted to investigate the Gakkel Ridge in the Arctic Ocean and was carried out by the icebreaking research vessels RV Polarstern and USCGC Healy. Polarstern is equipped with the multibeam sonar system Hydrosweep DS-2, whereas Healy carries Seabeam 2112. During the expedition an area of 8890 km length and 18 - 46 km width, situated between 82°N/8°W and 87°N/75°E, was surveyed simultaneously by both vessels. Water depths ranged from 566 to 5673 meters. Dense sea ice cover derogated the sonar measurements and decreased data quality. Data errors were corrected in an extensive post-processing. The data of two different sonar systems had to be consolidated in order to derive a high resolution bathymetry of the Gakkel Ridge. Final result was a digital terrain model (DTM) with a grid spacing of 100 meters, which was utilized for generating the map series AWI Bathymetric Chart of the Gakkel Ridge, consisting of ten map sheets.
    Keywords: ARK-XVII/2; AWI_Paleo; Gakkel_Ridge; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS59 AMORE
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
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  • 44
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mohtadi, Mahyar; Rossel, Pamela E; Lange, Carina Beatriz; Pantoja, Silvio; Böning, Philipp; Repeta, Daniel J; Grunwald, Maik; Lamy, Frank; Hebbeln, Dierk; Brumsack, Hans-Jürgen (2008): Deglacial pattern of circulation and marine productivity in the upwelling region off central-south Chile. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 272, 221-230, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2008.04.043
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: A high-resolution sea surface temperature and paleoproductivity reconstruction on a sedimentary record collected at 36°S off central-south Chile (GeoB 7165-1, 36°33'S, 73°40'W, 797 m water depth, core length 750 cm) indicates that paleoceanographic conditions changed abruptly between 18 and 17 ka. Comparative analysis of several cores along the Chilean continental margin (30°-41°S) suggests that the onset and the pattern of deglacial warming was not uniform off central-south Chile due to the progressive southward migration of the Southern Westerlies and local variations in upwelling. Marine productivity augmented rather abruptly at 13-14 ka, well after the oceanographic changes.We suggest that the late deglacial increase in paleoproductivity off central-south Chile reflects the onset of an active upwelling system bringing nutrient-rich, oxygen-poor Equatorial SubsurfaceWater to the euphotic zone, and a relatively higher nutrient load of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. During the Last Glacial Maximum, when the Southern Westerlies were located further north, productivity off central-south Chile, in contrast to off northern Chile, was reduced due to direct onshore-blowing winds that prevented coastal upwelling and export production.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CHIPAL; CONDOR-Ia; East Pacific; GeoB3302-1; GeoB3359-3; GeoB7139-2; GeoB7165-1; GIK17748-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); HOTLINE, HYGAPE; MARUM; off Chile; PUCK; SL; SO101; SO101/3_2-1; SO102/1; SO156/2; SO156/3; SO80_4; SO80a; Sonne; South-East Pacific
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 45
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kröncke, Ingrid (1994): Macrobenthos composition, abundance and biomass in the Arctic Ocean along a transect between Svalbard and the Makarov Basin. Polar Biology, 14(8), 519-529, https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00238221
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Macrofauna has been sampled at 30 stations, at water depths of 1018–4478 m, along a transect extending between Northern Svalbard and the Makarov Basin, as a basis for understanding aspects of the benthic ecology of the Arctic Ocean. Species numbers, abundances and biomasses were extremely low, and generally varied between 0 to 11/0.02 m**2, 0 to 850 individuals/m**2, and 0 to 82.65 g/m**2, respectively. A total of 42 species was found. The Amphipod Jassa marmorata was the most common species. Both numbers and biomasses of suspension-feeding species increased towards the Lomonosov Ridge, probably due to lateral transport of organic material by deep currents along the ridge.
    Keywords: Amundsen Basin; ARK-VIII/3; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Giant box corer; GKG; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Makarov Basin; Nansen Basin; Polarstern; PS19/150; PS19/151; PS19/155; PS19/165; PS19/166; PS19/181; PS19/182; PS19/186; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2157-7; PS2158-1; PS2159-7; PS2161-5; PS2162-1; PS2163-5; PS2164-7; PS2165-6; PS2166-4; PS2167-4; PS2168-4; PS2170-1; PS2171-1; PS2172-5; PS2174-7; PS2175-6; PS2176-7; PS2177-7; PS2178-6; PS2179-4; PS2180-1; PS2181-1; PS2182-6; PS2183-5; PS2184-4; PS2185-3; PS2185-8; PS2186-6; PS2187-6; PS2189-6; PS2190-6
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 46
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    In:  Supplement to: Stein, Ruediger; Fahl, Kirsten; Niessen, Frank; Siebold, Martina (1999): Late quaternary organic carbon and biomarker records from the Laptev Sea continental margin (Arctic Ocean): implications for organic carbon flux and composition. In: Kassens, H; Bauch, H A; Dmitrenko, I A; Eicken, H; Hubberten, H-W; Melles, M; Thiede, J & Timokhov, L A (eds.), Land-ocean systems in the Siberian Arctic: dynamics and history, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 635-656
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: In order to understand the processes controlling organic carbon deposition (i.e., primary productivity vs. terrigenous supply) and their paleoceanographic significance, three sediment cores (PS2471, PS2474. and PS2476) from the Laptev Sea continental margin were investigated for their content and composition of organic carbon. The characterization of organic matter indudes the determination of buk parameters (hydrogen index values and C/N ratios) and the analysis of specific biomarkers (n-alaknes, fatty acids, alkenones, and pigments). Total organic carbon (TOC) values vary between 0.3 and 2%. In general, the organic matter from the Laptev Sea continental margin is dominated by terrigenous matter throughout. However. significant amounts of marine organic carbon occur. The turbidites, according to a still preliminary stratigraphy probably deposited during glacial Oxygen Isotope Stages 2 and 4, are characterized by maximum amounts of organic carbon of terrigenous origin. Marine organic carbon appears to show enhanced relative abundances in the Termination I (?) and early Holocene time intervals, as indicated by maximum amounts of short chain n-alkanes, short-chain fatty acids, and alkenones. The increased amounts of faity acids, however, may also have a freshwater origin due to increased river discharge at that time. The occurrence of alkenones is suggested to indicate an intensification of Atlantic water inflow along the Eurasian continental margin starting at that time. Oxygen Isotope Stage l accumutation rates of total organic carhon are 0.3, 0.17, and 0.02 C/cm**2/ky in cores PS2476, PS2474, and PS2471, respectively.
    Keywords: Amundsen Basin; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Giant box corer; Giant piston corer; GKG; GPC; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Laptev Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS19/157; PS19/165; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2163-4; PS2170-3; PS2471-4; PS2474-2; PS2474-3; PS2476-3; PS2476-4; PS27; PS27/054; PS27/059; PS27/062; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 47
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: During the "Polarstern"-expeditions ARK-IX/4 (1993) and ARK-XI/1 (1995), organised by the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI), acoustic subbottom profiles (Parasound) have been collected in the Laptev Sea Shelf, Siberia. These data have been interpreted as an indicator of ice scours frequency and off-shore permafrost patterns. An additional acoustic profile data-base was available by the results of the expedition of the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR) of the year 1994. The area of the expedition was located closer to the shelf, therefore supports a better understanding of ice scours frequency in shallower marine environments. The data-file consists of a 2930 km Parasound-traverse and has been subdivided into 586 working profiles. They are characterised by their location, number of ice scours, interpreted patterns of reflection and their extension and morphology. The data have been evaluated statistically and graphically and were presented in a map. Different patterns of sea floor reflection were established by different environments, outer influences (e.g. size of the icebergs, direction of the drift of icebergs) and the climatic history of the region. In the north-westerly region of the Laptev Sea at the continental slope of Severnaya Zemlya the sea floor in shallower depths has been ploughed intensely by recent icebergs. In some regions (40-60m), as an effect of intensely ploughing, the sea floor is hardly defined in acoustic profiles come along with relocation of marine deposits. Glacial diamiet deposits prevented the development of deep scours. Up to 355m deeper scours result from lower sea levels. The marginal north-easterly region of the Laptev Sea is characterised exclusively by this type of scour. Morphology and depth of these scours can be compared with those of the westerly Vilkitsky-Street so that similar conditions of development may be expected. Both, the north-easterly Laptev Sea and the Vilkitsky-Street, are not dominated by patterns ofrecent icebergs. In contrary the shelf-regions north-easterly ofthe Taimyr peninsula and north-westerly of the New Siberian Islands have been modified evidently by recent icebergs, which drifted with prevalent currents anticlockwise along the shelf edge of the Laptev Sea and cause the deepest scours of the whole region. The off-shore permafrost at the inner shelf regions has an important influence on the scours intensity. The permafrost layer can be recognised by the maximum depth of ice scours. It is represented by a Parasound reflector that can be made up for distances. The age of the ice scours cannot be determined absolutely by Parasound data but a relative order can be estimated whenever two scours are situated close to each other. When the Parasound-traverse ofthe expedition ARK-IX/4 (1993) (77°24'N 133°30'E-77°30'N 133°40'E) was repeated partially in expedition ARK-XI/l (1995) the ice scours of 1993 remained unchanged and uneroded and no new ice scours had been detected. It can be concluded that scours persist for a long time in the Laptev Sea, though after all with an average of 3 ice scours per kilometer there are not many at all in the Laptev Sea.
    Keywords: ARK-IX/4; ARK-IX/4_LaptevSea; AWI_Paleo; Laptev Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; ParaSound; Polarstern; PS; PS27
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 48
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kröncke, Ingrid (1998): Macrofauna communities in the Amundsen Basin, at the Morris Jesup Rise and at the Yermak Plateau (Eurasian Arctic Ocean). Polar Biology, 19(6), 383-392, https://doi.org/10.1007/s003000050263
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Macrofaunal communities of the western Eurasian Arctic Ocean were studied along a transect from the North Pole, across the Amundsen Basin and Gakkel Ridge towards the Morris Jesup Rise and the Yermak Plateau. Samples were collected during autumn 1991, from depths of 560±4411 m, using a box corer. Macrofaunal species numbers varied from 1 to 11 per 0.02 m**2 in the basins approaching the Morris Jesup Rise and from 44 to 81 per 0.25 m**2 at the Yermak Plateau. Abundances increased from 1 to 31 per 0.02 m**2 in the basin and on the Morris Jesup Rise to 24±60 per 0.02 m**2 on the Yermak Plateau. Biomass was low in the basin and at the Morris Jesup Rise (0.5±68.9 mg per 0.02 m**2) but increased to 116.64 mg per 0.02 m**2 at the Yermak Plateau. A total of 108 taxa were recorded. The results contradict the hypothesis that diversity decreases with increasing latitude, and the high species richness at low abundance at intermediate depths was comparable with that observed in Antarctic and tropical regions.
    Keywords: Amundsen Basin; ARK-VIII/3; Giant box corer; GKG; Morris Jesup Rise; Nansen Basin; Polarstern; PS19/196; PS19/198; PS19/200; PS19/204; PS19/206; PS19/210; PS19/214; PS19/216; PS19/218; PS19/220; PS19/222; PS19/226; PS19/239; PS19/241; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2191-4; PS2192-1; PS2193-2; PS2194-1; PS2195-4; PS2196-2; PS2198-1; PS2199-5; PS2200-3; PS2201-2; PS2202-11; PS2205-7; PS2209-3; PS2210-1; PS2212-1; PS2213-1; PS2214-1; Yermak Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 49
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kuhn, Thomas; Bau, Michael; Blum, Nevin; Halbach, Peter (1998): Origin of negative Ce anomalies in mixed hydrothermal-hydrogenetic Fe-Me crusts from the Central Indian Ridge. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 163(1-4), 207-220, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0012-821X(98)00188-5
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Layered Fe-Mn crusts from the off-axis region of the first segment of the Central Indian Ridge north of the Rodrigues Triple Junction were studied geochemically and mineralogically. Vernadite (delta-MnO2) is the main mineral oxide phase. 230Thxs and Co concentrations suggest high growth rates of up to 29 mm/Myr and a maximum age of the basal crust layer of 1 Ma. Whereas most of the major and minor elements show concentrations which are typical of hydrogenetic formation, Co, Pb, Ni and Ti concentrations are strikingly lower. Concentrations and distribution of the strictly trivalent rare-earths and yttrium (REY) are typical of hydrogenetic ferromanganese oxide precipitates, but in marked contrast, the crusts are characterized by negative CeSN (shale normalized) anomalies and (Ce/Pr)SN ratios less than unity. Profiles through the crusts reveal only minor variations of the REY distribution and (Ce/Pr)SN ratios range from 0.45 to 0.68 (compared to ratios of up to 2 for typical hydrogenetic crusts from the Central Indian Basin). The apparent bulk partition coefficients between the crusts and seawater suggest that for the strictly trivalent REY the adsorption-desorption equilibrium has been reached. Positive Ce anomalies in the partition coefficient patterns reveal preferential uptake of Ce, but to a lesser extent than in normal hydrogenetic crusts. A new parameter (excess Ce, Cexs) to quantify the degree of decoupling of Ce from REY(III) is established on the basis of partition coefficients. Cexs/Cebulk ratios suggest that the CIR crusts formed by precipitation of Fe-Mn oxides from a hydrothermal plume and that in hydrothermal plumes and normal seawater the enrichment of Ce results from the same oxidative sorption process. The growth rates, calculated with 230Thxs data as well as with the Co formula, are inversely related to Cexs.
    Keywords: BCR; Box corer (Reineck); HYDROTRUNC; KL; PC; Piston corer; Piston corer (BGR type); Rodriguez Triple Junction; SO92; SO92_26PC; SO92_27PC; SO92_31GTV; SO92_36GTV; SO92_38GK; SO92_54GK; SO92_55KL; SO92_58KL; SO92_60GTV; SO92_60GTV/13; SO92_60GTV/15; SO92_72PC; SO92_74GTV; SO92_81PC; SO92_95PC; Sonne; Television-Grab; TVG
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 24 datasets
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  • 50
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    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: 2024-07-01
    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
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  • 51
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    PANGAEA
    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: 2024-07-01
    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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  • 52
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    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: 2024-07-01
    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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  • 53
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    In:  Supplement to: Romero, Oscar E; Lange, Carina Beatriz; Wefer, Gerold (2002): Interannual variability (1988-1991) of siliceous phytoplankton fluxes off NW Africa. Journal of Plankton Research, 24(10), 1035-1046, https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/24.10.1035
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Four years of observations (1988-1991) of downward fluxes of diatoms and silicoflagellates at a trap site off Cape Blanc (ca. 20°N, 20°W), northwest Africa, are presented. Significant variations in flux and species composition were observed as well as a marked drop in the export of biogenic opal (and diatoms) from 1988 to 1989; fluxes remained low thereafter. We hypothesize that this diminution might be related to decreased coastal upwelling intensity and offshore spreading of the typical chlorophyll filament, and/or a lesser silicate content of upwelling waters off Cape Blanc. In addition, the more seaward positioning of the mooring may have influenced the fluxes. At all times, diatoms were the most prominent contributors to the biogenic opal flux, and diatom fluxes closely paralleled total mass flux fluctuations. Although species composition varied seasonally, no significant qualitative variations were observed from year to year. In general, the dominance of neritic diatoms, such as Thalassionema nitzschioides var. nitzschioides, resting spores of Chaetoceros and Cyclotella litoralis, reflected the continuous offshore influence of coastal upwelling at the Cape Blanc trap site, with stronger intensity in spring/summer. In contrast, the occurrence of pelagic diatoms (e.g. Nitzschia bicapitata, N. interruptestriata, T. nitzschioides var. parva and Fragilariopsis doliolus), and high silicoflagellate fluxes (mainly Dictyocha messanensis) were linked to inshore transport of oceanic waters, generally in winter. With the exception of some fragile, pelagic diatoms, dominant species found in the settled material also occurred in the underlying sediments, suggesting that diatom thanatocoenosis downcore (Organisms preserved from the top to the bottom in sediment core) can be used as a reliable indicator of the intensity and persistence of the offshore spreading of coastal upwelling.
    Keywords: CB1_trap; CB2_trap; CB3_trap; CB4_trap; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; M12/1; M16/2; M6/6; M9/4; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Trap; TRAP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 12 datasets
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  • 54
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    In:  Supplement to: Schmidt, Daniela N; Renaud, Sabrina; Bollmann, Jörg (2003): Response of planktic foraminiferal size to late Quaternary climate change. Paleoceanography, 18(2), 1039, https://doi.org/10.1029/2002PA000831
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Geographical size distribution within entire Holocene foraminiferal assemblages is related to global environmental gradients such as temperature, primary productivity, and environmental variability. This study demonstrates that these correlations are also recognizable in late Quaternary assemblages from three locations in the South Atlantic on temporal and latitudinal scales. The size response to temporal paleoenvironmental changes during glacial-interglacial cycles mimics the geographic Holocene size variability. The amplitude of size variability is directly related to the amplitude of the climatic fluctuations as shown by the stable size-temperature relationship over time. The documented changes in the assemblage size are caused by species replacement and intraspecific size variability. The relative importance of these processes depends on the environmental setting. Species have been shown to reach their maximum size and abundance under certain optimum conditions and decrease in size if environmental conditions differ from these optima. We confirm that late Quaternary species sizes were largest at paleotemperatures identical to Holocene ones.
    Keywords: ANT-XI/2; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB1105-4; GeoB1413-4; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M16/1; M9/4; Meteor (1986); Polarstern; PS2498-1; PS28; PS28/304; SL; South Atlantic; West Angola Basin
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 55
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Leduc, Guillaume; Schneider, Ralph R; Kim, Jung-Hyun; Lohmann, Gerrit (2010): Holocene and Eemian Sea surface temperature trends as revealed by alkenone and Mg/Ca paleothermometry. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29(7-8), 989-1004, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.01.004
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: In this study we review a global set of alkenone- and foraminiferal Mg/Ca-derived sea surface temperatures (SST) records from the Holocene and compare them with a suite of published Eemian SST records based on the same approach. For the Holocene, the alkenone SST records belong to the actualized GHOST database (Kim, J.-H., Schneider R.R., 2004). The actualized GHOST database not only confirms the SST changes previously described but also documents the Holocene temperature evolution in new oceanic regions such as the Northwestern Atlantic, the eastern equatorial Pacific, and the Southern Ocean. A comparison of Holocene SST records stemming from the two commonly applied paleothermometry methods reveals contrasting - sometimes divergent - SST evolution, particularly at low latitudes where SST records are abundant enough to infer systematic discrepancies at a regional scale. Opposite SST trends at particular locations could be explained by out-of-phase trends in seasonal insolation during the Holocene. This hypothesis assumes that a strong contrast in the ecological responses of coccolithophores and planktonic foraminifera to winter and summer oceanographic conditions is the ultimate reason for seasonal differences in the origin of the temperature signal provided by these organisms. As a simple test for this hypothesis, Eemian SST records are considered because the Holocene and Eemian time periods experienced comparable changes in orbital configurations, but had a higher magnitude in insolation variance during the Eemian. For several regions, SST changes during both interglacials were of a similar sign, but with higher magnitudes during the Eemian as compared to the Holocene. This observation suggests that the ecological mechanism shaping SST trends during the Holocene was comparable during the penultimate interglacial period. Although this "ecology hypothesis" fails to explain all of the available results, we argue that any other mechanism would fail to satisfactorily explain the observed SST discrepancies among proxies.
    Keywords: 108-658C; 138-846; 160-967D; 160-969E; 161-977; 162-984; 165-1002C; 165-999A; 167-1012B; 167-1017E; 167-1019C; 175-1078C; 175-1084B; 184-1145C; 2; 202-1233; 202-1240; 202-1242; 225514; 225517; 71; 90b; 96; 96-619; A-7; AD91-17; Alboran Sea; also published as VM28-122; Angola Basin; Arabian Sea; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; AUSCAN; Bay of Bengal; BCR; BENEFIT/4; BENGAL FAN; Benguela Current, South Atlantic Ocean; BOFS31/1K; BOFS31#1; Box corer (Reineck); BS79-33; BS79-38; CALYPSO; Calypso Corer; Canarias Sea; Caribbean Sea; Cayman Rise, Caribbean Sea; CD159-12; CD53; CEPAG; CH07-98-GGC19; Charles Darwin; Chatham Rise; CHIPAL; Cocos Ridge; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Congo Fan; D13882; D249; De Soto Canyon; Discovery (1962); DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Eastern Basin; East Pacific; Emperor Seamounts; Equatorial East Pacific; GC; GeoB1023-5; GeoB3129-1; GeoB3313-1; GeoB3910-2; GeoB4509-2; GeoB4905-4; GeoB5546-2; GeoB5844-2; GeoB5901-2; GeoB6007-2; GeoB6518-1; GeoB7139-2; GeoB7926-2; GEOSCIENCES, MARMARCORE; GeoTü SL71; GGC; GGC-15-1; Giant box corer; Giant gravity corer; Giant piston corer; GIK17748-2; GIK17940-2; GIK17964-1; GIK18252-3; GIK18287-3; GIK23258-2; GINCO 3; GKG; Glomar Challenger; GPC; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Gulf of Mexico; Hakuho-Maru; HOTLINE, HYGAPE; IMAGES I; IMAGES III - IPHIS; IMAGES IV-IPHIS III; IMAGES IX - PAGE; IMAGES V; IMAGES VIII - MONA; IMAGES VII - WEPAMA; Indian Ocean; Indonesia; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; IOW225514; IOW225517; IOW4509B; James Clark Ross; Joides Resolution; JOPSII-6; JR20000727; JR51; JR51GC-35; JT96-0909PC; KAL; Kasten corer; KH-01-3; KH-01-3-19; KL; KL_Mg; Knorr; KNR176-2; KNR176-JPC32; Kurilen Trench; LAPAZ21P; Leg108; Leg138; Leg160; Leg161; Leg162; Leg165; Leg167; Leg175; Leg184; Leg202; Leg96; Le Suroît; M34/4; M35/1; M35003-4; M39/1; M39/1_08-3; M39008-3; M40/4; M40/4_87-6SL; M40/4_SL67; M40/4_SL71; M40/4_SL78; M40/4_SL78-3; M40/4_SL87; M41/1; M42/4b; M44/1; M44/1_74KL; M44/1_KL71; M44/3; M45/1; M45/5a; M47/3; M53/1; M6/6; M7/2; Marge Ibérique; Marion Dufresne (1972); Marion Dufresne (1995); Marmara Sea; MD01-2334; MD012378; MD01-2378; MD012390; MD01-2390; MD012412; MD01-2412; MD012416; MD01-2416; MD01-2443; MD022529; MD02-2529; MD022575; MD02-2575; MD032611G; MD03-2611G; MD03-2707; MD101; MD106; MD111; MD114; MD122; MD123; MD126; MD127; MD13; MD131; MD77-194; MD79-257; MD85674; MD94-103; MD952011; MD95-2011; MD952015; MD95-2015; MD952042; MD95-2042; MD952043; MD95-2043; MD972120; MD97-2120; MD972121; MD97-2121; MD972125; MD97-2125; MD972141; MD97-2141; MD972151; MD97-2151; MD982162; MD98-2162; MD982165; MD98-2165; MD982170; MD98-2170; MD982176; MD98-2176; MD982181; MD98-2181; MD99-2155; MD99-2251; MD99-2334; ME0005A; ME0005A-24JC; Melville; Meteor (1986); MONITOR MONSUN; NE-Brazilian continental margin; NEMO; Northeast Atlantic; Northeast Brasilian Margin; Northern Red Sea; North Pacific Ocean; North-West African margin; OCE326-GGC26; OCE326-GGC30; off Cameroon; OSIRIS4; OSIRIS III; Pacific Ocean; PAKOMIN; PC; PC-17; PC-2; PC-4; Petr Kottsov; Piston corer; Piston corer (BGR type); Piston corer Meischner large; PL07-39PC; Portuguese Margin; PUCK; RAPID-12-1K; RC11; RC1112; RC11-238; Reykjanes Ridge; RL11; Robert Conrad; Rockall; SCS90-36; SL; SO102/1; SO115; SO115_05; SO115_40; SO136; SO136_011GC; SO139; SO139-74KL; SO156/2; SO80_4; SO80a; SO90; SO90_136KL; SO90_39KG; SO90_93KL; SO93/3; SO93/3_126KL; SO95; Sonne; South Atlantic Ocean; South China Sea; South-East Pacific; Southern Ocean; Southern Okhotsk Sea; South Pacific Ocean; SSDP102; St.14; St.20; SU81-18; SUNDAFLUT; Sunda Shelf; TASQWA; Timor Sea; TN057-21; TR163-19; TR163-22; TY93-905; TY93929/P; U938; V19; V19-27; V19-28; V19-30; V21; V21-30; V28; V28-122; Vema; Victor Hensen; Vietnam shelf; Voring Plateau
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 133 datasets
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  • 56
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    In:  Supplement to: Fischer, Gerhard; Karakas, Gökay (2009): Sinking rates and ballast composition of particles in the Atlantic Ocean: implications for the organic carbon fluxes to the deep ocean. Biogeosciences, 6, 85-102, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-6-85-2009
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The flux of materials to the deep sea is dominated by larger, organic-rich particles with sinking rates varying between a few meters and several hundred meters per day. Mineral ballast may regulate the transfer of organic matter and other components by determining the sinking rates, e.g. via particle density. We calculated particle sinking rates from mass flux patterns and alkenone measurements applying the results of sediment trap experiments from the Atlantic Ocean. We have indication for higher particle sinking rates in carbonate-dominated production systems when considering both regional and seasonal data. During a summer coccolithophorid bloom in the Cape Blanc coastal upwelling off Mauritania, particle sinking rates reached almost 570 m per day, most probably due the fast sedimentation of densely packed zooplankton fecal pellets, which transport high amounts of organic carbon associated with coccoliths to the deep ocean despite rather low production. During the recurring winter-spring blooms off NW Africa and in opal-rich production systems of the Southern Ocean, sinking rates of larger particles, most probably diatom aggregates, showed a tendency to lower values. However, there is no straightforward relationship between carbonate content and particle sinking rates. This could be due to the unknown composition of carbonate and/or the influence of particle size and shape on sinking rates. It also remains noticeable that the highest sinking rates occurred in dust-rich ocean regions off NW Africa, but this issue deserves further detailed field and laboratory investigations. We obtained increasing sinking rates with depth. By using a seven-compartment biogeochemical model, it was shown that the deep ocean organic carbon flux at a mesotrophic sediment trap site off Cape Blanc can be captured fairly well using seasonal variable particle sinking rates. Our model provides a total organic carbon flux of 0.29 Tg per year down to 3000 m off the NW African upwelling region between 5 and 35° N. Simple parameterisations of remineralisation and sinking rates in such models, however, limit their capability in reproducing the flux variation in the water column.
    Keywords: ANT-III/2; ANT-VII/5; BO3; BO3_trap; Bouvet Island; Cape Blanc; CB1_trap; CB13; CB13_trap; CB2_trap; CB3_trap; CB4_trap; CB7; CB7_trap; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CV1-2_trap; CV2; CV2_trap; EA7; EA7_trap; EA8; EA8_trap; EA9; EA9_trap; East Equatorial Atlantic; Eastern equatorial Atlantic; GBN3_trap; GBS5; GBS5_trap; GeoB2212-8; GeoB2908; KG1_trap; M12/1; M16/2; M22/1; M29/3; M6/6; M9/4; MARUM; Meteor (1986); MOOR; Mooring; Mooring (long time); MOORY; Northwest Africa; PF3; Polar Front; Polarstern; PS06; PS14; Trap; TRAP; Trap, sediment; TRAPS; WA10; WA10_trap; WA11; WA11_trap; WA13; WA13_trap; WA14; WA14_trap; WA19; WA19_trap; WA4_trap; WA7_trap; WA8_trap; WA9; WA9_trap; Walvis Ridge, Southeast Atlantic Ocean; Western Atlantic; Western Equatorial Atlantic; WR2_trap
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 57
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    In:  Supplement to: Stuut, Jan-Berend W; Kasten, Sabine; Lamy, Frank; Hebbeln, Dierk (2007): Sources and modes of terrigenous sediment input to the Chilean continental slope. Quaternary International, 161(1), 67-76, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2006.10.041
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Physical, chemical, and mineralogical properties of a set of surface sediment samples collected along the Chilean continental slope (21-44°S) are used to characterise present-day sedimentation patterns and sediment provenance on the Chilean margin. Despite the presence of several exceptional latitudinal gradients in relief, oceanography, tectonic evolution, volcanic activity and onshore geology, the present-day input of terrigenous sediments to the Chilean continental margin appears to be mainly controlled by precipitation gradients, and source-rock composition in the hinterland. General trends in grain size denote a southward decrease in median grain-size of the terrigenous (Corganic, CaCO3 and Opal-free) fraction, which is interpreted as a shift from aeolian to fluvial sedimentation. This interpretation is supported by previous observations of southward increasing bulk sedimentation rates. North-south trends in sediment bulk chemistry are best recognised in the iron (Fe) and titanium (Ti) vs. potassium (K) and aluminium (Al) ratios of the sediments that most likely reflect the contribution of source rocks from the Andean volcanic arc. These ratios are high in the northernmost part, abruptly decrease at 25°S, and then more or less constantly increase southwards to a maximum at ~40°S.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; GeoB7103-4; GeoB7104-6; GeoB7106-1; GeoB7108-1; GeoB7112-1; GeoB7114-1; GeoB7115-1; GeoB7116-1; GeoB7118-1; GeoB7119-1; GeoB7120-1; GeoB7121-1; GeoB7122-1; GeoB7123-1; GeoB7127-1; GeoB7128-1; GeoB7129-1; GeoB7130-1; GeoB7131-1; GeoB7132-1; GeoB7133-1; GeoB7134-1; GeoB7135-1; GeoB7136-1; GeoB7137-1; GeoB7138-1; GeoB7139-1; GeoB7140-1; GeoB7141-1; GeoB7142-1; GeoB7144-1; GeoB7147-1; GeoB7148-1; GeoB7149-1; GeoB7150-1; GeoB7152-1; GeoB7153-1; GeoB7154-2; GeoB7155-1; GeoB7156-1; GeoB7157-1; GeoB7158-1; GeoB7159-1; GeoB7160-4; GeoB7161-5; GeoB7162-4; GeoB7163-5; GeoB7166-2; GeoB7167-4; GeoB7169-2; GeoB7170-1; GeoB7171-2; GeoB7172-4; GeoB7173-4; GeoB7174-3; GeoB7175-4; GeoB7177-3; GeoB7179-1; GeoB7180-1; GeoB7181-1; GeoB7182-1; GeoB7183-1; GeoB7186-1; GeoB7187-1; GeoB7189-1; GeoB7190-1; GeoB7191-1; GeoB7192-1; GeoB7194-1; GeoB7195-1; GeoB7197-1; GeoB7198-1; GeoB7199-2; GeoB7202-1; GeoB7203-1; GeoB7207-1; GeoB7208-1; GeoB7211-1; GeoB7212-1; GeoB7213-1; GeoB7215-1; GeoB7216-1; GeoB7218-1; GeoB7219-1; MARUM; MUC; MultiCorer; off Chile; PUCK; SO156/1; SO156/2; SO156/3; Sonne
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 58
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    In:  Supplement to: Plewa, Kerstin; Meggers, Helge; Kasten, Sabine (2006): Barium in sediments off NW Africa: A tracer for paleoproductivity or meltwater events? Paleoceanography, 21(2), PA2015, https://doi.org/10.1029/2005PA001136
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: High-resolution down-core analyses of the solid phase content of total barium (Batot) and total organic carbon (TOC) back to 25 kyr B.P. were performed on a gravity core from the upper continental slope off Cape Yubi (Morocco). The observed discrepancy between the two potential paleoproductivity proxies, Batot and TOC, initiated supplementary examinations of the pore water, the geochemistry of the clay fraction, X-ray diffraction analyses, and the application of a sequential Ba extraction method of selected samples. Additionally, we analyzed down-core samples of the planktonic foraminifera Turborotalita quinqueloba and Globorotalia inflata for their Ba/Ca ratios. These analyses, which were performed for the first time on these species, were used to reconstruct past oceanic Ba concentrations. We suggest that in the study area, which is characterized by high accumulation rates, the preserved TOC content is a valuable proxy for past primary productivity, whereas the solid phase Batot contents appear to be affected by other mechanisms and factors. Peaks of total barium content in the clay fraction and of Ba/Ca ratios in the planktonic foraminifera shells found during the Younger Dryas and the Heinrich 1 event are likely to result from increased meltwater influx into the northern North Atlantic. We suggest that Ba-enriched meltwater was transmitted by the eastern boundary current system from higher latitudes to the region of the Canary Islands. Total barium contents of the clay fraction (Batot,clay) and Ba/Ca in planktonic foraminifera shells seem to be reliable proxies for this discharge of meltwater.
    Keywords: 273; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB; GeoB5546-2; GeoB8613-6; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KL; M42/4b; M58/2; MARUM; Meteor (1986); off Northwest Africa; Piston corer (BGR type); SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 59
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    In:  Supplement to: Schneider, Ralph R; Müller, Peter J; Ruhland, Götz; Meinecke, Gerrit; Schmidt, Heike; Wefer, Gerold (1996): Late Quarternary surface temperatures and productivity in the east-equatorial South Atlantic: response to changes in trade/monsoon wind forcing and surface water advection. In: Wefer, G; Berger, W H; Siedler, G & Webb, D (eds.), The South Atlantic: Present and Past Circulation, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 527-551
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: In order to reconstruct Late Quatemary variations of surface oceanography in the eastequatorial South Atlantic, time series of sea-surface temperatures (SST) and paleoproductivity were established from cores recovered in the Guinea and Angola Basins, and at the Walvis Ridge. These records, based on sedimentary alkenone and organic carbon concentrations, reveal that during the last 350,000 years surface circulation and productivity changes in the east-equatorial South Atlantic were highiy sensitive to climate forcing at 23- and 100-kyr periodicities. Covarying SST and paleoproductivity changes at the equator and at the Walvis Ridge appear to be driven by variations in zonal trade-wind intensity, which forces intensification or reduction of coastal and equatorial upwelling, as well as enhanced Benguela cold water advection from the South. Phase relationships of precessional variations in the paleoproductivity and SST records from the distinct sites were evaluated with respect to boreal summer insolation over Africa, movements of southem ocean thermal fronts, and changes in global ice volume. The 23-kyr phasing implies a sensitivity of eastem South Atlantic surface water advection and upwelling to West African monsoon intensity and to changes in the position ofthe subtropical high pressure cell over the South Atlantic, both phenomena which modulate zonal strength of southeasterly trades. SST and productivity changes north of 20°S lack significant variance at the 41-kyr periodicity; and at the Walvis Ridge and the equator lead changes in ice volume. This may indicate that obliquity-driven clirnate change, characteristic for northem high latitudes, e.g fluctuations in continental ice masses, did not substantially influence subtropical and tropical surface circulation in the South Atlantic. At the 23-kyr cycle SST and productivity changes in the eastern Angola Basin lag those in the equatorial Atlantic and at the Walvis Ridge by about 3500 years. This lag is explained by variations in cross-equatorial surface water transport and west-east countercurrent retum flow modifying precessional variations of SST and productivity in the eastem Angola Basin relative to those in the mid South Atlantic area under the central field of zonal trade winds. Sea level-related shifts of upwelling cells in phase with global clirnate change may be also recorded in SST and productivity variability along the continental margin off Southwest Africa. They may account for the delay of the paleoceanogreaphic signal from continental margin sites with respect to that from the pelagic sites at the equator and the Walvis Ridge.
    Keywords: Angola Basin; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB; GeoB1008-3; GeoB1016-3; GeoB1028-5; GeoB1105-4; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M6/6; M9/4; Meteor (1986); SFB261; SL; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents; Walvis Ridge, Southeast Atlantic Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 60
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Spielhagen, Robert F; Baumann, Karl-Heinz; Erlenkeuser, Helmut; Nowaczyk, Norbert R; Nørgaard-Pedersen, Niels; Vogt, Christoph; Weiel, Dominik (2004): Arctic Ocean deep-sea record of Northern Eurasian ice sheet history. Quaternary Science Reviews, 23(11-13), 1455-1483, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2003.12.015
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The sediment composition of deep-sea cores from the central Arctic Ocean, the Fram Strait, and the Yermak Plateau was analyzed for several parameters to reconstruct the history of marine paleoenvironment and terrestrial glaciation in the last 200,000 years. Layers with high amounts of coarse, terrigenous ice-rafted debris (IRD) and often high contents of smectite were deposited during extensive glaciations in northern Eurasia, when ice sheets reached the northern continental margins of the Barents and Kara seas and discharged icebergs into the Arctic Ocean. Intercalated layers with relatively low IRD and smectite contents, but abundant planktic foraminifers in the coarse fraction were deposited during periods of Atlantic Water inflow to the Arctic Ocean and seasonally open waters (leads) in a sea ice cover with only few icebergs in the Arctic Ocean. High IRD contents in the sediments reflect the presence of ice sheets on the Kara and Barents seas shelves and the hinterland during the entire oxygen isotope stage 6 (ca 190-130 ka), in substage 5b (ca 90-80 ka), at the stage boundary 5/4 (around 75 ka), and in late stage 4/early stage 3 (ca 65-50 ka). These results are in excellent correlation with those from recent field work in northern Scandinavia, European Russia, Siberia, and on the shelves. Relatively low amounts of IRD in central Arctic Ocean sediments from the Late Weichselian glacial maximum (ca 24-18 ka) correlate well with the recent reconstruction of a very limited eastern ice sheet extension during this time. Oxygen and carbon isotope records of planktic foraminifers from the analyzed sediment cores show a number of prominent excursions which can be interpreted as evidence for freshwater events in the Arctic Ocean. The synchroneity of freshwater events and IRD input suggests a common source. Strongest events were associated with deglaciations of the Barents and Kara seas after the ice sheets had blocked the outflow of large rivers for several millennia. The outflow of freshwater from large ice-dammed lakes occurred at ca 130, 80-75, and 52 ka. Freshwater events in the central Arctic Ocean during the last deglaciation (ca 18 ka) were relatively small compared to the previous events. This indicates that during most of the Late Weichselian glacial maximum a river outflow from northern Siberia to the Arctic Ocean was possible. Atlantic Water inflow to the Arctic Ocean and seasonally open waters in the ice (leads) occurred during the interglacials of oxygen isotope stage 1 and substage 5e, during several interstadials (stage 3, substages 5a and 5c), and to a lesser degree within stadials and glacials (stages 2, 4, and 6). With the exception of the interglacials, these periods were times of strong ice growth on the continents as revealed by terrestrial data. The coincidence suggests that open waters in the Arctic Ocean and the Nordic Seas were an important moisture source (in addition to more southerly sources) which fostered the growth of ice sheets on northern Eurasia.
    Keywords: Antarctic Ocean; Arctic Ocean; ARK-IV/3; ARK-VIII/3; ARK-XIV/1a; AWI_Paleo; Fram Strait; Giant box corer; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; GIK21535-10 PS11/430-10; GIK21535-5 PS11/430-5; GIK21535-8 PS11/430-8; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; KL; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Makarov Basin; Morris Jesup Rise; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS11; PS1533-3; PS1535-10; PS1535-5; PS1535-8; PS19/176; PS19/186; PS19/218; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS2178-2; PS2178-5; PS2185-3; PS2185-6; PS2200-2; PS2200-5; PS51; PS51/038-4; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
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  • 61
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    In:  Supplement to: Steph, Silke; Regenberg, Marcus; Tiedemann, Ralf; Mulitza, Stefan; Nürnberg, Dirk (2009): Stable isotopes of planktonic foraminifera from tropical Atlantic/Caribbean core-tops: Implications for reconstructing upper ocean stratification. Marine Micropaleontology, 71(1-2), 1-19, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2008.12.004
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: D18O values of nine tropical-subtropical planktonic foraminiferal species with different preferential habitat depths collected from 62 core-top samples along an east-west transect across the tropical Atlantic/Caribbean were used to test the applicability of interspecific d18O gradients for reconstructions of tropical upper ocean stratification. In general, the d18O difference (Delta d18O) between intermediate- and shallow-dwelling species decreases, and Delta d18O between deep and intermediate dwellers increases with increasing thermocline depth towards the west. The statistical significance of regional differences in Delta d18O highlights Delta d18O between the intermediate dwellers (in particular Globorotalia scitula and Globorotalia tumida) and the shallow dweller Globigerinoides ruber pink, as well as Delta d18O between the deep dwellers Globorotalia crassaformis or Globorotalia truncatulinoides dextral and intermediate dwellers as most sensitive to changes in tropical Atlantic thermocline depth. Based on the observed regional variations in interspecific Delta d18O, we propose a multispecies stratification index "STRAtrop" = (d18Ointermediate - d18Oshallow) / (d18Odeep - d18Oshallow) for the tropical ocean. Statistically significant differences in STRAtrop values between the E-Atlantic and the Caribbean suggest that this index may be a useful tool to monitor variations in tropical upper ocean stratification in the geological record.
    Keywords: Amazon Fan; Aves Ridge; Bahamas; BCR; Beata Ridge; Box corer (Reineck); Brazil Basin; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Columbia Basin; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB1104-5; GeoB1105-3; GeoB1106-5; GeoB1108-6; GeoB1111-5; GeoB1112-3; GeoB1113-7; GeoB1114-3; GeoB1115-4; GeoB1116-1; GeoB1503-2; GeoB1505-3; GeoB1506-1; GeoB1508-1; GeoB1511-6; GeoB1512-1; GeoB1513-2; GeoB1515-2; GeoB1523-2; GeoB4304-1; GeoB4305-1; Giant box corer; GKG; Guadeloupe; Guinea Basin; M16/2; M35/1; M35002-1; M35003-6; M35004-1; M35005-3; M35006-6; M35008-1; M35010-2; M35012-6; M35013-3; M35014-1; M35015-1; M35018-1; M35019-1; M35020-2; M35023-3; M35023-4; M35024-6; M35026-2; M35030-1; M35032-1; M35034-3; M35035-1; M35036-3; M35037-1; M35038-1; M35039-1; M38/1; M9/4; Martinique; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Midatlantic Ridge; MUC; MultiCorer; Multiple revolver box corer; RASTA/GOLDFLOS; RKG; SO164; SO164-01-3; SO164-02-3; SO164-03-3; SO164-04-2; SO164-07-3; SO164-18-1; SO164-19-3; SO164-20-2; SO164-21-3; SO164-22-2; SO164-23-3; SO164-24-3; SO164-25-3; SO164-48-2; SO164-50-3; Sonne; Venezuela Basin
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
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  • 62
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    In:  Supplement to: Tan, Tjhing Lok; Rüger, Hans-Jürgen (1991): Biomass and nutritional requirements of psychrotrophic bacterial communities in Fram Strait and western Greenland Sea. Proceedings of the Fourth European Marine Micobiology Symposium, Kieler Meeresforschung, 8, 219-224, hdl:10013/epic.13649.d001
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: During the 'Polarstern' expedition ARK-IV/2 in June 1987, water samples from 8 stations were taken to study biomass and substrate utilization of cold adapted bacteria. Bacterial biomasses determined from acridine orange direct counts (AODC) were between 0.4 and 31.4 µ/g C/l, and ATP concentrations amounted from 〈0.1 to 40 ng/l. Colony counts on seawater agar reached only 0.1% of AODC, but with the MPN-method 1 to 10% of AODC were recorded. With 14C-glutamic acid or 14C-glucose as tracer substrate in oligotrophic broth containing 0.5 mg trypticase and 0.05 mg yeast extract per liter of seawater, obligately oligotrophic bacteria could be detected in one water sample. Although incubation was at 2 °C, only psychrotrophic bacteria showing growth temperatures between 1 and 30 °C were obtained. Organic substrate utilizations by 106 isolates were tested at 4 and 20 °C. Most carbohydrates, organic acids, alcohols, and alanine were assimilated at both temperatures, but arginine, aspartate and ornithine were utilized only at 20 °C by almost all strains.
    Keywords: ARK-IV/2; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; North Greenland Sea; Polarstern; PS11; PS11/185-1; PS11/195-1; PS11/223-1; PS11/227-1; PS11/235-1; PS11/242-1; PS11/248-1; PS11/253-1
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 63
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    In:  Supplement to: Lipp, Julius S; Hinrichs, Kai-Uwe (2009): Structural diversity and fate of intact polar lipids in marine sediments. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 73(22), 6816-6833, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2009.08.003
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Marine sediments harbor an enormous quantity of microorganisms, including a multitude of novel species. The habitable zone of the marine sediment column begins at the sediment-water interface and probably extends to depths of several thousands of meters. Studies of the microbial diversity in this ecosystem have mostly relied on molecular biological techniques. We used a complementary method - analysis of intact polar membrane lipids - to characterize the in-situ microbial community in sediments covering a wide range of environmental conditions from Peru Margin, Equatorial Pacific, Hydrate Ridge, and Juan de Fuca Ridge. Bacterial and eukaryotic phospholipids were only detected in surface sediments from the Peru Margin. In contrast, deeply buried sediments, independent of their geographic location, were dominated by archaeal diether and tetraether lipids with various polar head groups and core lipids. We compared ring distributions of archaeal tetraether lipids derived from polar glycosidic precursors with those that are present as core lipids. The distributions of these related compound pools were distinct, suggestive of different archaeal sources, i.e., the polar compounds derive from sedimentary communities and the core lipids are fossil remnants from planktonic communities with possible admixtures of decayed sedimentary archaea. This in-situ production of distinct archaeal lipid populations potentially affects applications of the TEX86 paleotemperature proxy as demonstrated by offsets in reconstructed temperatures between both pools. We evaluated how varying cell and lipid stabilities will influence the sedimentary pool by using a box-model. The results are consistent with (i) a requirement of continuous inputs of freshly synthesized lipids in subsurface sediments for explaining the observed distribution of intact polar lipids, and (ii) decreasing lipid inputs with increasing burial depth.
    Keywords: 201-1226B; 201-1227A; 201-1227D; 201-1229A; 201-1229D; 201-1230B; 204-1249F; 2MC; 301-U1301C; 47MC; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Exp301; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program / International Ocean Discovery Program; IODP; Joides Resolution; Juan de Fuca Hydrogeology; Juan de Fuca Ridge, North Pacific Ocean; Leg201; Leg204; MARUM; MUC; MultiCorer; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; PERU-AUFTRIEB; Peru Margin; SO147; SO147_2MC; SO147_47MC; Sonne; South Pacific Ocean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 64
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    In:  School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong | Supplement to: McGregor, Helen V; Dupont, Lydie M; Stuut, Jan-Berend W; Kuhlmann, Holger (2009): Vegetation change, goats, and religion: a 2000-year history of land use in southern Morocco. Quaternary Science Reviews, 28(15-16), 1434-1448, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.02.012
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Understanding past human-climate-environment interactions is essential for assessing the vulnerability of landscapes and ecosystems to future climate change. This is particularly important in southern Morocco where the current vegetation is impacted by pastoralism, and the region is highly sensitive to climate variability. Here, we present a 2000-year record of vegetation, sedimentation rate, XRF chemical element intensities, and particle size from two decadal-resolved, marine sediment cores, raised from offshore Cape Ghir, southern Morocco. The results show that between 650 and 850 AD the sedimentation rate increased dramatically from 100 cm/1000 years to 300 cm/1000 years, and the Fe/Ca and pollen flux doubled, together indicating higher inputs of terrestrial sediment. Particle size measurements and end-member modelling suggest increased fluvial transport of the sediment. Beginning at 650 AD pollen levels from Cichorioideae species show a sharp rise from 10% to 20%. Pollen from Atemisia and Plantago, also increase from this time. Deciduous oak pollen percentages show a decline, whereas those of evergreen oak barely change. The abrupt increase in terrestrial/fluvial input from 650 to 850 AD occurs, within the age uncertainty, of the arrival of Islam (Islamisation) in Morocco at around 700 AD. Historical evidence suggests Islamisation led to population increase and development of southern Morocco, including expanded pastoralism, deforestation and agriculture. Livestock pressure may have changed the vegetation structure, accounting for the increase in pollen from Cichorioideae, Plantago, and Artemisia, which include many weedy species. Goats in particular may have played a dominant role as agents of erosion, and intense browsing may have led to the decline in deciduous oak; evergreen oak is more likely to survive as it re-sprouts more vigorously after browsing. From 850 AD to present sedimentation rates, Fe/Ca ratios and fluvial discharge remain stable, whereas pollen results suggest continued degradation. Pollen results from the past 150 years suggest expanded cultivation of olives and the native argan tree, and the introduction of Australian eucalyptus trees. The rapidly increasing population in southern Morocco is causing continued pressure to expand pastoralism and agriculture. The history of land degradation presented here suggests that the vegetation in southern Morocco may have been degraded for a longer period than previously thought and may be particularly sensitive to further land use changes. These results should be included in land management strategies for southern Morocco.
    Keywords: Bottle, Niskin; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB5008-1; GeoB6007-2; GeoB6008-1; GeoB6008-2; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M41/2; M45/5a; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Mid-Atlantic Ridge; MUC; MultiCorer; NIS; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 65
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    In:  Supplement to: Weber, Michael E; Clark, Peter U; Ricken, Werner; Mitrovica, Jerry X; Hostetler, Steven W; Kuhn, Gerhard (2011): Interhemispheric ice-sheet synchronicity during the last glacial maximum. Science, 334(6060), 1265-1269, https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1209299
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The timing of the last maximum extent of the Antarctic ice sheets relative to those in the Northern Hemisphere remains poorly understood. We develop a chronology for the Weddell Sea sector of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet that, combined with ages from other Antarctic ice-sheet sectors, indicates that the advance to and retreat from their maximum extent was within dating uncertainties synchronous with most sectors of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets. Surface climate forcing of Antarctic mass balance would probably cause an opposite response, whereby a warming climate would increase accumulation but not surface melting. Our new data support teleconnections involving sea-level forcing from Northern Hemisphere ice sheets and changes in North Atlantic deep-water formation and attendant heat flux to Antarctic grounding lines to synchronize the hemispheric ice sheets.
    Keywords: ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; ANT-VIII/5; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Halley Bay; Lyddan Island; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; PS10; PS10/778; PS12; PS12/319; PS1498-2; PS1599-3; PS16; PS16/409; PS16/410; PS16/413; PS16/417; PS16/432; PS1789-1; PS1790-1; PS1791-2; PS1793-2; PS1798-1; SL; SPP1158; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
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  • 66
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    In:  Supplement to: Pape, Thomas; Feseker, Tomas; Kasten, Sabine; Fischer, David; Bohrmann, Gerhard (2011): Distribution and abundance of gas hydrates in near-surface deposits of the Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano, SW Barents Sea. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 12(9), Q09009, 21 PP., https://doi.org/10.1029/2011GC003575
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The occurrence of gas hydrates at submarine mud volcanoes (MVs) located within the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) is controlled by upward fluid and heat flux associated with MV activity. Determining the spatial distribution of gas hydrates at MVs is crucial to evaluate their sensitivity to known episodic changes in volcanic activity. We determined the hydrocarbon inventory and spatial distribution of hydrates at an individual MV structure. The Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano (HMMV), located at 1,250 m water depth on the Barents Sea slope, was investigated by combined pressure core sampling, heat flow measurements, and pore water chemical analysis. Quantitative pressure core degassing revealed gas-sediment ratios between 3.1 and 25.7, corresponding to hydrate concentrations of up to 21.3% of the pore volume. Hydrocarbon compositions and physicochemical conditions imply that gas hydrates incipiently crystallize as structure I hydrate, with a dissociation temperature of around 13.8°C at this water depth. Based on numerous in situ measurements of the geothermal gradient in the seabed, pore water sulfate profiles and microbathymetric data, we show that the thickness of the GHSZ increases from less than 1 m at the warm center to around 47 m in the outer parts of the HMMV. We estimate the total mass of hydrate-bound methane stored at the HMMV to be about 102.5 kt, of which 2.8 kt are located within the morphological Unit I around the center and thus are likely to be dissociated in the course of a large eruption.
    Keywords: ARK-XXII/1b; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GC; Gravity corer; HERMES; Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European Seas; MARUM; Norwegian Sea; PC; Piston corer; Polarstern; PS70; PS70/053-1; PS70/054-1; PS70/068-1; PS70/069-1; PS70/081-1; PS70/092-1; PS70/093-1; PS70/094-1; PS70/097-1; PS70/098-1; PS70/102-1; PS70/110-1; PS70/113-1; PS70/117-1; PS70/122-1; PS70/126-1; PS70/133-1
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 67
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    In:  Supplement to: Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Melles, Martin; Kuhn, Gerhard; Larter, Robert D (2012): Marine geological constraints for the grounding-line position of the Antarctic Ice Sheet on the southern Weddell Sea shelf at the Last Glacial Maximum. Quaternary Science Reviews, 32, 25-47, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2011.11.017
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Abstract: The history of grounded ice-sheet extent on the southern Weddell Sea shelf during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and the timing of post-LGM ice-sheet retreat are poorly constrained. Several glaciological models reconstructed widespread grounding and major thickening of the Antarctic Ice Sheet in the Weddell Sea sector at the LGM. In contrast, recently published onshore data and modelling results concluded only very limited LGM-thickening of glaciers and ice streams feeding into the modern Filchner and Ronne ice shelves. These studies concluded that during the LGM ice shelves rather than grounded ice covered the Filchner and Ronne troughs, two deep palaeo-ice stream troughs eroded into the southern Weddell Sea shelf. Here we review previously published and unpublished marine geophysical and geological data from the southern Weddell Sea shelf. The stratigraphy and geometry of reflectors in acoustic sub-bottom profiles are similar to those from other West Antarctic palaeo-ice stream troughs, where grounded ice had advanced to the shelf break at the LGM. Numerous cores from the southern Weddell Sea shelf recovered sequences with properties typical for subglacially deposited tills or subglacially compacted sediments. These data sets give evidence that grounded ice had advanced across the shelf during the past, thereby grounding in even the deepest parts of the Filchner and Ronne troughs. Radiocarbon dates from glaciomarine sediments overlying the subglacial deposits are limited, but indicate that the ice grounding occurred at the LGM and that ice retreat started before ~15.1 corrected 14C kyrs before present (BP) on the outer shelf and before ~7.7 corrected 14C kyrs BP on the inner shelf, which is broadly synchronous with ice retreat in other Antarctic sectors. The apparent mismatch between the ice-sheet reconstructions from marine and terrestrial data can be attributed to ice streams with very low surface profiles (similar to those of "ice plains") that had advanced through Filchner Trough and Ronne Trough at the LGM. Considering the global sea-level lowstand of ~130 metres below present, a low surface slope of the expanded LGM-ice sheet in the southern Weddell Sea can reconcile grounding-line advance to the shelf break with limited thickening of glaciers and ice streams in the hinterland. This scenario implies that ice-sheet growth in the Weddell Sea sector during the LGM and ice-sheet drawdown throughout the last deglaciation could only have made minor contributions to the major global sea-level fluctuations during these times.
    Keywords: 002; 011; 013; 016; 2-19-1; 2-20-1; 2-22-1; 3-10-1; 3-1-1; 3-11-1; 3-1-2; 3-7-1; ANT-I/2; ANT-II/4; ANT-III/3; ANT-IV/3; ANT-V/4; ANT-VI/3; AWI_Paleo; Cape Fiske; Dredge; DRG; Filchner Shelf; Filchner Trough; G1; G15; G17; G18; G2; G5; GC; Giant box corer; GKG; Glacier; Gould Bay; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); International Weddell Sea Oceanographic Expeditions; IWSOE68; IWSOE68-002; IWSOE68-011; IWSOE68-013; IWSOE68-016; IWSOE69; IWSOE69-G1; IWSOE69-G15; IWSOE69-G17; IWSOE69-G18; IWSOE69-G2; IWSOE69-G5; IWSOE70; IWSOE70-2-19-1; IWSOE70-2-20-1; IWSOE70-2-22-1; IWSOE70-3-10-1; IWSOE70-3-1-1; IWSOE70-3-11-1; IWSOE70-3-1-2; IWSOE70-3-7-1; MG; Multiboxcorer; NARE77; NARE77_11; NARE77_12; NARE77_13; NARE77_14; NARE77_16; NARE77_19; NARE77_20; NARE77_22; NARE77_23; NARE79; NARE79_210; NARE79_212; NARE79_213; NARE79_214; NARE79_221; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; PC; Piston corer; Polarsirkel; Polarstern; PS01; PS01/154; PS01/155; PS01/156; PS01/161; PS01/162; PS01/177; PS01/184; PS01/186; PS01/189; PS04; PS04/318; PS04/334; PS04/335; PS04/337; PS04/340; PS04/346; PS04/348; PS04/350; PS04/351; PS04/357; PS04/368; PS04/370; PS04/380; PS04/382; PS04/389; PS04/414; PS04/423; PS04/429; PS04/433; PS04/434; PS04/442; PS04/447; PS04/449; PS04/472; PS04/477; PS04/481; PS04/484; PS04/495; PS04/500; PS04/508; PS04/509; PS06/301; PS06/302; PS06/303; PS06/304; PS06/306; PS06 SIBEX; PS08; PS08/379; PS08/380; PS08/381; PS08/382; PS08/384; PS08/385; PS08/386; PS08/387; PS08/439; PS08/442; PS08/444; PS08/449; PS08/450; PS08/452; PS10; PS10/778; PS1010-1; PS1011-1; PS1012-1; PS1013-1; PS1014-1; PS1016-1; PS1017-1; PS1018-1; PS1019-1; PS1194-1; PS1196-1; PS1197-1; PS1197-2; PS1198-1; PS1199-1; PS1199-2; PS12; PS12/344; PS12/348; PS12/350; PS12/372; PS1200-2; PS1200-4; PS1201-1; PS1202-2; PS1203-1; PS1204-1; PS1205-1; PS1206-1; PS1207-2; PS1208-1; PS1209-1; PS1210-1; PS1210-2; PS1211-2; PS1212-1; PS1213-1; PS1214-1; PS1215-2; PS1216-1; PS1217-1; PS1219-1; PS1220-3; PS1222-1; PS1223-1; PS1275-1; PS1276-1; PS1277-1; PS1278-1; PS1279-1; PS1396-1; PS1397-1; PS1397-3; PS1398-1; PS1398-2; PS1399-1; PS1400-1; PS1400-4; PS1401-1; PS1401-2; PS1402-2; PS1403-1; PS1418-1; PS1420-1; PS1420-2; PS1422-1; PS1423-1; PS1423-2; PS1424-1; PS1424-2; PS1498-1; PS1498-2; PS1609-2; PS1609-3; PS1611-1; PS1611-3; PS1612-1; PS1612-2; PS1621-2; SL; Weddell Sea
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    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 68
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    In:  Supplement to: Voelker, Antje H L (1999): Zur Deutung der Dansgaard-Oeschger Ereignisse in ultra-hochauflösenden Sedimentprofilen aus dem Europäischen Nordmeer (Dansgaard-Oeschger events in ultra-high resolution sediment records from the Nordic Seas). Berichte-Reports, Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Kiel, 9, 278 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/reports-ifg.1999.9
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: High-, i.e. 15-140-yr-resolution climate records from sediment cores 23071, 23074, and PS2644 from the Nordic Seas were used to recon:;truct changes in the surface and deep water circulation during marine isotope stages 1-5.1, i.e. the last 82 000 yr. From this the causal links between the paleoceanographic signals and the Dansgaard-Oeschger events 1-21 revealed in 0180-ice-core records from Greenland were determined. The stratigraphy of the cores is based on the planktic 0180 curves, the minima of which were directly correlated with the GISP2-0180 record, numerous AMS 14C ages, and some ash layers. The planktic d18O and dl3C curves of all three cores reveal numerous meltwater events, the most pronounced of which were assigned to the Heinrich events 1-6. The meltwater events, among other things also accompanied by cold sea surface temperatures and high IRD concentration, correlate with the stadial phases of the Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles and in the western Iceland Sea also to colder periods or abrupt drops in 0180 within a few longer interstadials. Besides being more numerous, the meltwater events also show isotope values lighter in the Iceland Sea than in the central Norwegian Sea, especially if compared to core 23071. This implies a continuous inflow of relative warm Atlantic water into the Norwegian Sea and a cyclonic circulation regime.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-X/2; AWI_Paleo; Denmark Strait; Giant box corer; GIK/IfG; GIK23071-2; GIK23071-3; GIK23074-1; GIK23074-3; GIK23351-1; GIK23351-4; GIK23354-4; GIK23354-6; GKG; GLAMAP; Global Environmental Change: The Northern North Atlantic; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Institute for Geosciences, Christian Albrechts University, Kiel; KAL; Kasten corer; M2/2; M7/5; Meteor (1986); Norwegian-Greenland Sea; Norwegian Sea; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2613-1; PS2613-6; PS2616-7; PS2644-2; PS2644-5; PS2645-2; PS2645-5; PS2646-2; PS2646-5; PS2647-2; PS2647-5; PS31; PS31/113; PS31/116; PS31/160; PS31/160-5; PS31/161; PS31/162; PS31/163; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; SFB313; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 48 datasets
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  • 69
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    In:  Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Sedimentology and stable isotope measurements on sediment cores from the Atlantic-Indian Ridge.
    Keywords: ANT-IV/4; ANT-VI/3; Argentine Islands; Atlantic Indik Ridge; AWI_Paleo; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KL; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Piston corer (BGR type); Polarstern; PS08; PS08/509; PS12; PS12/545; PS12/549; PS12/551; PS12/553; PS12/555; PS12/557; PS1436-1; PS1649-1; PS1649-2; PS1650-1; PS1650-2; PS1651-1; PS1651-2; PS1652-1; PS1652-2; PS1653-1; PS1653-2; PS1654-1; PS1654-2; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 13 datasets
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  • 70
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    In:  P.P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow | Supplement to: Shevchenko, Vladimir P (2006): Vliyanie Aerozoley na Sredu i Morskoe Osadkonakoplenie v Arktike (Influence of Aerosols on Environment and Marine Sedimentation in the Arctic). Nauka Publ. (Moscow): in Russian, 226 pp
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: In this monograph on the basis of materials obtained by the author and his colleagues in Arctic expeditions of 1991-2005 and of published data results of studies effect of aerosols on environmental conditions and marine sedimentation in the Arctic are summarizes. Processes of aeolian transport and transformation of sedimentary material from sources to places of its accumulation in bottom sediments are described. Results of this study can be used to assess current state of ecosystem of Arctic seas and as a background for evaluation of possible human impact on nature during exploration of mineral resources of the Arctic shelf. For oceanographers, geochemists, geoecologists.
    Keywords: Aerial sample, pump; AEROS; Aerosol sampler; AIRPUMP; Akademik Mstislav Keldysh; Akademik Sergey Vavilov; AMK31; AMK31-1; AMK31-2; AMK31-3; AMK31-4; AMK31-5; Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Arctic; ARK-XI/1; ARK-XI/1_1; ARK-XI/1_10AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_11AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_12AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_1AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_2; ARK-XI/1_2AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_3AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_4AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_5AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_6AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_7AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_8AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1_9AFA-XA; ARK-XI/1-10AS; ARK-XI/1-10PhC; ARK-XI/1-11AS; ARK-XI/1-11PhC; ARK-XI/1-12AS; ARK-XI/1-12PhC; ARK-XI/1-13PhC; ARK-XI/1-14PhC; ARK-XI/1-15PhC; ARK-XI/1-16PhC; ARK-XI/1-17PhC; ARK-XI/1-18PhC; ARK-XI/1-19PhC; ARK-XI/1-1AS; ARK-XI/1-1PhC; ARK-XI/1-20PhC; ARK-XI/1-21PhC; ARK-XI/1-22PhC; ARK-XI/1-23PhC; ARK-XI/1-24PhC; ARK-XI/1-25PhC; ARK-XI/1-26PhC; ARK-XI/1-27PhC; ARK-XI/1-28PhC; ARK-XI/1-29PhC; ARK-XI/1-2AS; ARK-XI/1-2PhC; ARK-XI/1-30PhC; ARK-XI/1-31PhC; ARK-XI/1-32PhC; ARK-XI/1-33PhC; ARK-XI/1-34PhC; ARK-XI/1-35PhC; ARK-XI/1-36PhC; ARK-XI/1-37PhC; ARK-XI/1-38PhC; ARK-XI/1-39PhC; ARK-XI/1-3AS; ARK-XI/1-3PhC; ARK-XI/1-40PhC; ARK-XI/1-41PhC; ARK-XI/1-42PhC; ARK-XI/1-43PhC; ARK-XI/1-44PhC; ARK-XI/1-45PhC; ARK-XI/1-46PhC; ARK-XI/1-47PhC; ARK-XI/1-48PhC; ARK-XI/1-49PhC; ARK-XI/1-4AS; ARK-XI/1-4PhC; ARK-XI/1-50PhC; ARK-XI/1-51PhC; ARK-XI/1-52PhC; ARK-XI/1-53PhC; ARK-XI/1-54PhC; ARK-XI/1-55PhC; ARK-XI/1-56PhC; ARK-XI/1-57PhC; ARK-XI/1-58PhC; ARK-XI/1-59PhC; ARK-XI/1-5AS; ARK-XI/1-5PhC; ARK-XI/1-60PhC; ARK-XI/1-61PhC; ARK-XI/1-62PhC; ARK-XI/1-63PhC; ARK-XI/1-6AS; ARK-XI/1-6PhC; ARK-XI/1-7AS; ARK-XI/1-7PhC; ARK-XI/1-8AS; ARK-XI/1-8PhC; ARK-XI/1-9AS; ARK-XI/1-9PhC; ARK-XIII/2; ARK-XIII/2_1AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2_2AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2_3AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2_4AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2_5AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2_6AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2_7AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2_8AFA-XA; ARK-XIII/2-10PhC; ARK-XIII/2-11PhC; ARK-XIII/2-12PhC; ARK-XIII/2-13PhC; ARK-XIII/2-14PhC; ARK-XIII/2-15PhC; ARK-XIII/2-16PhC; ARK-XIII/2-17PhC; ARK-XIII/2-18PhC; ARK-XIII/2-19PhC; ARK-XIII/2-1PhC; ARK-XIII/2-20PhC; ARK-XIII/2-21PhC; ARK-XIII/2-22PhC; ARK-XIII/2-23PhC; ARK-XIII/2-24PhC; ARK-XIII/2-25PhC; ARK-XIII/2-26PhC; ARK-XIII/2-27PhC; ARK-XIII/2-28PhC; ARK-XIII/2-29PhC; ARK-XIII/2-2PhC; ARK-XIII/2-30PhC; ARK-XIII/2-31PhC; ARK-XIII/2-32PhC; ARK-XIII/2-33PhC; ARK-XIII/2-34PhC; ARK-XIII/2-35PhC; ARK-XIII/2-36PhC; ARK-XIII/2-37PhC; ARK-XIII/2-38PhC; ARK-XIII/2-39PhC; ARK-XIII/2-3PhC; ARK-XIII/2-40PhC; ARK-XIII/2-41PhC; ARK-XIII/2-42PhC; ARK-XIII/2-43PhC; ARK-XIII/2-44PhC; ARK-XIII/2-45PhC; ARK-XIII/2-46PhC; ARK-XIII/2-47PhC; ARK-XIII/2-48PhC; ARK-XIII/2-49PhC; ARK-XIII/2-4PhC; ARK-XIII/2-50PhC; ARK-XIII/2-51PhC; ARK-XIII/2-52PhC; ARK-XIII/2-53PhC; ARK-XIII/2-54PhC; ARK-XIII/2-55PhC; ARK-XIII/2-56PhC; ARK-XIII/2-57PhC; ARK-XIII/2-58PhC; ARK-XIII/2-59PhC; ARK-XIII/2-5PhC; ARK-XIII/2-60PhC; ARK-XIII/2-61PhC; ARK-XIII/2-62PhC; ARK-XIII/2-63PhC; ARK-XIII/2-64PhC; ARK-XIII/2-65PhC; ARK-XIII/2-66PhC; ARK-XIII/2-6PhC; ARK-XIII/2-7PhC; ARK-XIII/2-8PhC; ARK-XIII/2-9PhC; ARK-XIV/1a; ARK-XIV/1a-10PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-11PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-12PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-13PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-14PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-15PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-16PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-17PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-18PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-19PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-1PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-20PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-21PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-22PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-23PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-24PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-25PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-26PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-27PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-28PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-29PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-2PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-30PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-31PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-32PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-33PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-34PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-35PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-36PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-37PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-38PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-39PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-3PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-40PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-41PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-42PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-43PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-44PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-45PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-46PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-47PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-48PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-49PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-4PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-50PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-51PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-52PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-53PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-54PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-55PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-56PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-57PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-5PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-6PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-7PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-8PhC; ARK-XIV/1a-9PhC; ASV11; ASV11-1; ASV11-10PhC; ASV11-11PhC; ASV11-12PhC; ASV11-13PhC; ASV11-14PhC; ASV11-15PhC; ASV11-16PhC; ASV11-17PhC; ASV11-18PhC; ASV11-19PhC; ASV11-1PhC; ASV11-2; ASV11-20PhC; ASV11-21PhC; ASV11-22PhC; ASV11-23PhC; ASV11-24PhC; ASV11-25PhC; ASV11-26PhC; ASV11-27PhC; ASV11-2PhC; ASV11-3PhC; ASV11-4PhC; ASV11-5PhC; ASV11-6PhC; ASV11-7PhC; ASV11-8PhC; ASV11-9PhC; ASV12; ASV12-1; ASV13; ASV13-1; ASV13-2; ASV13-3; ASV13-4; DM49; DM49-10; DM49-10WhF; DM49-11; DM49-11WhF; DM49-12; DM49-12WhF; DM49-13; DM49-13WhF; DM49-14; DM49-14WhF; DM49-15; DM49-16; DM49-17; DM49-18; DM49-19; DM49-1WhF; DM49-20; DM49-21; DM49-22; DM49-23; DM49-2WhF; DM49-3; DM49-3WhF; DM49-4; DM49-4WhF; DM49-5; DM49-5WhF; DM49-6; DM49-6WhF; DM49-7; DM49-7WhF; DM49-8; DM49-8WhF; DM49-9; DM49-9WhF; Dmitry Mendeleev; Kara Sea; Laptev Sea; PL-1996-B; PL-1996-N; PL94; PL94_10AFA-XA; PL94_10air; PL94_11air; PL94_12air; PL94_13air; PL94_14air; PL94_15air; PL94_16air; PL94_17air; PL94_18air; PL94_19air; PL94_1AFA-XA; PL94_1air; PL94_20air; PL94_2AFA-XA; PL94_2air; PL94_3AFA-XA; PL94_3air; PL94_4AFA-XA; PL94_4air; PL94_5AFA-XA; PL94_5air; PL94_6AFA-XA; PL94_6air; PL94_7AFA-XA; PL94_7air; PL94_8AFA-XA; PL94_8air; PL94_9AFA-XA; PL94_9air; PL96-4; PL96-4AFA-XA; PL96-5; PL96-5AFA-XA; PL96-6; PL96-6AFA-XA; PL96-7; PL96-7AFA-XA; PL96-8; PL96-8AFA-XA; Polarstern; Port of Arkhangelsk; Professor Logachev; Professor Shtokman; PS36; PS44; PS51; PSh49; PSh49-1; PSh49-2; PSh49-3; PSh49-4; SPASIBA-91; SPASIBA-91_Air1; SPASIBA-91_Air10; SPASIBA-91_Air2; SPASIBA-91_Air3; SPASIBA-91_Air4; SPASIBA-91_Air5; SPASIBA-91_Air6; SPASIBA-91_Air7; SPASIBA-91_Air8; SPASIBA-91_Air9; SPASIBAIII; Yakov Smirnitskiy
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 31 datasets
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  • 71
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    In:  Supplement to: Guilini, Katja; van Oevelen, Dick; Soetaert, Karline; Middelburg, Jack J; Vanreusel, Ann (2010): Nutritional importance of benthic bacteria for deep-sea nematodes from the Arctic ice margin: Results of an isotope tracer experiment. Limnology and Oceanography, 55, 1977-1989, https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.2010.55.5.1977
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: A stable isotope (13C)-labeling experiment was performed to quantify the importance of bacterial carbon as a food source for an Arctic deep-sea nematode community. Bacterial functional groups were isotopically enriched with 13C-glucose, 13C-acetate, 13C- bicarbonate, and 13C-amino acids injected into sediments collected from 1280 m depth at 79uN, 6uE, west of Svalbard. Incorporation of the 13C label into bacterial phospholipid-derived fatty acids (PLFAs) and nematodes in the top 5 cm of the sediment was monitored over a 7-d period. The 13C dynamics of nematodes was fitted with a simple isotope turnover model to derive the importance of the different bacterial functional groups as carbon sources for the nematodes. The different substrates clearly labeled different bacterial groups as evidenced by differential labeling of the PLFA patterns. The deep-sea nematode community incorporated a very limited amount of the label, and the isotope turnover model showed that the dynamics of the isotope transfer could not be attributed to bacterivory. The low enrichment of nematodes suggests a limited passive uptake of injected 13C-labeled substrates. The lack of accumulation suggests that the injected 13C-labeled dissolved organic carbon compounds are not important as carbon sources for deep-sea nematodes. Since earlier studies with isotopically enriched algae also found limited uptake by nematodes, the food sources of deep-sea nematodes remain unclear.
    Keywords: ARK-XXII/1c; hermes; HERMES; hermione; HERMIONE; Hotspot Ecosystem Research and Mans Impact On European Seas; Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European Seas; MUC; MultiCorer; North Greenland Sea; Polarstern; PS70; PS70/188-1; PS70/190-1; PS70/192-1
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 72
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    In:  Supplement to: Meggers, Helge; Freudenthal, Tim; Nave, Silvia Osorio; Targarona, Jordi; Abrantes, Fatima F; Helmke, Peer (2002): Assessment of geochemical and micropaleontological sedimentary parameters as proxies of surface water properties in the Canary Islands region. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 49(17), 3631-3654, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-0645(02)00103-0
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The Canary Islands region occupies a key position with respect to biogeochemical cycles, with the zonal transition from oligotrophic to nutrient-rich waters and the contribution of Saharan dust to the particle flux. We present the distribution of geochemical proxies (TOC, carbonate, d15N, d13Corg, C/N-ratio) and micropaleontological parameters (diatoms, dinoflagellates, foraminifera, pteropods), in 80 surface-sediment samples in order to characterise the influence of coastally upwelled water on the domain of the subtropical gyre. Results of the surface-sediment analyses confirmed the high biomass gradient from the coast to the open ocean inferred from satellite data of surface chlorophyll or SST. The distribution of total dinoflagellate cysts, the planktic foraminifera species Globigerina bulloides, the diatom resting spore Chaetoceros spp., and TOC concentration coincided well with the areas of strong filament production off Cape Ghir and Cape Yubi. The warm-water planktic foraminifera Globigerinoides ruber (white), the diatom Nitzschia spp., and the d15N-values showed the opposite trend with high values in the open ocean. Factor analyses on the planktic foraminifera species distribution indicated three major assemblages in the Canary Islands region that represent the present surface-water conditions from the upwelling influenced region via a mixing area towards the subtropical gyre.
    Keywords: Agadir Canyon; Canary Islands; Canary Islands Azores Gibraltar Observations; CANIGO; GeoB; GeoB4024-3; GeoB4025-2; GeoB4026-1; GeoB4029-2; GeoB4031-1; GeoB4038-2; GeoB4040-2; GeoB4057-2; GeoB4060-2; GeoB4202-1; GeoB4204-1; GeoB4205-1; GeoB4206-2; GeoB4207-1; GeoB4208-1; GeoB4209-1; GeoB4210-2; GeoB4211-1; GeoB4212-3; GeoB4213-1; GeoB4214-3; GeoB4215-1; GeoB4216-2; GeoB4217-1; GeoB4220-2; GeoB4221-2; 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; GeoB4238-2; GeoB4239-1; GeoB4241-5; GeoB4242-4; GeoB4301-1; GeoB5529-1; GeoB5530-3; GeoB5531-1; GeoB5532-2; GeoB5533-1; GeoB5534-2; GeoB5535-1; GeoB5536-3; GeoB5537-2; GeoB5538-2; GeoB5539-2; GeoB5540-3; GeoB5541-2; GeoB5542-3; GeoB5546-3; GeoB5547-2; GeoB5548-3; GeoB5549-2; GeoB5550-3; GeoB5551-2; GeoB5553-2; GeoB5555-2; GeoB5556-3; GeoB5557-2; GeoB5558-2; GeoB5559-1; GeoB5560-2; GeoB5561-1; GeoB6005-1; GeoB6006-2; GeoB6007-1; GeoB6008-2; GeoB6009-1; GeoB6010-1; GeoB6011-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Giant box corer; GKG; M37/1; M38/1; M42/4b; M45/5a; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; VH96/1-3; VH96/1-4; Victor Hensen
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 73
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    In:  Supplement to: Haas, Christian; Pfaffling, Andreas; Hendricks, Stefan; Rabenstein, Lasse; Etienne, Jean-Louis; Rigor, Ignatius (2008): Reduced ice thickness in Arctic Transpolar Drift favors rapid ice retreat. Geophysical Research Letters, 35, L17501, https://doi.org/10.1029/2008GL034457
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Helicopter-borne electromagnetic sea ice thickness measurements were performed over the Transpolar Drift in late summers of 2001, 2004, and 2007, continuing ground-based measurements since 1991. These show an ongoing reduction of modal and mean ice thicknesses in the region of the North Pole of up to 53 and 44%, respectively, since 2001. A buoy derived ice age model showed that the thinning was mainly due to a regime shift from predominantly multi- and second-year ice in earlier years to first-year ice in 2007, which had modal and mean summer thicknesses of 0.9 and 1.27 m. Measurements of second-year ice which still persisted at the North Pole in April 2007 indicate a reduction of late-summer second-year modal and mean ice thicknesses since 2001 of 20 and 25% to 1.65 and 1.81 m, respectively. The regime shift to younger and thinner ice could soon result in an ice free North Pole during summer.
    Keywords: Airship; Arctic Ocean; Arctic Ocean, Central Basin; ARK-XX/2; ARK-XXII/2; AWI_SeaIce; Electro-magnetic Bird (EM-Bird); EMB; HEM_ARK20_01; HEM_ARK20_02; HEM_ARK20_03; HEM_ARK20_04a; HEM_ARK20_04b; HEM_ARK20_04c; HEM_ARK20_05; HEM_ARK20_06; HEM_ARK20_07; HEM_ARK20_08; HEM_ARK20_09; HEM_ARK20_10; HEM_ARK22_01; HEM_ARK22_02a; HEM_ARK22_02b; HEM_ARK22_03; HEM_ARK22_04; HEM_ARK22_05a; HEM_ARK22_05b; HEM_ARK22_06; HEM_ARK22_07a; HEM_ARK22_07b; HEM_ARK22_08a; HEM_ARK22_08b; HEM_ARK22_09; HEM_ARK22_10; HEM_ARK22_11a; HEM_ARK22_11b; HEM_ARK22_12a; HEM_ARK22_12b; HEM_ARK22_13; HEM_ARK22_14; HEM_ARK22_15a; HEM_ARK22_15b; HEM_ARK22_16; HEM_ARK22_17; HEM_PoleAirship07_01; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; Polarstern; PS66; PS70 SPACE DAMOCLES; Sea Ice Physics @ AWI; Total_Pole_Airship_2007; Total Pole Airship 2007
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 37 datasets
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  • 74
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kuhlmann, Holger; Meggers, Helge; Freudenthal, Tim; Wefer, Gerold (2004): The transition of the monsoonal and the N Atlantic climate system off NW Africa during the Holocene. Geophysical Research Letters, 31, L22204, https://doi.org/10.1029/2004GL021267
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The northward extent of the influence of the W African monsoon during humid periods of interglacials is subject to investigations highlighting feedback mechanisms, such as vegetation. To detect this regional variation and the climate system acting farther to the north will be the aim of this paper focussing on the Holocene. We present two very high-resolution Holocene sediment records off NW Africa located at 31°N and 27°N. The well-known mid-Holocene climate change from the "African Humid Period" to present arid conditions is well reflected by the terrigenous input in the southern core. In contrast, in the northern core spectral and wavelet analyses indicate a periodic oscillation of about 900 years of the terrigenous input throughout the last 9000 years B.P. We conclude that the W African monsoonal influence characterized by the abrupt climatic change at 5000 years B.P. can be separated from the influence of the N Atlantic climate system reflected by a periodic oscillation throughout the Holocene.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GeoB; GeoB5546-2; GeoB6007-2; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KL; M42/4b; M45/5a; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Piston corer (BGR type); SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 75
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    In:  Supplement to: Vogt, Christoph (1997): Zeitliche und räumliche Verteilung von Mineralvergesellschaftungen in spätquartären Sedimenten des Arktische Ozeans und ihre Nützlichkeit als Klimaindikatoren während der Glazial/Interglazial-Wechsel (Regional and temporal variations of mineral assemblages in Arctic Ocean sediments as climate indicator during glacial/interglacial changes). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 251, 309 pp, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzP_0251_1997
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The Arctic Ocean System is a key player regarding the climatic changes of Earth. Its highly sensitive ice Cover, the exchange of surface and deep water masses with the global ocean and the coupling with the atmosphere interact directly with global climatic changes. The output of cold, polar water and sea ice influences the production of deep water in the North Atlantic and controls the global ocean circulation ("the conveyor belt"). The Arctic Ocean is surrounded by the large Northern Hemisphere ice sheets which not only affect the sedimentation in the Arctic Ocean but also are supposed to induce the Course of glacials and interglacials. Terrigenous sediment delivered from the ice sheets by icebergs and meltwater as well as through sea ice are major components of Arctic Ocean sediments. Hence, the terrigenous content of Arctic Ocean sediments is an outstanding archive to investigate changes in the paleoenvironment. Glazigenic sediments of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and surface samples of the Arctic Ocean and the Siberian shelf regions were investigated by means of x-ray diffraction of the bulk fraction. The source regions of distinct mineral compositions were to be deciphered. Regarding the complex circumpolar geology stable christalline shield rocks, active and ancient fold belts including magmatic and metamorphic rocks, sedimentary rocks and wide periglacial lowlands with permafrost provide a complete range of possible mineral combinations. Non- glaciated shelf regions mix the local input from a possible point source of a particular mineral combination with the whole shelf material and function as a sampler of the entire region draining to the shelf. To take this into account, a literature research was performed. Descriptions of outcropping lithologies and Arctic Ocean sediments were scanned for their mineral association. The analyses of glazigenic and shelf sediments yielded a close relationship between their mineral composition and the adjacent source region. The most striking difference between the circumpolar source regions is the extensive outcrop of carbonate rocks in the vicinity of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and in N Greenland while siliciclastic sediments dominate the Siberian shelves. In the Siberian shelf region the eastern Kara Sea and the western Laptev Sea form a destinct region defined by high smectite, (clino-) pyroxene and plagioclase input. The source of this signal are the extensive outcrops of the Siberian trap basalt in the Putorana Plateau which is drained by the tributaries of the Yenissei and Khatanga. The eastern Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea can also be treated as one source region containing a feldspar, quartz, illite, mica, and chlorite asscciation combined with the trace minerals hornblende and epidote. Franz Josef Land provides a mineral composition rich in quartz and kaolinite. The diverse rock suite of the Svalbard archipelago distributes specific mineral compositions of highly metamorphic christalline rocks, dolomite-rich carbonate rocks and sedimentary rocks with a higher diagenetic potential manifested in stable newly built diagenetic minerals and high organic maturity. To reconstruct the last 30,000 years as an example of the transition between glacial and interglacial conditions a profile of sediment cores, recovered during the RV Polarstern" expedition ARK-VIIIl3 (ARCTIC '91), and additional sediment cores around Svalbard were investigated. Besides the mineralogy of different grain size fractions several additional sedimentological and organo-geochemical Parameterswere used. A detailed stratigraphic framework was achieved. By exploiting this data set changes in the mineral composition of the Eurasian Basin sediments can be related to climatic changes. Certain mineral compositions can even be associated with particular transport processes, e.g. the smectitel pyroxene association with sea ice transport from the eastern Kara Sea and the western Laptev Sea. Hence, it is possible to decipher the complex interplay between the influx of warm Atlantic waters into the Southwest of the Eurasian Basin, the waxing and waning of the Svalbard1Barents- Sea- and Kara-Sea-Ice-Sheets, the flooding of the Siberian shelf regions and the surface and deep water circulation. Until now the Arctic Ocean was assumed to be a rather stable System during the last 30,000 years which only switched from a completely ice covered situation during the glacial to seasonally Open waters during the interglacial. But this work using mineral assemblages of sediment cores in the vicinity of Svalbard revealed fast changes in the inflow of warm Atlantic water with the Westspitsbergen Current (〈 1000 years), short periods of advances and retreats of the marine based Eurasian ice sheets (1000-3000 years), and short melting phases (400 years?). Deglaciation of the marine-based Eurasian and the land-based north American and Greenland ice sheets are not simultaneous. This thesis postulates that the Kara Sea Ice Sheet released an early meltwater signal prior to 15,000 14C years leading the Barents Sea Ice Sheet while the western land-based ice sheets are following later than 13,500 14C years. The northern Eurasian Basin records the shift between iceberg and sea-ice material derived from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and N-Greenland and material transported by sea-ice and surface currents from the Siberian shelf region. The phasing of the deglaciation becomes very obvious using the dolomite and quartd phyllosilicate record. It is also supposed that the flooding of the Laptev Sea during the Holocene is manifested in a stepwise increase of sediment input at the Lomonosov Ridge between the Eurasian and Amerasian Basin. Depending on the strength of meltwater pulses from the adjacent ice sheets the Transpolar Drift can probably be relocated. These movements are traceable by the distribution of indicator minerals. Based on the outcome of this work the feasibility of bulk mineral determination can be qualified as excellent tool for paleoenvironmental reconstructions in the Arctic Ocean. The easy preparation and objective determination of bulk mineralogy provided by the QUAX software bears the potential to use this analyses as basic measuring method preceding more time consuming and highly specialised mineralogical investigations (e.g. clay mineralogy, heavy mineral determination).
    Keywords: 302-M0002A; 4391-2; 4413-1; 4416-1; ACEX-M2A; Amundsen Basin; Arctic Coring Expedition, ACEX; Arctic Ocean; ARK-IX/4; ARK-VIII/2; ARK-VIII/3; AWI_Paleo; B20A; B21B; B23A; B24A; B25A; B26B; B28B; B30A; B31A; B32; B5; Barents abyssal plain; Barents Sea; BC; Bear Island Trough; Box corer; CCGS Captain Molly Kool (Vidar Viking); DM49; Dmitry Mendeleev; Exp302; Fletcher Abyssal Plain; Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean; GC; GERG; Giant box corer; Giant piston corer; GKG; GPC; Gravity corer; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Gravity corer (Russian type); Integrated Ocean Drilling Program / International Ocean Discovery Program; IODP; Jenissei; KAL; KAL_R; Kara Sea/St. Anna Trough; Kasten corer; Kasten corer RUS; KS113T; KS117T; Laptev Sea; Laptev Sea, Taymyr Island; Lomonosov Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Lomonosov solpe; Makarov Basin; Men4386-2; Men4388-2; Men4391-2; Men4399-2; Men4403-2; Men4409-1; Men4410-2; Men4413-1; Men4414-2; Men4416-1; Men4417-3; Morris Jesup Rise; MUC; MultiCorer; Nansen Basin; Northwind Ridge, Arctic Ocean; Ob; OB64T; OB73T; OB87T; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Pechora Sea (southeast Barents Sea); PI-93-AR; PI-93-AR_B5; PI-94-AR; PI-94-AR_B20A; PI-94-AR_B21B; PI-94-AR_B23A; PI-94-AR_B24A; PI-94-AR_B25A; PI-94-AR_B26B; PI-94-AR_B28B; PI-94-AR_B30A; PI-94-AR_B31A; PI-94-AR_B32; PL-1994; PL94-11; PL94-23; PL94-32; PL94-62; Polar Sea; Polar Star; Polarstern; Pole Abyssal Plain; Professor Logachev; PS07T; PS19/084; PS19/086; PS19/148; PS19/150; PS19/151; PS19/152; PS19/154; PS19/155; PS19/158; PS19/159; PS19/160; PS19/161; PS19/164; PS19/165; PS19/166; PS19/167; PS19/171; PS19/172; PS19/173; PS19/175; PS19/176; PS19/178; PS19/181; PS19/182; PS19/183; PS19/184; PS19/185; PS19/186; PS19/189; PS19/190; PS19/192; PS19/194; PS19/196; PS19/198; PS19/200; PS19/204; PS19/206; PS19/210; PS19/214; PS19/218; PS19/222; PS19/224; PS19/226; PS19/228; PS19/234; PS19/239; PS19/241; PS19/245; PS19/246; PS19/249; PS19/252; PS19 ARCTIC91; PS19 EPOS II; PS2122-2; PS2123-2; PS2123-3; PS2156-1; PS2157-3; PS2158-1; PS2159-4; PS2161-4; PS2162-1; PS2164-2; PS2165-1; PS2165-3; PS2165-5; PS2166-1; PS2167-3; PS2168-3; PS2170-4; PS2171-2; PS2172-3; PS2174-2; PS2174-4; PS2174-5; PS2175-3; PS2175-4; PS2176-2; PS2177-3; PS2178-4; PS2179-3; PS2180-1; PS2181-4; PS2182-4; PS2183-3; PS2184-3; PS2185-3; PS2185-4; PS2185-6; PS2186-3; PS2187-5; PS2189-3; PS2190-5; PS2191-1; PS2192-1; PS2192-3; PS2193-2; PS2194-1; PS2195-4; PS2196-3; PS2198-4; PS2200-2; PS2200-4; PS2200-5; PS2202-4; PS2204-3; PS2205-1; PS2206-4; PS2208-1; PS2209-1; PS2210-3; PS2212-3; PS2212-5; PS2212-6; PS2213-1; PS2213-4; PS2214-4; PS2215-1; PS2439-1; PS2440-4; PS2441-3; PS2442-4; PS2443-2; PS2444-1; PS2445-3; PS2445-4; PS2446-3; PS2447-4; PS2448-3; PS2449-3; PS2450-2; PS2451-2; PS2452-2; PS2453-2; PS2455-3; PS2456-2; PS2458-3; PS2459-2; PS2460-3; PS2461-2; PS2462-3; PS2463-3; PS2465-3; PS2466-3; PS2468-3; PS2469-3; PS2470-4; PS2471-3; PS2472-3; PS2473-3; PS2474-2; PS2474-3; PS2475-1; PS2476-3; PS2477-3; PS2478-3; PS2480-2; PS2481-2; PS2483-2; PS2484-2; PS2485-1; PS2486-2; PS26T; PS27; PS27/001; PS27/006; PS27/007; PS27/014; PS27/016; PS27/017; PS27/019; PS27/020; PS27/024; PS27/025; PS27/027; PS27/028; PS27/029; PS27/030; PS27/031; PS27/033; PS27/034; PS27/038; PS27/039; PS27/040; PS27/041; PS27/043; PS27/044; PS27/047; PS27/048; PS27/050; PS27/052; PS27/053; PS27/054; PS27/056; PS27/058; PS27/059; PS27/060; PS27/062; PS27/064; PS27/065; PS27/067; PS27/068; PS27/070; PS27/071; PS27/072; PS27/073; Pyasina; Quaternary Environment of the Eurasian North; QUEEN; RGC; RUS_unspec; SAT-077; SAT-136; SL; SPASIBAIII; St. Anna Trough, Kara Sea; Svalbard; van Veen Grab; VGRAB; Vilkitsky Strait; Voronin Trough; VT-123; Wrangel Abyssal Plain; Yakov Smirnitskiy; Yermak Plateau; YR102T; YR107T; YR94T
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 87 datasets
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  • 76
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    In:  Supplement to: Frenz, Michael; Höppner, René; Stuut, Jan-Berend W; Wagner, Thomas; Henrich, Rüdiger (2003): Surface Sediment Bulk Geochemistry and Grain-Size Composition Related to the Oceanic Circulation along the South American Continental Margin in the Southwest Atlantic. In: Wefer, G; Mulitza, S & Ratmeyer, V (eds.), The South Atlantic in the Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Material Budgets and Current Systems, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, 347-373
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Surface sediments from the South American continental margin surrounding tbe Argentine Basin were studied with respect to bulk geochemistry (Caeo) and C ) and grain-size composition (sand/silt/clay relation and terrigenous silt grain-size distribution). The grain-size distributions of the terrigenous silt fraction were unmixed into three end members (EMs), using an end-member modelling algorithm. Three unimodal EMs appear to satisfactorily explain the variations in the data set of the grain-size distributions ofterrigenous silt. The EMs are related to sediment supply by rivers, downslope transport, winnowing, dispersal and re-deposition by currents. The bulk geochemical composition was used to trace the distribution of prominent water masses within the vertical profile. The sediments of the eastern South American continental margin are generally divided into a coarse-grained and carbonate-depleted southwestern part, and a finer-grained and carbonate-rich northeastern part. The transition of both environments is located at the position of the Brazil Malvinas Confluence (BMC). The sediments below the confluence mixing zone of the Malvinas and Brazil Currents and its extensions are characterised by high concentrations of organic carbon, low carbonate contents and high proportions of the intennediate grain-size end member. Tracing these properties, the BMC emerges as a distinct north-south striking feature centered at 52-54°W crossing the continental margin diagonally. Adjacent to this prominent feature in the southwest, the direct detrital sediment discharge of the Rio de la Plata is clearly recognised by a downslope tongue of sand and high proportions of the coarsest EM. A similar coarse grain-size composition extends further south along the continental slope. However, it displays bener sorting due to intense winnowing by the vigorous Malvinas Current. Fine-grained sedimentary deposition zones are located at the southwestern deeper part of the Rio Grande Rise and the southern abyssal Brazil Basin, both within the AABW domain. Less conspicuous winnowing/accumulation panerns are indicated north of the La Plata within the NADW level according to the continental margin topography. We demonstrate that combined bulk geochemical and grain-size properties of surface sediments, unmixed with an end-member algorithm, provide a powerful tool to reconstruct the complex interplay of sedimentology and oceanography along a time slice.
    Keywords: 06MT41_3; Argentine Basin; Bottle, Niskin; Brazil Basin; GeoB; GeoB2101-1; GeoB2102-1; GeoB2104-1; GeoB2105-3; GeoB2106-1; GeoB2107-5; GeoB2108-1; GeoB2109-3; GeoB2110-1; GeoB2111-2; GeoB2112-1; GeoB2113-1; GeoB2116-2; GeoB2117-4; GeoB2118-1; GeoB2119-2; GeoB2121-1; GeoB2122-1; GeoB2123-1; GeoB2124-1; GeoB2125-2; GeoB2126-1; GeoB2127-1; GeoB2130-1; GeoB2701-2; GeoB2703-6; GeoB2704-1; GeoB2705-7; GeoB2706-5; GeoB2706-6; GeoB2707-4; GeoB2708-5; GeoB2709-6; GeoB2711-2; GeoB2712-1; GeoB2714-5; GeoB2715-1; GeoB2717-8; GeoB2718-1; GeoB2719-1; GeoB2721-2; GeoB2722-1; GeoB2723-1; GeoB2724-6; GeoB2724-7; GeoB2725-1; GeoB2726-3; GeoB2727-1; GeoB2729-1; GeoB2730-1; GeoB2731-1; GeoB2734-2; GeoB2801-2; GeoB2802-2; GeoB2803-1; GeoB2804-2; GeoB2805-1; GeoB2806-6; GeoB2807-1; GeoB2808-3; GeoB2809-2; GeoB2810-2; GeoB2811-1; GeoB2812-3; GeoB2813-1; GeoB2817-3; GeoB2818-1; GeoB2819-2; GeoB2820-1; GeoB2821-1; GeoB2821-2; GeoB2824-1; GeoB2825-3; GeoB2826-1; GeoB2827-2; GeoB2828-1; GeoB2829-3; GeoB2830-1; GeoB5110-5; GeoB6201-3; GeoB6202-5; GeoB6203-1; GeoB6204-1; GeoB6204-2; GeoB6205-1; GeoB6206-1; GeoB6207-2; GeoB6208-1; GeoB6209-2; GeoB6210-1; GeoB6211-1; GeoB6212-2; GeoB6213-1; GeoB6214-5; GeoB6216-1; GeoB6218-1; GeoB6219-7; GeoB6220-1; GeoB6221-1; GeoB6222-2; GeoB6223-1; GeoB6223-3; GeoB6224-1; GeoB6225-2; GeoB6226-7; GeoB6228-2; GeoB6229-5; GeoB6230-1; GeoB6231-1; GeoB6232-1; GeoB6233-1; GeoB6234-1; GeoB6301-1; GeoB6307-1; GeoB6308-1; GeoB6309-2; GeoB6310-1; GeoB6311-2; GeoB6312-1; GeoB6313-2; GeoB6314-1; GeoB6317-2; GeoB6330-1; GeoB6334-2; GeoB6336-2; GeoB6337-8; GeoB6339-1; GeoB6340-1; GeoB6341-1; GeoB6344-5; GeoB6346-4; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Giant box corer; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Hand net; HN; M23/2; M29/1; M29/2; M41/3; M46/2; M46/3; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; NIS; Northwestern Vema Channel; Rio Grande Rise; Santos Plateau; SL; Slope off Argentina; Uruguay continental margin; western South Atlantic
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 77
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Müller, Juliane; Werner, Kirstin; Stein, Ruediger; Fahl, Kirsten; Moros, Matthias; Jansen, Eystein (2012): Holocene cooling culminates in sea ice oscillations in Fram Strait. Quaternary Science Reviews, 47, 1-14, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.04.024
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: A reconstruction of Holocene sea ice conditions in the Fram Strait provides insight into the palaeoenvironmental and palaeoceanographic development of this climate sensitive area during the past 8,500 years BP. Organic geochemical analyses of sediment cores from eastern and western Fram Strait enable the identification of variations in the ice coverage that can be linked to changes in the oceanic (and atmospheric) circulation system. By means of the sea ice proxy IP25, phytoplankton derived biomarkers and ice rafted detritus (IRD) increasing sea ice occurrences are traced along the western continental margin of Spitsbergen throughout the Holocene, which supports previous palaeoenvironmental reconstructions that document a general cooling. A further significant ice advance during the Neoglacial is accompanied by distinct sea ice fluctuations, which point to short-term perturbations in either the Atlantic Water advection or Arctic Water outflow at this site. At the continental shelf of East Greenland, the general Holocene cooling, however, seems to be less pronounced and sea ice conditions remained rather stable. Here, a major Neoglacial increase in sea ice coverage did not occur before 1,000 years BP. Phytoplankton-IP25 indices ("PIP25-Index") are used for more explicit sea ice estimates and display a Mid Holocene shift from a minor sea ice coverage to stable ice margin conditions in eastern Fram Strait, while the inner East Greenland shelf experienced less severe to marginal sea ice occurrences throughout the entire Holocene.
    Keywords: ARK-X/2; AWI_Paleo; East Greenland Sea; Fram Strait; Gravity corer (Kiel type); KAL; Kasten corer; Maria S. Merian; MSM05/5; MSM05/5_712-2; MSM05/5_723-2; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2641-4; PS31; PS31/154; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 78
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Franke, Christine; Hofmann, Daniela; von Dobeneck, Tilo (2004): Does lithology influence relative paleointensity records? A statistical analysis on South Atlantic pelagic sediments. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interior, 147, 285-296, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2004.07.004
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: The relative paleointensity (RPI) method assumes that the intensity of post depositional remanent magnetization (PDRM) depends exclusively on the magnetic field strength and the concentration of the magnetic carriers. Sedimentary remanence is regarded as an equilibrium state between aligning geomagnetic and randomizing interparticle forces. Just how strong these mechanical and electrostatic forces are, depends on many petrophysical factors related to mineralogy, particle size and shape of the matrix constituents. We therefore test the hypothesis that variations in sediment lithology modulate RPI records. For 90 selected Late Quaternary sediment samples from the subtropical and subantarctic South Atlantic Ocean a combined paleomagnetic and sedimentological dataset was established. Misleading alterations of the magnetic mineral fraction were detected by a routine Fe/kappa test (Funk, J., von Dobeneck, T., Reitz, A., 2004. Integrated rock magnetic and geochemical quantification of redoxomorphic iron mineral diagenesis in Late Quaternary sediments from the Equatorial Atlantic. In: Wefer, G., Mulitza, S., Ratmeyer, V. (Eds.), The South Atlantic in the Late Quaternary: reconstruction of material budgets and current systems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin/Heidelberg/New York/Tokyo, pp. 239-262). Samples with any indication of suboxic magnetite dissolution were excluded from the dataset. The parameters under study include carbonate, opal and terrigenous content, grain size distribution and clay mineral composition. Their bi- and multivariate correlations with the RPI signal were statistically investigated using standard techniques and criteria. While several of the parameters did not yield significant results, clay grain size and chlorite correlate weakly and opal, illite and kaolinite correlate moderately to the NRM/ARM signal used here as a RPI measure. The most influential single sedimentological factor is the kaolinite/illite ratio with a Pearson's coefficient of 0.51 and 99.9% significance. A three-member regression model suggests that matrix effects can make up over 50% of the observed RPI dynamics.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Central South Atlantic; GeoB6405-6; GeoB6407-1; GeoB6408-4; GeoB6422-1; GeoB6425-2; GeoB6428-1; Gravity corer (Kiel type); M46/4; MARUM; Meteor (1986); SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 18 datasets
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  • 79
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mackensen, Andreas; Schumacher, Stefanie; Radke, Jens; Schmidt, Daniela N (2000): Microhabitat preferences and stable carbon isotopes of endobenthic foraminifera: clue to quantitative reconstruction of oceanic new production? Marine Micropaleontology, 40(3), 233-258, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0377-8398(00)00040-2
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Seventeen surface sediment samples from the North Atlantic Ocean off NE-Greenland between 76° and 81°N, and nine samples from the South Atlantic Ocean close to Bouvet Island between 48° and 55°S were taken with the aid of a Multiple Corer and investigated for their live (Rose Bengal stained) benthic foraminiferal content within the upper 15 cm of sediment. Preferentially endobenthic Melonis barleeanum, Melonis zaandami, and Bulimina aculeata as well as preferentially epibenthic Lobatula lobatula were counted from 1-cm-thick sediment slices each and analyzed for stable carbon and oxygen isotopic compositions of their calcareous tests. Live and dead specimens were counted and measured separately. The carbon isotopic composition of the foraminifera was compared to that of the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) of simultaneously sampled bottom water. During a period of one month, one station off NE-Greenland was replicately sampled once every week and samples were processed as above. Live specimens of Lobatula lobatula are confined to the uppermost two centimeters of sediment. Live specimens of Melonis spp. are found down to 8 cm within the sediment but with a distinct sub-surface maximum between 2 and 5 cm. The down-core distribution of live Bulimina aculeata shows a distinct surface maximum in the top centimeter and constant but low numbers down to 11-cm subbottom depth. The average stable carbon isotopic composition (d13C versus per mil PDB) of live Lobatula lobatula off NE-Greenland is by 0.4±0.1 per mil higher than the d13CDIC of the ambient bottom water at the time of sampling. There is evidence that this species calcify before the ice-free season, when bottom water d13CDIC is supposed to be higher. This would reconfirm the one-to-one relationship between d13C of ambient water DIC and cibicids, widely used by paleoceanographers. Live Melonis barleeanum show a negative offset from bottom water DIC of -1.7±0.6 per mil in the uppermost sediment and of -2.2±0.5 per mil in 3-4-cm subbottom depth. All d13C values of live Melonis spp. decrease within the upper four centimeters, regardless of the time of sampling and site investigated. The offset of live Bulimina aculeata from bottom water d13CDIC values of 8 stations rather constantly amounts to -0.6±0.1 per mil, no matter what subbottom depth the specimens are from. At one station however, where is strong indication of elevated organic carbon flux, the negative offset averaged over all sub-bottom depths increases to -1.5±0.2 per mil. Buliminids actively move within the sediment and by this either record an average isotope signal of the pore water or the signal of one specific calcification depth. The recorded signal, however, depends on the organic carbon flux and reflects general but site-specific pore water d13CDIC values. If compared with epibenthic d13C values from the same site, not influenced by pore water and related phytodetritus layer effects, Buliminad13C values bear some potential as a paleoproductivity proxy. Specimens of Melonis spp. seem to prefer a more static way of life and calcify at different but individually fix depths within the sediment. Although live specimens thus record a stratified pore water d13C signal, there is no means yet to correct for bioturbational and early diagenetic effects in fossil faunas.
    Keywords: ANT-IX/4; ANT-VIII/3; ARK-IX/3; Atlantic Ridge; AWI_Paleo; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Indian-Antarctic Ridge; MUC; MultiCorer; Northeast Greenland; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS16; PS16/316; PS16/342; PS1771-4; PS1777-7; PS18; PS18/250; PS18/251; PS18/252; PS18/253; PS18/254; PS18/255; PS18/256; PS2092-1; PS2093-1; PS2094-1; PS2095-1; PS2096-1; PS2097-1; PS2098-1; PS2412-1; PS2412-2; PS2413-3; PS2415-2; PS2415-5; PS2419-2; PS2419-3; PS2420-2; PS2420-3; PS2422-1; PS2422-2; PS2423-1; PS2423-3; PS2424-2; PS2426-2; PS2426-4; PS2427-2; PS2427-3; PS2428-1; PS2428-2; PS2429-1; PS2429-4; PS2430-2; PS2432-2; PS2432-3; PS2433-1; PS2433-3; PS2435-1; PS2435-3; PS2437-1; PS2437-3; PS26/111; PS26/115; PS26/119; PS26/138; PS26/145; PS26/147; PS26/148; PS26/149; PS26/165; PS26/179; PS26/213; PS26/214; PS26/215; PS26/217; PS26/231; PS26/234; PS26/258; PS26 NEW
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 80
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Klages, Johann Philipp; Kuhn, Gerhard; Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter; Graham, Alastair G C; Smith, James A; Larter, Robert D; Gohl, Karsten (2013): First geomorphological record and glacial history of an inter-ice stream ridge on the West Antarctic continental shelf. Quaternary Science Reviews, 61, 47-61, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.11.007
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Inter-ice stream areas cover significant portions of Antarctica's formerly glaciated shelves, but have been largely neglected in past geological studies because of overprinting by iceberg scours. Here, we present results of the first detailed survey of an inter-ice stream ridge from the West Antarctic continental shelf. Well-preserved sub- and proglacial bedforms on the seafloor of the ridge in the eastern Amundsen Sea Embayment (ASE) provide new insights into the flow dynamics of this sector of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) during the Last Glacial cycle. Multibeam swath bathymetry and PARASOUND acoustic sub-bottom profiler data acquired across a mid-shelf bank, between the troughs of the Pine Island-Thwaites (PITPIS) and Cosgrove palaeo-ice streams (COPIS), reveal large-scale ribbed moraines, hill-hole pairs, terminal moraines, and crevasse-squeeze ridges. Together, these features form an assemblage of landforms that is entirely different from that in the adjacent ice-stream troughs, and appears to be unique in the context of previous studies of Antarctic seafloor geomorphology. From this assemblage, the history of ice flow and retreat from the inter-ice stream ridge is reconstructed. The bedforms indicate that ice flow was significantly slower on the inter-ice stream ridge than in the neighbouring troughs. While terminal moraines record at least two re-advances or stillstands of the ice sheet during deglaciation, an extensive field of crevasse-squeeze ridges indicates ice stagnation subsequent to re-advancing ice, which deposited the field of terminal moraines in the NE. The presented data suggest that the ice flow behaviour on the inter-ice stream ridge was substantially different from that in the adjacent troughs. However, newly obtained radiocarbon ages on two sediment cores recovered from the inter-ice stream ridge suggest a similar timing in the deglaciation of both areas. This information closes an important gap in the understanding of past WAIS behaviour in the eastern ASE. Our newly-documented bedforms will also serve as an important diagnostic tool in future studies for interpreting ice-sheet histories in similar inter-ice stream areas.
    Keywords: ANT-XXVI/3; AWI_Paleo; Gravity corer (Kiel type); N Burke Island (flank of drumlin); N Burke Island (moraine on drumlin); Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS75; PS75/233-1; PS75/234-1; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 21 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 81
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Vink, Annemiek; Baumann, Karl-Heinz; Boeckel, Babette; Esper, Oliver; Kinkel, Hanno; Volbers, Andrea N A; Willems, Helmut; Zonneveld, Karin A F (2003): Coccolithophorid and dinoflagellate synecology in the South and Equatorial Atlantic: Improving the palaeoecological significance of phytoplanktonic microfossils. In: Wefer, G; Mulitza, S & Ratmeyer, V (eds.), The South Atlantic in the Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Material Budgets and Current Systems, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, 101-120, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-18917-3_6
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Individual planktonic microfossil species, or assemblage groups of different species, are often used to, qualitatively and/or quantitatively, reconstruct past (sub)surface-water conditions of the world's oceans and seas. Until now, little information has been available on the surface sediment distribution patterns and paleoenvironmental reconstruction potential of coccolith, calcareous dinoflagellate cyst and organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst assemblages of the South and equatorial Atlantic, especially at the species level. This paper (i) summarizes the distributions of these three phytoplanktonic microfossil groups in numerous Atlantic surface sediments from 20°N-50°S and 30°E-65°W and determines their relationship with the physicochemical and trophic conditions of the overlying (sub)surface-waters, and (ii) determines the synecology of the three phytoplankton groups by carrying out statistical analyses (i.e. detrended and canonical correspondence analyses) on all groups simultaneously. Ecological relationships are additionally strengthened by statistically comparing the distribution patterns of the phytoplankton groups with those of planktonic foraminifera (Pflaumann et al. 1996; Niebler et al. 1998), as the ecological preferences of the latter are much better known. Many of the analyzed phytoplanktonic microfossil species or groups of species in the surface sediments do show restricted distributions which primarily reflect the environmental conditions of the upper water masses above them (e.g. sea-surface temperature, productivity, stratification). The acquired 'reference' data sets are large and diverse enough to allow future development of transfer functions for the reconstruction of past surface-water conditions, and show that there is still an enormous paleoenvironmental reconstruction potential concealed in many fossil coccolith and dinoflagellate cyst assemblages.
    Keywords: 06MT15_2; 06MT41_3; A-21; A-24; A-30; A-32; A-38; A-39; A-9; Amazon Fan; Amazon Shelf/Fan; Angola Basin; ANT-X/4; ANT-X/6; Ascencion Island; Atlantic Caribbean Margin; AWI_Paleo; B_LANDER; B-32; B-39; B-47; B-5; BC; Bottom lander; Box corer; Brazil Basin; Cape Basin; Ceara Rise; Central Brazil Basin; Central South Atlantic; Continental slope off Brazil; East Brazil Basin; Eastern Niger fan; Eastern Rio Grande Rise; Equatorial Atlantic; GeoB; GeoB1101-4; GeoB1102-3; GeoB1103-3; GeoB1104-5; GeoB1105-3; GeoB1106-5; GeoB1108-6; GeoB1111-5; GeoB1113-7; GeoB1114-3; GeoB1115-4; GeoB1116-1; GeoB1117-3; GeoB1118-2; GeoB1119-2; GeoB1203-2; GeoB1204-3; GeoB1207-2; GeoB1208-1; GeoB1211-1; GeoB1211-2; GeoB1212-2; GeoB1213-2; GeoB1216-2; GeoB1217-1; GeoB1220-2; GeoB1311-2; GeoB1403-2; GeoB1413-2; GeoB1414-2; GeoB1415-1; GeoB1417-2; GeoB1418-1; GeoB1419-1; GeoB1420-1; GeoB1421-1; GeoB1503-2; GeoB1505-4; GeoB1506-1; GeoB1508-1; GeoB1515-2; GeoB1516-1; GeoB1517-2; GeoB1520-1; GeoB1521-2; GeoB1522-1; GeoB1523-2; GeoB1703-5; GeoB1704-1; GeoB1705-2; GeoB1706-1; GeoB1707-2; GeoB1709-3; GeoB1710-2; GeoB1711-5; GeoB1712-2; GeoB1713-6; GeoB1714-1; GeoB1715-1; GeoB1716-2; GeoB1717-1; GeoB1718-1; GeoB1719-5; GeoB1720-4; GeoB1721-4; GeoB1722-3; GeoB1724-3; GeoB1724-4; GeoB1726-1; GeoB1728-3; GeoB1729-1; GeoB1901-1; GeoB1902-3; GeoB1903-1; GeoB1904-1; GeoB1905-1; GeoB1907-1; GeoB1908-1; GeoB2001-1; GeoB2007-1; GeoB2008-1; GeoB2009-1; GeoB2011-1; GeoB2018-1; GeoB2019-2; GeoB2021-4; GeoB2022-3; GeoB2109-3; GeoB2111-2; GeoB2118-1; GeoB2130-1; GeoB2207-2; GeoB2704-1; GeoB2714-5; GeoB2905-1; GeoB2906-3; GeoB2907-1; GeoB2908-8; GeoB2909-1; GeoB2910-2; GeoB3601-1; GeoB3602-2; GeoB3603-1; GeoB3604-4; GeoB3605-1; GeoB3606-2; GeoB3607-1; GeoB3608-1; GeoB3701-1; GeoB3702-1; GeoB3703-1; GeoB3705-1; GeoB3706-1; GeoB3707-1; GeoB3709-1; GeoB3710-1; GeoB3711-1; GeoB3715-1; GeoB3717-1; GeoB3718-4; GeoB3718-8; GeoB3719-2; GeoB3720-1; GeoB3720-3; GeoB3721-4; GeoB3722-1; GeoB3723-1; GeoB3723-2; GeoB3724-1; GeoB3725-1; GeoB3801-5; GeoB3802-2; GeoB3803-1; GeoB3804-2; GeoB3806-2; GeoB3807-2; GeoB3808-7; GeoB3809-1; GeoB3810-2; GeoB3812-2; GeoB3822-1; GeoB3825-1; GeoB3826-2; GeoB3827-1; GeoB3906-9; GeoB3908-11; GeoB3909-1; GeoB3910-3; GeoB3911-1; GeoB3912-2; GeoB3913-2; GeoB3914-3; GeoB3916-1; GeoB3918-1; GeoB3925-2; GeoB3935-1; GeoB3936-2; GeoB3937-1; GeoB3938-2; GeoB3939-1; GeoB4303-6; GeoB4304-1; GeoB4306-1; GeoB4307-1; GeoB4308-2; GeoB4311-1; GeoB4315-1; GeoB4319-11; GeoB4401-3; GeoB4402-3; GeoB4403-2; GeoB4404-2; GeoB4407-2; GeoB4408-3; GeoB4410-3; GeoB4411-1; GeoB4412-3; GeoB4413-1; GeoB4414-2; GeoB4415-2; GeoB4417-5; GeoB4418-2; GeoB4419-5; GeoB4420-3; GeoB4421-2; GeoB4422-1; GeoB4423-3; GeoB4424-2; GeoB4901-5; GeoB4902-4; GeoB4903-2; GeoB4904-6; GeoB4905-2; GeoB4906-5; GeoB4907-2; GeoB4908-3; GeoB4909-3; GeoB4910-4; GeoB4911-1; GeoB4912-3; GeoB4913-3; GeoB4914-4; GeoB4915-2; GeoB4916-3; GeoB4917-4; GeoB4918-3; GeoB5002-1; GeoB5004-2; GeoB5006-1; GeoB5007-1; GeoB5008-3; GeoB5110-5; GeoB5112-5; GeoB5115-2; GeoB5117-2; GeoB5121-2; GeoB5130-1; GeoB5132-2; GeoB5134-1; GeoB5136-2; GeoB5140-3; GeoB5201-8; GeoB6201-3; GeoB6201-4; GeoB6206-1; GeoB6209-2; GeoB6210-1; GeoB6212-2; GeoB6224-1; GeoB6226-2; GeoB6231-1; GeoB6301-1; GeoB6308-1; GeoB6311-2; GeoB6313-2; GeoB6317-2; GeoB6330-1; GeoB6402-6; GeoB6403-4; GeoB6406-1; GeoB6407-2; GeoB6409-2; GeoB6410-1; GeoB6411-4; GeoB6413-4; GeoB6414-1; GeoB6416-2; GeoB6417-2; GeoB6418-3; GeoB6419-1; GeoB6420-2; GeoB6421-1; GeoB6422-5; GeoB6423-1; GeoB6425-1; GeoB6426-2; GeoB6427-1; GeoB6429-1; GEOMAR; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Giant box corer; GIK17836-1; GIK17843-1; GIK17851-1; GIK17862-1; GIK17884-1; GIK17912-1; GKG; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Guayana continental slope; Guinea Basin; Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel; JOPSI-3; JOPSI-8; M12/1; M15/2; M16/1; M16/2; M20/2; M23/1; M23/2; M23/3; M29/1; M29/3; M34/1; M34/2; M34/3; M34/4; M35/1; M35003-4; M35004-3; M35005-4; M35006-7; M35008-3; M35010-3; M38/1; M38/2; M41/1; M41/2; M41/3; M41/4; M46/2; M46/3; M46/4; M9/4; Meteor (1986); MIC; Midatlantic Ridge; Mid Atlantic Ridge; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; MiniCorer; MUC; MultiCorer; Namibia Continental Margin; Namibia continental slope; NE off San Thome; Northeast Brasilian Margin; Northern Brasil Basin; Northern Cape Basin; northern Congo fan; Northwestern Vema Channel; off Angola; off Cameroon; off Gabun; off Kunene; off northern Gabun; off south Gabun; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS21 06AQANTX_4; PS22; PS22/902; PS22/973; PS2230-1; PS2367-1; PS2376-2; Sierra Leone Rise; SL; Slope off Argentina; SO84; Sonne; South African margin; South Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; Southern Cape Basin; southern Congo fan; South of Cape Verde; ST. HELENA HOTSPOT; van Veen Grab; Vema Channel; VGRAB; Victor Hensen; Walvis Ridge; West Angola Basin; Western Equatorial Atlantic
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Vertical profiles of water temperature, pressure and salinity were measured by the Drift Towing Ocean Profiler (DTOP) buoy 2019V1, a.k.a. 2019A, an autonomous platform, installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during MOSAiC (Leg 1) 2019/20. The resulting time series describes the vertical profile of the ocean below the sea ice as a function of place and time between 06 October 2019 and 09 May 2020 in sample intervals of 12 hours. In addition, the DTOP measured air temperature, relative humidity and barometric pressure and GPS position at hourly intervals. This instrument was deployed as part of the projects National Key R&D Program of China and The Marine S&T Fund of Shandong Province for Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology.
    Keywords: AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_105; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; autonomous platform; buoy; Buoy, Drift Towing Ocean Profiler; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; drifter; DTOP; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; ocean profiles; PS122/1_1-275, 2019V1; Salinity; Temperature
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: During the “Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC)” in 2019/2020 a Distributed Network (DN) of autonomous stations (buoys) was installed on the sea ice and drifted across the Arctic Ocean. This network consisted of 〉200 individual devices ranging from simple position buoys to complex and interdisciplinary multi-sensor platforms. Most (complex) measurements were performed on sea ice floes (sites or nodes) by co-located instruments. These sites were called medium (M) and large (L) sites. In addition, autonomous instruments were operated in the Central Observatory (CO), which consisted of the research ice breaker Polarstern and the adjacent ice camp. Initially, 4 L and 9 M sites were installed around the CO in a distance of up to 40 km. However, their distances and relative positions changed over time due to the drift of the ice pack over time. Over the course of the MOSAiC expedition, 3 different COs were established because of re-locations of RV Polarstern: CO1 started with the first drift of Polarstern on 04 October 2019; CO2 started with the second drift on 19 June 2020; and CO3 started with the third drift on 21 August 2020.
    Keywords: 2019O4; 2019O6; 2019T66; 2019V4; 2020M26; 2020O10; 2020P225; AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_105; AF-MOSAiC-1_109; AF-MOSAiC-1_112; AF-MOSAiC-1_117; AF-MOSAiC-1_120; AF-MOSAiC-1_124; AF-MOSAiC-1_127; AF-MOSAiC-1_128; AF-MOSAiC-1_77; AF-MOSAiC-1_86; AF-MOSAiC-1_95; Akademik Fedorov; Akademik Tryoshnikov; Arctic Ocean; AT-MOSAiC-1; AT-MOSAiC-1_1; AT-MOSAiC-1_3; AT-MOSAiC-1_4; BUOY_CTD_CHAIN; BUOY_SNOW; Buoy, Drift Towing Ocean Profiler; Buoy; CTD chain; CT; distributed network; drift track; DTOP; Ice Mass Balance buoy, flexibel; Ice-Tethered Profiler; IMBflex; ISVP; ITP; ITP94, 2019W2, PS122/1_1-168; Mosaic; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; North Greenland Sea; Ocean CTD buoy; OCTDB; Polarstern; PS122/1; PS122/1_1-124; PS122/1_1-139, 2019S94; PS122/1_1-145, 2019S81; PS122/1_1-151, 2019O4; PS122/1_1-153, 2019O6; PS122/1_1-154, 2019O7; PS122/1_1-172, 2019T69; PS122/1_1-275, 2019V1; PS122/1_1-276, 2019V2; PS122/1_1-278, 2019V4; PS122/1_1-314, 2019T67; PS122/1-track; PS122/2; PS122/2-track; PS122/3; PS122/3_28-114; PS122/3-track; PS122/4; PS122/4_43-68; PS122/4-track; PS122/5; PS122/5_58-94; PS122/5-track; SAMS Ice Mass Balance buoy; SIMBA; Snow buoy; Surface velocity profiler; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 15 datasets
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: A set of eight ice-tethered buoy systems (2019O1 to 2019O8) were deployed by the Akademik Fedorov in the Northern Laptev Sea in early October 2019 as part of the MOSAiC Distributed Network. Each buoy consisted of 5 Seabird SBE37IMP Microcat CTDs mounted along an inductive modem tether at depths of 10, 20, 50, 75 and 100m. The buoys were installed on stable sea ice floes (designated as “M-sites”) at a distance of 15-35 km around the main MOSAiC ice camp, and co-located with Snow Buoys, Ice Mass Balance Buoys and D-TOP ocean profilers. The individual instruments were programmed to record oceanographic data internally at 2-minute intervals. The surface unit of the buoy prompted the instruments for an additional measurement every 10 minutes, which was then transmitted to a base station via iridium along with GPS position and time, as well as surface temperature. After a several months long drift through the Central Arctic Ocean, 4 out of 8 buoys were recovered in August 2020, and the internally recorded data from the CTDs were secured. The attached zip archive comprises the unprocessed 10-minute data transmitted by the buoy (.txt file), as well as the 2-minute data downloaded and converted from the 5 individual CTDs after their recovery (either .cap or .cnv). A processed and quality controlled version of this dataset will be supplemented and linked to upon completion. A link to a data paper describing the processing will be given below.
    Keywords: 2019O1; 2019O3; 2019O4; 2019O6; AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_106; AF-MOSAiC-1_110; AF-MOSAiC-1_114; AF-MOSAiC-1_117; AF-MOSAiC-1_121; AF-MOSAiC-1_124; AF-MOSAiC-1_127; AF-MOSAiC-1_131; Akademik Fedorov; Akademik Tryoshnikov; Arctic Ocean; AT-MOSAiC-1; AT-MOSAiC-1_1; AT-MOSAiC-1_4; buoy; eddy; FRAM; FRontiers in Arctic marine Monitoring; mesoscale; MIDO; MOSAiC; MOSAIC_PO; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Multidisciplinary Ice-based Distributed Observatory; North Greenland Sea; Ocean CTD buoy; oceanography; OCTDB; Polarstern; PS122/1_1-148, 2019O1; PS122/1_1-149, 2019O2; PS122/1_1-150, 2019O3; PS122/1_1-151, 2019O4; PS122/1_1-152, 2019O5; PS122/1_1-153, 2019O6; PS122/1_1-154, 2019O7; PS122/1_1-155, 2019O8; PS122/4; PS122/4_43-149; PS122/4_43-165; Transpolar Drift
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Vertical profiles of water temperature, pressure and salinity were measured by the Drift Towing Ocean Profiler (DTOP) buoy 2019V2, a.k.a. 2019B, an autonomous platform, installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during MOSAiC (Leg 1) 2019/20. The resulting time series describes the vertical profile of the ocean below the sea ice as a function of place and time between 07 October 2019 and 09 August 2020 in sample intervals of 12 hours. In addition, the DTOP measured air temperature, relative humidity and barometric pressure and GPS position at hourly intervals. This instrument was deployed as part of the projects National Key R&D Program of China and The Marine S&T Fund of Shandong Province for Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology.
    Keywords: AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_109; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; autonomous platform; buoy; Buoy, Drift Towing Ocean Profiler; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; DTOP; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; ocean profiles; PS122/1_1-276, 2019V2; Salinity; Temperature
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Vertical profiles of water temperature, pressure and salinity were measured by the Drift Towing Ocean Profiler (DTOP) buoy 2019V3, a.k.a. 2019C, an autonomous platform, installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during MOSAiC (Leg 1) 2019/20. The resulting time series describes the vertical profile of the ocean below the sea ice as a function of place and time between 07 October 2019 and 03 August 2020 in sample intervals of 12 hours. In addition, the DTOP measured air temperature, relative humidity and barometric pressure and GPS position at hourly intervals. This instrument was deployed as part of the projects National Key R&D Program of China and The Marine S&T Fund of Shandong Province for Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology.
    Keywords: 2019V3; AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_113; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; autonomous platform; buoy; Buoy, Drift Towing Ocean Profiler; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; DTOP; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; ocean profile; Polarstern; PS122/1_1-277, 2019V3; PS122/4; PS122/4_43-160; Salinity; Temperature
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Vertical profiles of water temperature, pressure and salinity were measured by the Drift Towing Ocean Profiler (DTOP) buoy 2019V4, a.k.a. 2019E, an autonomous platform, installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during MOSAiC (Leg 1) 2019/20. The resulting time series describes the vertical profile of the ocean below the sea ice as a function of place and time between 09 October 2019 and 17 August 2020 in sample intervals of 12 hours. In addition, the DTOP measured air temperature, relative humidity and barometric pressure and GPS position at hourly intervals. This instrument was deployed as part of the projects National Key R&D Program of China and The Marine S&T Fund of Shandong Province for Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology.
    Keywords: 2019V4; AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_120; Akademik Fedorov; Akademik Tryoshnikov; Arctic Ocean; AT-MOSAiC-1; AT-MOSAiC-1_3; autonomous platform; buoy; Buoy, Drift Towing Ocean Profiler; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; DTOP; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; North Greenland Sea; ocean profile; PS122/1_1-278, 2019V4; Salinity; Temperature
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Vertical profiles of water temperature, pressure and salinity were measured by the Drift Towing Ocean Profiler (DTOP) buoy 2019V5, a.k.a. 2019D, an autonomous platform, installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during MOSAiC (Leg 1) 2019/20. The resulting time series describes the vertical profile of the ocean below the sea ice as a function of place and time between 11 October 2019 and 25 October 2019 in sample intervals of 12 hours. In addition, the DTOP measured air temperature, relative humidity and barometric pressure and GPS position at hourly intervals. This instrument was deployed as part of the projects National Key R&D Program of China and The Marine S&T Fund of Shandong Province for Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology.
    Keywords: AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_130; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; autonomous platform; buoy; Buoy, Drift Towing Ocean Profiler; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; DTOP; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; ocean profile; PS122/1_1-279, 2019V5; Salinity; Temperature
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Temperature and heating-induced temperature differences were measured along a chain of thermistors. SIMBA 2019T69 (a.k.a. FMI6-02) is an autonomous instrument that was installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during the 1st leg of MOSAiC in October 2019. The thermistor chain was 5 m long and included 241 sensors with a regular spacing of 2cm. The resulting time series describes the evolution of temperature and temperature differences after two heating cycles of 30 and 120 s as a function of place, depth and time between 11 October 2019 and 30 September 2020 in sample intervals of 6 hours for temperature and 24 hours for temperature differences. In addition to temperature, geographic position, barometric pressure, air temperature measured 1m over the ice level, tilt and compass were measured.
    Keywords: AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_128; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; autonomous platform; buoy; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; Ice mass balance; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; PS122/1_1-172, 2019T69; SAMS Ice Mass Balance buoy; SIMBA; Temperature; Thermistor
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Temperature and heating-induced temperature differences were measured along a chain of thermistors. SIMBA 2019T67 (a.k.a. PRIC_09_06) is an autonomous instrument that was installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during the 1st leg of MOSAiC in October 2019. The thermistor chain was 5 m long and included 241 sensors with a regular spacing of 2cm. The resulting time series describes the evolution of temperature and temperature differences after two heating cycles of 30 and 120 s as a function of place, depth and time between 05 October 2019 and 06 August 2020 in sample intervals of 6 hours for temperature and 24 hours for temperature differences. In addition to temperature, geographic position, barometric pressure, air temperature measured 1m over the ice level, tilt and compass were measured.
    Keywords: AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_77; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; autonomous platform; buoy; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; Ice mass balance; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; PS122/1_1-314, 2019T67; SAMS Ice Mass Balance buoy; SIMBA; Temperature; Thermistor
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Temperature and heating-induced temperature differences were measured along a chain of thermistors. SIMBA 2019T66 (a.k.a. PRIC_09_05) is an autonomous instrument that was installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during the 1st leg of MOSAiC in October 2019. The thermistor chain was 5 m long and included 241 sensors with a regular spacing of 2cm. The resulting time series describes the evolution of temperature and temperature differences after two heating cycles of 30 and 120 s as a function of place, depth and time between 29 October 2019 and 14 August 2020 in sample intervals of 6 hours for temperature and 24 hours for temperature differences. In addition to temperature, geographic position, barometric pressure, air temperature measured 1m over the ice level, tilt and compass were measured.
    Keywords: 2019T66; autonomous platform; buoy; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; Ice mass balance; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Polarstern; PS122/1; PS122/1_1-124; SAMS Ice Mass Balance buoy; SIMBA; Temperature; Thermistor
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Temperature and heating-induced temperature differences were measured along a chain of thermistors. SIMBA 2019T62 (a.k.a. PRIC_09_01,IRIDIUM number 300234068706290) is an autonomous instrument that was installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during the 1st leg of the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) in October 2019. The buoy was deployed at the second year coring site of the MOSAiC central observatory with initial thicknesses of snow and ice of 0.18 and 0.80 m, respectively, on 29 October 2019. The thermistor chain was 5 m long and included 241 sensors with a regular spacing of 2 cm. The depths for the sensors are 96 to -382 cm, referring to the initial interface between snow and ice. The last sensor was used to measure the air temperature at 1 m above the initial snow surface. The resulting time series describes the evolution of temperature and temperature differences after two heating cycles of 30 and 120 s as a function of place, depth and time between 29 October 2019 and 28 July 2020 in sample intervals of 6 hours for temperature and 24 hours for temperature differences. In addition to temperature, geographic position, barometric pressure, tilt and compass were measured until 1 August 2020.
    Keywords: 2019T62; 2019T62, PRIC_09_01; Arctic Ocean; Coring site; Heating rise; INTAROS; Integrated Arctic observation system; MOSAiC; MOSAiC_ICE; MOSAiC20192020; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Polarstern; PS122/1; PS122/1_1-125; PS122/4; PS122/4_43-156; SAMS Ice Mass Balance buoy; Sea ice mass balance; SIMBA; Temperature
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: One unmanned ice station (UIS) has been deployed at the L3 site (85.13ºN, 135.68ºE) of the Distributed Network (DN) of the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) campaign on 10 October 2019. The UIS is a new prototype of IMB assembled by the Polar Research Institute of China, which consists of two separate units (ice and ocean) to measure physical parameters of the air-snow-sea ice-ocean system. For the ice unit, two acoustic sensors (Campbell SR50A and Teledyne-Benthos PSA916, respectively) are used to measure the relative changes in the position of the air/snow and ice/water interfaces. Thermistors (Maxim Integrated DS28EA00) mounted at 0.03 m spacing along a 4.5-m thermistor chain were used to measure temperature profiles. Air temperature and relative humidity (Vaisala HMP155A), as well as barometric pressure (Vaisala CS106), were measured at 1.5 m height above the initial snow surface. The UIS ocean unit (CT package) consisted of five conductivity & temperature sensors (RBR duo CT), one conductivity, and temperature & depth (pressure) sensor (RBR concerto CTD). The ocean unit were used to measure upper ocean at the depths of about 5-40 m, with the initial depths of 5.4, 10.4, 15.4, 20.4, 25.4, and 40.4 m. The ice and ocean units of UIS were deployed 10 m apart. The initial ice thickness and snow depth at the buoy deployment site were 1.53 and 0.15 m, respectively. The changes in ice thickness was determined using measurements by the underwater acoustic sounder. The measuring noise of the acoustic sounder has been removed. Since the acoustic sensor at the surface was invalid very soon after the deployment, the evolution of the air/snow interface was determined using the temperature profiles. Overall, the measurement accuracy was 0.1 K for temperature, 0.03 m for the snow or ice surface, and 0.01 m for the ice bottom, respectively. After the snow cover melted over, the negative values for the snow depth indicate the onset of ice surface melt. The changes in the depths of CT sensors were estimated based on their initial depths and the depth measured by the CTD at the bottom of CT package. The measurement of the UIS ice unit lasted until 15 June 2020 when the buoy drifted to 82.28°N; while the ocean unit lasted until 28 September 2020 and finally failed at 74.09°N.
    Keywords: AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_100; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; CT package; Mosaic; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Polarstern; PS122/1_1-263; PS122/4; PS122/4_43-177; Sea ice mass balance; UnIS; Unmanned ice station; Unmanned Ice Station
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Temperature and heating-induced temperature differences were measured along a chain of thermistors. SIMBA 2019T68 (a.k.a. FMI_06_01, IRIDIUM number 300234068708330) is an autonomous instrument that was installed on drifting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean during the 1st leg of the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) in October 2019. The buoy was deployed at the M1site with initial thicknesses of snow and ice of 0.17 and 1.81 m, respectively, on 5 October 2019. The thermistor chain was 5 m long and included 241 sensors with a regular spacing of 2 cm. The depths for the sensors are 81 to -397 cm, referring to the initial interface between snow and ice. The last sensor was used to measure the air temperature at 1 m above the initial snow surface. The resulting time series describes the evolution of temperature and temperature differences after two heating cycles of 30 and 120 s as a function of depth and time between 5 October 2019 and 5 June 2020 in sample intervals of 6 hours for temperature and 24 hours for temperature differences. In addition to temperature, geographic position, barometric pressure, tilt and compass were measured.
    Keywords: 2019T68; AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_103; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; distributed network; Heating rise; INTAROS; Integrated Arctic observation system; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; MOSAiC-ICE; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Polarstern; PS122/1_1-171, 2019T68, FMI_06_01; PS122/4; PS122/4_43-163; SAMS Ice Mass Balance buoy; Sea ice mass balance; SIMBA; snow; Temperate
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Alkenone concentration and radiocarbon age in 7 gobally-distributed surface sediment samples and their associated grain-size fractions. Total organic carbon (TOC) and fractional abundance of grain-size fractions from bulk sediments (Bulk%) are taken from Ausín et al. (2021). Analytical precision of Uk'37 is 0.003 units. Uk'37-SST propagated error is ±0.51℃. These parameters were measured to explore the influence of alkenone-mineral associations and hydrodynamic mineral sorting processes on alkenone proxy signals. Bulk sediment samples were fractionated into four grain-size fractions (sand (〉300-63 µm); coarse silt (63-10 µm); fine silt (10-2 µm); and clay (〈 2 µm) prior to lipid extraction and manual column chromatography to obtain a ketone fraction containing the alkenones. The concentration and distribution of C37 alkenones was analyzed using gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (GC-FID) at the Biogeoscience Group Laboratories, ETH Zürich in 2018. The ketone fractions used for determination of alkenone concentration and unsaturation were further purified for compound specific radiocarbon analysis following Ohkouchi et al. (2005). Samples, were measured as CO2 using an Elemental-Analyzer system interface coupled to a gas ion source (GIS)-equipped Minicarbon Dating System (MICADAS) at the Laboratory of Ion Beam Physics, ETH Zürich in 2018. References Ausín, B., Bruni, E., Haghipour, N., Welte, C., Bernasconi, S. M., & Eglinton, T. I. Controls on the abundance, provenance and age of organic carbon buried in continental margin sediments. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 558, 116759, doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2021.116759, 2021. Ohkouchi, N., Xu, L., Reddy, C. M., Montluon, D., & linton, T. I. Radiocarbon dating of alkenones from marine sediments: I. Isolation Protocol Radiocarbon, 47, 401-412, doi:10.1017/S0033822200035189, 2005.
    Keywords: Alkenones; grain-size fractions; Lateral transport; radiocarbon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Solar radiation over and under sea ice was measured by radiation station 2019R9, an autonomous platform, installed on drifting First-Year-Ice (FYI) in the Arctic Ocean during MOSAiC (Leg 1) 2019/20. The resulting time series describes radiation measurements as a function of place and time between 07 October 2019 and 17 June 2020 in sample intervals of 3 hours. The radiation measurements have been performed with spectral radiometers. All data are given in full spectral resolution interpolated to 1.0 nm, and integrated over the entire wavelength range (broadband, total: 320 to 950 nm). Two sensors, solar irradiance and upward reflected solar irradiance, were mounted on a on a platform about 1 m above the sea ice surface. The third sensor was mounted 0.5 m underneath the sea ice measuring the downward transmitted irradiance. Along with the radiation measurements, this autonomous platform consisted of a 5 m long thermistor chain with sensor spacing of 0.02 m and several other sensor packages, which measured water temperature, pressure and conductivity at hourly intervals. Ecology sensors measured backscatter strength, chlorophyll a and fluorescence of dissolved organic matter at hourly intervals. Oxygen sensors measured relative oxygen air saturation, and water temperature at hourly intervals. In addition, uncompensated and compensated conductivity of water as well as relative snow height was measured at hourly intervals. All times are given in UTC.
    Keywords: AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_71; Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Ocean; autonomous platform; AWI_SeaIce; Backscatter; BRS; buoy; Buoy, radiation station; chlorophyll; Conductivity; Current sea ice maps for Arctic and Antarctic; drift; FDOM; Ice mass balance; meereisportal.de; MOSAiC; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Oxygen; PS122/1_1-313, 2019R9; Sea Ice Physics @ AWI; snow depth; solar radiation
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 17 datasets
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  • 97
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Tütken, Thomas; Eisenhauer, Anton; Wiegand, Bettina; Hansen, Bent T (2002): Glacial-interglacial cycles in Sr and Nd isotopic composition of Arctic marine sediments triggered by the Svalbard/Barents Sea ice sheet. Marine Geology, 182(3-4), 351-372, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0025-3227(01)00248-1
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of Arctic marine sediments characterize changes of sediment source regions and trace shelf-ocean particle pathways during glacial-interglacial transitions in the eastern Arctic Ocean. In the 140-ka sedimentary record of a marine core from Yermak Plateau, north of Svalbard, 87Sr/86Sr ratios and epsion-Nd values vary between 0.717 and 0.740 and 39.3 and 314.9, respectively. Sr and Nd isotopic composition both change characteristically during glacial-interglacial cycles and are correlated with the extension of the Svalbard/Barents Sea ice sheet (SBIS). The downcore variation in Sr and Nd isotopic composition indicates climatically induced changes in sediment provenance from two isotopically distinct end-members: (1) Eurasian shelf sediments as a distal source; and (2) Svalbard bedrock as a proximal source that coincide with a change in transport mechanism from sea ice to glacial ice. During glacier advance from Svalbard and intensified glacial bedrock erosion, epsion-Nd values decrease gradually to a minimum value of 314.9 due to increased input of crystalline Svalbard bedrock material. During glacial maxima, the SBIS covered the entire Barents Sea shelf and supplied increasing amounts of Eurasian shelf material to the Arctic Ocean as ice rafted detritus (IRD). Epsion-Nd values in glacial sediments reach maximum values that are comparable to the average value of modern Eurasian shelf and sea ice sediments (epsion-Nd = 310.3). This confirms ice rafting as a major sediment transport mechanism for Eurasian shelf sediments into the Arctic Ocean and trace a sediment origin from the Kara Sea/Laptev Sea shelf area. After the decay of the shelf-based SBIS, the glacial shelf sediment spikes during glacial terminations I (epsion-Nd = 310.6) and II (epsion-Nd = 310.1) epsion-Nd values rapidly decrease to values of 312.5 typical for interglacial averages. The downcore Sr isotopic composition is anticorrelated to the Nd isotopic composition, but may be also influenced by grain-size effects. In contrast, the Nd isotopic composition in clay- to silt-size fractions of one bulk sediment sample is similar to within 0.3-0.8 epsion-Nd units and seems to be a grain-size independent provenance tracer.
    Keywords: Antarctic Ocean; ARK-IV/3; GIK21533-3 PS11/412; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Polarstern; PS11; PS1533-3; SL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 98
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hulth, Stefan; Blackburn, T H; Hall, Per (1994): Arctic sediments (Svalbard): consumption and microdistribution of oxygen. Marine Chemistry, 46(3), 293-316, https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-4203(94)90084-1
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: Total sediment oxygen consumption rates (TSOC or Jtot), measured during sediment-water incubations, and sediment oxygen microdistributions were studied at 16 stations in the Arctic Ocean (Svalbard area). The oxygen consumption rates ranged between 1.85 and 11.2 mmol m**-2 d**-1, and oxygen penetrated from 5.0 to 〉59 mm into the investigated sediments. Measured TSOC exceeded the calculated diffusive oxygen fluxes (Jdiff) by 1.1-4.8 times. Diffusive fluxes across the sediment-water interface were calculated using the whole measured microprofiles, rather than the linear oxygen gradient in the top sediment layer. The lack of a significant correlation between found abundances of bioirrigating meiofauna and high Jtot/Jdiff ratios as well as minor discrepancies in measured TSOC between replicate sediment cores, suggest molecular diffusion, not bioirrigation, to be the most important transport mechanism for oxygen across the sediment-water interface and within these sediments. The high ratios of Jtot/Jdiff obtained for some stations were therefore suggested to be caused by topographic factors, i.e. underestimation of the actual sediment surface area when one-dimensional diffusive fluxes were calculated, or sampling artifacts during core recovery from great water depths. Measured TSOC correlated to water depth raised to the -0.4 to -0.5 power (TSOC = water depth**-0.4 to -0.5) for all investigated stations, but they could be divided into two groups representing different geographical areas with different sediment oxygen consumption characteristics. The differences in TSOC between the two areas were suggested to reflect hydrographic factors (such as ice coverage and import/production of reactive particulate organic material) related to the dominating water mass (Atlantic or polar) in each of the two areas. The good correlation between TSOC and water depth**-0.4 to -0.5 rules out any of the stations investigated to be topographic depressions with pronounced enhanced sediment oxygen consumption.
    Keywords: ADEPD; ARK-VIII/2; Atlantic Data Base for Exchange Processes at the Deep Sea Floor; Giant box corer; GKG; MUC; MULT; MultiCorer; Multiple investigations; Polarstern; PS19/040; PS19/045; PS19/050; PS19/070; PS19/078; PS19/082; PS19/084; PS19/086; PS19/098; PS19/100; PS19/101; PS19/105; PS19/108; PS19/112; PS19/119; PS19/134; PS19/143; PS19/146; PS19 EPOS II
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 20 datasets
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  • 99
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Fahl, Kirsten; Stein, Ruediger (2012): Modern seasonal variability and deglacial/Holocene change of central Arctic Ocean sea-ice cover: New insights from biomarker proxy records. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 351-352, 123-133, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2012.07.009
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: For the reconstruction of sea-ice variability, a biomarker approach which is based on (1) the determination of sea-ice diatom-specific highly-branched isoprenoid (IP25) and (2) the coupling of phytoplankton biomarkers and IP25 has been used. For the first time, such a data set was obtained from an array of two sediment traps deployed at the southern Lomonosov Ridge in the central Arctic Ocean at water depth of 150 m and 1550 m and recording the seasonal variability of sea ice cover in 1995/1996. These data indicate a predominantly permanent sea ice cover at the trap location between November 1995 and June 1996, an ice-edge situation with increased phytoplankton productivity and sea-ice algae input in July/August 1996, and the start of new-ice formation in late September. The record of modern sea-ice variability is then used to better interpret data from sediment core PS2458-4 recovered at the Laptev Sea continental slope close to the interception with Lomonosov Ridge and recording the post-glacial to Holocene change in sea-ice cover. Based on IP25 and phytoplankton biomarker data from Core PS2458-4, minimum sea-ice cover was reconstructed for the Bølling/Allerød warm interval between about 14.5 and 13 calendar kyr BP, followed by a rapid and distinct increase in sea-ice cover at about 12.8 calendar kyr BP. This sea-ice event was directly preceded by a dramatic freshwater event and a collapse of phytoplankton productivity, having started about 100 years earlier. These data are the first direct evidence that enhanced freshwater flux caused enhanced sea-ice formation in the Arctic at the beginning of the Younger Dryas. In combination with a contemporaneous, abrupt and very prominent freshwater/meltwater pulse in the Yermak Plateau/Fram Strait area these data may furthermore support the hypothesis that strongly enhanced freshwater (and ice) export from the Arctic into the North Atlantic could have played an important trigger role for the onset of the Younger Dryas cold reversal. During the Early Holocene, sea-ice cover steadily increased again (ice-edge situation), reaching modern sea-ice conditions (more or less permanent sea-ice cover) probably at about 7–8 calendar kyr BP.
    Keywords: Arctic Ocean; ARK-IX/4; ARK-XI/1; AWI_Paleo; KAL; Kasten corer; Laptev Sea; Mooring (long time); MOORY; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS2458-4; PS27; PS27/038; PS2756-1; PS36; PS36/051LOMO-2
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 100
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Krylova, Elena M; Sahling, Heiko; Janssen, Ronald (2010): Abyssogena: a new genus of the family Vesicomyidae (Bivalvia) from deep-water vents and seeps. Journal of Molluscan Studies, 76(2), 107-132, https://doi.org/10.1093/mollus/eyp052
    Publication Date: 2024-07-01
    Description: A new genus Abyssogena is established for A. phaseoliformis (Métivier, Okutani & Ohta, 1986) and A. kaikoi (Okutani & Métivier, 1986), which were previously assigned to the genus Calyptogena Dall, 1891, and also for two new species, A. southwardae and A. novacula. The most characteristic features of Abyssogena are an elongate shell up to about 280 mm in length; a pallial line starting from the ventral margin of the anterior adductor scar; secondary pallial attachment scars developed dorsal to the pallial line; radially arranged hinge teeth with a reduced anterior cardinal tooth in the right valve; and presence of an inner ctenidial demibranch only. Abyssogena occurs in deep water from 2,985 to 6,400 m and is distributed in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans at cold seeps along continental margins and hydrothermal vents at mid-oceanic ridges. Some species have a remarkably wide geographic distribution; A. southwardae is present throughout the Atlantic and A. phaseoliformis is present in Japan, Kuril-Kamchatka, as well as Aleutian Trenches. No fossils of Abyssogena are known.
    Keywords: 11; 48-1; 49-1; 63-1; Advance_II_11; Akademik Mstislav Keldysh; Alaska, USA; ALVIN; AMK41; AMK41-3869-1; Anyas Garden, Logatchev area; AT_3133; Barbados; BARESNAUT_Pl_94; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Giant box corer; GKG; HYDROMAR1; Japan Trench; KAIKO_85_KR98-07; KAIKO_KD-14; KAIKO_KD-18; KAIKO_KD-5; KD-14; KD-18; KD-5; KODIAK-VENT; Logachev Hydrothermal Field, diffusive field; M60/3; M60/3-66-ROV; M66/1; M66/1_395; MARUM; Meteor (1986); Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 10-15°N; MIR; MIR deep-sea manned submersible; Nadir_PL-18; NAUT; Nautile; offshore Virginia; off the Canary Archipelago, Henry Seamount; Remote operated vehicle; ROV; SO110/2; SO110/2_48-1; SO110/2_49-1; SO110/2_63-1; SO97/1; SO97/1_66; Sonne; SO-RO; Submersible Alvin; Television-Grab; Tenryu Submarine Canyon; TVG
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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