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  • 2020-2023  (5)
  • 1995-1999  (6)
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  • 1
    Keywords: Hochschulschrift
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (116 Seiten = 8 MB) , Illustrationen, Graphen, Karten
    Edition: 2021
    Language: German
    Note: Zusammenfassung in deutscher und englischer Sprache
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  • 2
    Keywords: Fahrtbericht ; Vietnam ; Schelf ; Holozän ; Transgression ; Stratigraphie ; Echolot ; Vietnam ; Schelf ; Meeressediment ; Bohrkern ; Südchinesisches Meer ; Mount Pinatubo ; Eruption ; Tephra ; Sediment ; Populationsbiologie ; Sonne ; Meeresgeologie ; Meeresbiologie ; Expedition ; Vietnam ; Schelf ; Holozän ; Transgression ; Stratigraphie ; Echolot ; Vietnam ; Schelf ; Meeressediment ; Bohrkern ; Südchinesisches Meer ; Mount Pinatubo ; Eruption ; Tephra ; Sediment ; Populationsbiologie ; Sonne ; Meeresgeologie ; Meeresbiologie ; Expedition
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: 157 S. , graph. Darst.
    Series Statement: Berichte / Institut für Geowissenschaften, Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel 7
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-21
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2022-11-14
    Description: The Indo-Pacific Warm Pool (IPWP) exerts a dominant role in global climate by releasing huge amounts of water vapour and latent heat to the atmosphere and modulating upper ocean heat content (OHC), which has been implicated in modern climate change1. The long-term variations of IPWP OHC and their effect on monsoonal hydroclimate are, however, not fully explored. Here, by combining geochemical proxies and transient climate simulations, we show that changes of IPWP upper (0–200 m) OHC over the past 360,000 years exhibit dominant precession and weaker obliquity cycles and follow changes in meridional insolation gradients, and that only 30%–40% of the deglacial increases are related to changes in ice volume. On the precessional band, higher upper OHC correlates with oxygen isotope enrichments in IPWP surface water and concomitant depletion in East Asian precipitation as recorded in Chinese speleothems. Using an isotope-enabled air–sea coupled model, we suggest that on precessional timescales, variations in IPWP upper OHC, more than surface temperature, act to amplify the ocean–continent hydrological cycle via the convergence of moisture and latent heat. From an energetic viewpoint, the coupling of upper OHC and monsoon variations, both coordinated by insolation changes on orbital timescales, is critical for regulating the global hydroclimate.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-03-24
    Description: We collected a suite of core top samples during R/V Sonne Cruise SO257 in May 2017 along the southwestern front of the Indo‐Pacific Warm Pool (IPWP) to monitor the variability of Southern Hemisphere tropical and subtropical sea surface hydrology and to assess temperature and salinity reconstructions with data sets reflecting conditions in the post‐monsoonal season. In our core top samples, a steep increase in planktic δ18O, associated with a decrease in sea surface temperature (SST), indicates that the southwestern front of the IPWP is located between 23° and 24°S during austral fall. We additionally reconstructed SST, sea surface salinity ,and δ18O seawater (δ18Osw) over the last 450 kyr in two sediment successions located within and beyond the monsoonal rain belt. Our records show that SST was highly coherent and phase‐locked with atmospheric pCO2 during the last 450 kyr. The regional differences in the δ18Osw records reveal that the Western Australian Margin north of 15°S remained seasonally under the influence of IPWP water masses, even during glacials. The temporal variability in upper ocean hydrology along the Western Australian Margin is not directly coupled to local monsoonal precipitation, but is strongly affected by advective mixing of Indonesian Throughflow derived water masses.
    Description: Key Points: Southwest front of modern Indo‐Pacific Warm Pool (IPWP) during austral fall is located between 23° and 24°S. Western Australian Margin north of 15°S remained seasonally influenced by IPWP throughout past 450 kyr. Upper ocean hydrology off Western Australia represents an integrated signal of monsoonal precipitation and advective mixing.
    Description: China Scholarship Council
    Description: German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
    Keywords: ddc:551.46
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2022-03-23
    Description: The late Miocene was a period of declining CO2 levels and extensive environmental changes, which likely had a large impact on monsoon strength as well as on the weathering and erosion intensity in the South Asian Monsoon domain. To improve our understanding of these feedback systems, detrital clays from the southern Bay of Bengal (International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1443) were analyzed for the radiogenic isotope compositions of Sr, Nd, and Pb to reconstruct changes in sediment provenance and weathering regime related to South Asian Monsoon rainfall from 9 to 5 Ma. The 100 kyr resolution late Miocene to earliest Pliocene record suggests overall low variability in the provenance of clays deposited on the Ninetyeast Ridge. However, at 7.3 Ma, Nd and Pb isotope compositions indicate a switch to an increased relative contribution from the Irrawaddy River (by ∼10%). This shift occurred during the global benthic δ13C decline, and we suggest that global cooling and increasing aridity resulted in an eastward shift of precipitation patterns leading to a more focused erosion of the Indo‐Burman Ranges. Sr isotope compositions were decoupled from Nd and Pb isotope signatures and became more radiogenic between 6 and 5 Ma. Grassland expansion generating thick, easily weatherable soils may have led to an environment supporting intense chemical weathering, which is likely responsible for the elevated detrital clay 87Sr/86Sr ratios during this time. This change in Sr isotope signatures may also have contributed to the late Miocene increase of the global seawater Sr isotope composition.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The South Asian or Indian monsoon affects the lives of billions. Through the erosion and weathering of rocks, the monsoon also has the potential to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through increased weathering in the region including the Himalaya Mountains. The late Miocene, between 9 and 5 million years ago, was a period of global cooling and proliferation of grasslands in different regions including South Asia. Here, we examine the composition of clays formed by rock weathering during the late Miocene to determine their source region around the Bay of Bengal. The results suggest a generally stable mixture of sources with the strongest sources being regions with the highest monsoon rainfall today. We identify slight changes in the mixture of sources, which accompany a global change in carbon cycling, highlighting the role monsoon climate likely played in these changes. Toward the end of the Miocene, we identify a change in the Sr isotopes, which was not caused by source changes but by the strength of the rock weathering. This change has been observed in global records and it seems likely that it was driven by rock weathering in the South Asian Monsoon region.
    Description: Highlights: Radiogenic isotope compositions of detrital clays from the Bay of Bengal indicate a generally stable provenance from 9 to 5 Ma. A step change in Nd and Pb isotope compositions at ∼7.3 Ma reflects a climatically driven eastward shift in precipitation patterns resulting in enhanced erosion of the Indo‐Burman Ranges. Elevated 87Sr/86Sr between 6 and 5 Ma was likely related to increased chemical weathering caused by thicker soils and by C4 plant expansion.
    Description: DFG
    Description: ANR
    Description: IODP
    Keywords: ddc:551.302 ; ddc:551.701
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2022-10-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2021. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Bretschneider, L., Hathorne, E. C., Bolton, C. T., Gebregiorgis, D., Giosan, L., Gray, E., Huang, H., Holbourn, A., Kuhnt, W., & Frank, M. Enhanced late miocene chemical weathering and altered precipitation patterns in the watersheds of the Bay of Bengal recorded by detrital clay radiogenic isotopes. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 36(9), (2021): e2021PA004252, https://doi.org/10.1029/2021PA004252.
    Description: The late Miocene was a period of declining CO2 levels and extensive environmental changes, which likely had a large impact on monsoon strength as well as on the weathering and erosion intensity in the South Asian Monsoon domain. To improve our understanding of these feedback systems, detrital clays from the southern Bay of Bengal (International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1443) were analyzed for the radiogenic isotope compositions of Sr, Nd, and Pb to reconstruct changes in sediment provenance and weathering regime related to South Asian Monsoon rainfall from 9 to 5 Ma. The 100 kyr resolution late Miocene to earliest Pliocene record suggests overall low variability in the provenance of clays deposited on the Ninetyeast Ridge. However, at 7.3 Ma, Nd and Pb isotope compositions indicate a switch to an increased relative contribution from the Irrawaddy River (by ∼10%). This shift occurred during the global benthic δ13C decline, and we suggest that global cooling and increasing aridity resulted in an eastward shift of precipitation patterns leading to a more focused erosion of the Indo-Burman Ranges. Sr isotope compositions were decoupled from Nd and Pb isotope signatures and became more radiogenic between 6 and 5 Ma. Grassland expansion generating thick, easily weatherable soils may have led to an environment supporting intense chemical weathering, which is likely responsible for the elevated detrital clay 87Sr/86Sr ratios during this time. This change in Sr isotope signatures may also have contributed to the late Miocene increase of the global seawater Sr isotope composition.
    Description: This research used samples and data provided by the International Ocean Discovery Program and was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) (grants HA 5751/6-1 & -2). C. T. Bolton acknowledges funding from the French ANR project iMonsoon (ANR-16-CE01-0004-01) and IODP France. W. Kuhnt acknowledges funding from the DFG (grant Ku649/36-1).
    Keywords: Clay radiogenic isotopes ; Late Miocene ; South Asian Monsoon ; Chemical weathering
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2021. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Bretschneider, L., Hathorne, E. C., Huang, H., Luebbers, J., Kochhann, K. G. D., Holbourn, A., Kuhnt, W., Thiede, R., Gebregiorgis, D., Giosan, L., & Frank, M. Provenance and weathering of clays delivered to the Bay of Bengal during the middle Miocene: linkages to tectonics and monsoonal climate. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 36(2), (2021): e2020PA003917, https://doi.org/10.1029/2020PA003917.
    Description: Tectonics and regional monsoon strength control weathering and erosion regimes of the watersheds feeding into the Bay of Bengal, which are important contributors to global climate evolution via carbon cycle feedbacks. The detailed mechanisms controlling the input of terrigenous clay to the Bay of Bengal on tectonic to orbital timescales are, however, not yet well understood. We produced orbital‐scale resolution geochemical records for International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1443 (southern Bay of Bengal) across five key climatic intervals of the middle to late Miocene (15.8–9.5 Ma). Our new radiogenic Sr, Nd, and Pb isotope time series of clays transported to the Ninetyeast Ridge suggest that the individual contributions from different erosional sources overall remained remarkably consistent during the Miocene despite major tectonic reorganizations in the Himalayas. On orbital timescales, however, high‐resolution data from the five investigated intervals show marked fluctuations of all three isotope systems. Interestingly, the variability was much higher within the Miocene Climatic Optimum (around 16–15 Ma) and across the major global cooling (~13.9–13.8 Ma) until ~13.5 Ma, than during younger time intervals. This change is attributed to a major restriction on the supply of High Himalayan erosion products due to migration of the peak precipitation area toward the frontal domains of the Himalayas and the Indo‐Burman Ranges. The transient excursions of the radiogenic isotope signals on orbital timescales most likely reflect climatically driven shifts in monsoon strength.
    Description: This research used samples and data provided by the International Ocean Discovery Program and was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) (grants HA 5751/6‐1 and HA 5751/6‐2, KU 649/36‐1, and TH 1317‐8 and TH 1317‐9). Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Keywords: Allomorphina pacifica; Ammonia sp.; Anomalina globulosa; Astrononion novozealandicum; Astrononion stellatum; Bolivina pacifica; Bolivina robusta; Bolivina spp.; Bolivina striatula; Bolivinita quadrilatera; Brizalina alata; Bulimina aculeata; Bulimina alazanensis; Bulimina exilis; Bulimina marginata; Bulimina mexicana; Cancris auriculus; Cassidulina crassa; Cassidulina laevigata; Cassidulina spp.; Ceratobulimina pacifica; Chilostomella ovoidea; Cibicides lobatulus; Cibicidoides pseudoungerianus; Cibicidoides robertsonianus; Cibicidoides sp.; Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi; Cornuspira planorbis; Counting 〉300 µm fraction; Dentalina spp.; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Eggerella bradyi; Ehrenbergina undulata; Elphidium spp.; Epistominella exigua; Epistominella rugosa; Fissurina spp.; Florilus scaphus; Foraminifera, benthic; Foraminifera, benthic indeterminata; Frondicularia inaequalis; Gavelinopsis translucens; GIK17940-2; Glandulina symmetrica; Globobulimina affinis; Globobulimina spinensis; Globocassidulina elegans; Globocassidulina spp.; Globocassidulina subglobosa; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Guttulina spp.; Gyroidina broeckhiana; Gyroidina nitida; Gyroidina orbicularis; Gyroidina spp.; Gyroidinoides lamarckiana; Hanzawaia concentrica; Hoeglundina elegans; Islandiella sp.; Karreriella bradyi; Lagena spp.; Laticarinina pauperata; Lenticulina spp.; Martinottiella communis; Melonis barleeanus; Miliolidae; Miliolinella spp.; MONITOR MONSUN; Neolenticulina peregrina; Nodosaria spp.; Nonionella bradyi; Oolina spp.; Oridorsalis umbonatus; Osangularia culter; Patellinella jugosa; Pleurostomella alternans; Pseudoeponides nipponica; Pseudononion granuloumbilicatum; Pullenia bulloides; Pullenia quinqueloba; Pyrgoella sphaerica; Pyrgo murrhina; Pyrgo spp.; Quinqueloculina seminulum; Quinqueloculina spp.; Quinqueloculina venusta; Reussella spinulosa; Robertinoides bradyi; Rosalina conciana; Rosalina spp.; Rutherfordoides sp.; Rutherfordoides tenuis; Saracenaria angularis; Sigmoilopsis schlumbergeri; Siphonina bradyana; Siphotextularia flintii; Siphotextularia spp.; SL; SO95; Sonne; South China Sea; Sphaeroidina bulloides; Spiroloculina spp.; Textularia spp.; Trifarina bradyi; Triloculina tricarinata; Uvigerina auberiana; Uvigerina peregrina; Uvigerina spp.; Valvulineria glabra
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 9282 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Keywords: Anomalina globulosa; Astrononion novozealandicum; Bolivina pacifica; Bolivina robusta; Bolivina spp.; Bolivina striatula; Bulimina aculeata; Bulimina alazanensis; Bulimina exilis; Bulimina mexicana; Buliminella sp.; Cassidulina crassa; Cassidulina laevigata; Ceratobulimina pacifica; Chilostomella ovoidea; Cibicidoides kullenbergi; Cibicidoides pseudoungerianus; Cibicidoides robertsonianus; Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi; Cornuspira planorbis; Counting 〉300 µm fraction; Dentalina spp.; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Eggerella bradyi; Ehrenbergina undulata; Elphidium spp.; Epistominella exigua; Epistominella rugosa; Event label; Fissurina spp.; Foraminifera, benthic; Foraminifera, benthic agglutinated; Foraminifera, benthic indeterminata; Frondicularia inaequalis; Gavelinopsis translucens; GIK17964-2; GIK17964-3; Globobulimina affinis; Globobulimina spinensis; Globocassidulina elegans; Globocassidulina subglobosa; Gravity corer (Kiel type); Guttulina spp.; Gyroidina broeckhiana; Gyroidina nitida; Gyroidina orbicularis; Gyroidinoides lamarckiana; Gyroidinoides sp.; Hoeglundina elegans; Islandiella seranensis; Karreriella bradyi; KOL; Lagena spp.; Laticarinina pauperata; Lenticulina spp.; Martinottiella communis; Melonis barleeanus; Miliolidae; Miliolinella spp.; MONITOR MONSUN; Nodosaria spp.; Oolina spp.; Oridorsalis umbonatus; Osangularia culter; Pararotalia nipponica; Piston corer (Kiel type); Pleurostomella alternans; Pseudoeponides nipponica; Pseudononion granuloumbilicatum; Pullenia bulloides; Pullenia quinqueloba; Pyrgoella sphaerica; Pyrgo murrhina; Pyrgo spp.; Quinqueloculina seminulum; Quinqueloculina spp.; Quinqueloculina venusta; Reussella spinulosa; Robertinoides bradyi; Rosalina conciana; Rutherfordoides sp.; Rutherfordoides tenuis; Saracenaria angularis; Sigmoilopsis asperula; Sigmoilopsis manicara; Sigmoilopsis schlumbergeri; Siphotextularia flintii; Siphotextularia rolshauseni; SL; SO95; Sonne; South China Sea; Sphaeroidina bulloides; Spiroloculina spp.; Spiroloculina tenuissima; Textularia agglutinans; Textularia spp.; Trifarina bradyi; Triloculina tricarinata; Uvigerina auberiana; Uvigerina peregrina; Uvigerina spp.; Valvulineria glabra
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 7098 data points
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