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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-03-23
    Description: Under the EC sponsored research project ODER (Oder Discharge-Environmental Response) first investigations have been carried out to estimate the chlorinated biphenyls (CB) input into Oderhaff via the Oder river. For this purpose, vertical profiles of CB content and composition were analysed on samples of three sediment cores. In two water samples, the content of suspended particulate material as weil as the particulate CB content and congener-specific composition were measured. In the Oderhaff the CB concentrations of particulate material were between 700 to 800 pg/dm3. Significant differences in the composition of the components were not observed. In sediments, CB contents were as high as 17 to 24 ngig dry weight in near surface sediment layers. They decreased with increasing sediment depth and were below detection limits at 15 to 21 cm depth. Based on the size of the 49 accumulation area and related hydrographic conditions, we estimated an input of 95 kg into the Oderhaff for the last 65 years since the onset of CB production. Applying the present prevailing conditions, we calculated an average transport of about 825 kg CB by the Oder river during this period. Comparing these two estimates, we observed that at least 15 % of the CB transported by the Oder river was deposited in the Oderhaff. The remaining 85 % (-730 kg), have been further transported into the South Pomeranian Bight and Southern Baltic Sea.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: The Labrador Current is part of the anticlockwise subpolar gyre and plays a major role in the formation of North Atlantic Deep Water. It is influenced by the West Greenland and Baffin currents supplying warmer Atlantic and cold polar waters, respectively. During the early Holocene, at the final stage of the last deglaciation, meltwater and iceberg discharge caused highly variable conditions in the Labrador Current. In order to assess its sensitivity to such freshening, this study provides a well-resolved Holocene paleoclimatic record from the Labrador Shelf. Based on benthic foraminiferal faunal and alkenone biomarker analyses, we differentiated four distinct climatic periods in the western Labrador Sea. From 8.9 to 8.6 ka BP, the Labrador Shelf was dominated by polar water outflow from Baffin Bay and covered by perennial sea ice. Between 8.6 and 7.4 ka BP, a strong subsurface inflow of warmer Atlantic water masses is ascribed to an intensification and redirection of the West Greenland Current. At 7.4 ka BP, the decreased influence of Atlantic water masses on the Labrador Shelf marks the establishment of winter convection leading to the formation of Labrador Sea Water in the central basin. Concurrently, an intensified polar water outflow through the Canadian Gateways strengthened the inner Labrador Current, and higher primary productivity suggests longer spring blooms because of a shorter sea-ice season during the Holocene Thermal Maximum. In the late Holocene after 3 ka BP, periodic fluctuations of primary productivity may tentatively be correlated with stronger and weaker northwesterly winds.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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