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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: The Kryos Basin is a deep-sea hypersaline anoxic basin (DHAB) located in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea (34.98°N 22.04°E). It is filled with brine of re-dissolved Messinian evaporites and is nearly saturated with MgCl2-equivalents, which makes this habitat extremely challenging for life. The strong density difference between the anoxic brine and the overlying oxic Mediterranean seawater impedes mixing, giving rise to a narrow chemocline. Here, we investigate the microbial community structure and activities across the seawater–brine interface using a combined biogeochemical, next-generation sequencing, and lipid biomarker approach. Within the interface, we detected fatty acids that were distinctly 13C-enriched when compared to other fatty acids. These likely originated from sulfide-oxidizing bacteria that fix carbon via the reverse tricarboxylic acid cycle. In the lower part of the interface, we also measured elevated rates of methane oxidation, probably mediated by aerobic methanotrophs under micro-oxic conditions. Sulfate reduction rates increased across the interface and were highest within the brine, providing first evidence that sulfate reducers (likely Desulfovermiculus and Desulfobacula) thrive in the Kryos Basin at a water activity of only ~0.4 Aw. Our results demonstrate that a highly specialized microbial community in the Kryos Basin has adapted to the poly-extreme conditions of a DHAB with nearly saturated MgCl2 brine, extending the known environmental range where microbial life can persist.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-08-04
    Description: We report on a multidisciplinary study of cold seeps explored in the Central Nile deep-sea fan of the Egyptian margin. Our approach combines in situ seafloor observation, geophysics, sedimentological data, measurement of bottom-water methane anomalies, pore-water and sediment geochemistry, and 230Th/U dating of authigenic carbonates. Two areas were investigated, which correspond to different sedimentary provinces. The lower slope, at ∼ 2100 m water depth, indicates deformation of sediments by gravitational processes, exhibiting slope-parallel elongated ridges and seafloor depressions. In contrast, the middle slope, at ∼ 1650 m water depth, exhibits a series of debris-flow deposits not remobilized by post-depositional gravity processes. Significant differences exist between fluid-escape structures from the two studied areas. At the lower slope, methane anomalies were detected in bottom-waters above the depressions, whereas the adjacent ridges show a frequent coverage of fractured carbonate pavements associated with chemosynthetic vent communities. Carbonate U/Th age dates (∼ 8 kyr BP), pore-water sulphate and solid phase sediment data suggest that seepage activity at those carbonate ridges has decreased over the recent past. In contrast, large (∼ 1 km2) carbonate-paved areas were discovered in the middle slope, with U/Th isotope evidence for ongoing carbonate precipitation during the Late Holocene (since ∼ 5 kyr BP at least). Our results suggest that fluid venting is closely related to sediment deformation in the Central Nile margin. It is proposed that slope instability leads to focused fluid flow in the lower slope and exposure of ‘fossil’ carbonate ridges, whereas pervasive diffuse flow prevails at the unfailed middle slope.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: De Jonge, Cindy; Stadnitskaia, Alina; Hopmans, Ellen C; Cherkashov, Georgy A; Fedotov, Andrey; Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S (2014): In situ produced branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers in suspended particulate matter from the Yenisei River, Eastern Siberia. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 125, 476-491, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2013.10.031
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: Soil-derived branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) in marine river fan sediments have a potential use for determining changes in the mean annual temperature (MAT) and pH of the river watershed soils. Prior to their incorporation in marine sediments, the compounds are transported to the marine system by rivers. However, emerging evidence suggests that the brGDGTs in freshwater systems can be derived from both soil run-off and in situ production. The production of brGDGTs in the river system can complicate the interpretation of the brGDGT signal delivered to the marine system. Therefore, we studied the distribution of brGDGT lipids in suspended particulate matter (SPM) of the Yenisei River. Chromatographic improvements allowed quantification of the recently described hexamethylated brGDGT isomer, characterized by having two methyl groups at the 6/6' instead of the 5/5' positions, in an environmental dataset for the first time. This novel compound was the most abundant brGDGT in SPM from the Yenisei. Its fractional abundance correlated well with that of the 6-methyl isomer of the hexamethylated brGDGT that contains one cyclopentane moiety. The Yenisei River watershed is characterized by large differences in MAT (〉11 °C) as it spans a large latitudinal range (46-73°N), which would be expected to be reflected in brGDGT distributions of its soils. However, the brGDGT distributions in its SPM show little variation. Furthermore, the reconstructed pH values are high compared to the watershed soil pH. We, therefore, hypothesize that the brGDGTs in the Yenisei River SPM are predominantly produced in situ and not primarily derived from erosion of soil. This accounts for the absence of a change in the temperature signal, as the river water temperature is more stable. Using a lake calibration, the reconstructed temperature values agree with the mean summer temperatures (MST) recorded. The brGDGTs delivered to the sea by the Yenisei River during this season are thus not soil-derived, possibly complicating the use of brGDGTs in marine sediments for palaeoclimate reconstructions.
    Keywords: NIOZ_UU; NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: De Jonge, Cindy; Stadnitskaia, Alina; Hopmans, Ellen C; Cherkashov, Georgy A; Fedotov, Andrey; Streletskaya, Irina; Vasiliev, Alexander A; Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S (2015): Drastic changes in the distribution of branched tetraether lipids in suspended matter and sediments from the Yenisei River and Kara Sea (Siberia): Implications for the use of brGDGT-based proxies in coastal marine sediments. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 165, 200-225, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2015.05.044
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: The distribution of branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) in soils has been shown to correlate with pH and mean annual air temperature. Because of this dependence brGDGTs have found an application as palaeoclimate proxies in coastal marine sediments, based on the assumption that their distribution is not altered during the transport from soils to marine systems by rivers. To study the processes acting on the brGDGT distributions, we analysed the full suite of brGDGTs, including the recently described 6-Me brGDGTs, in both the suspended particulate matter (SPM) of the Siberian Yenisei River and the SPM and sediments of its outflow in the Kara Sea. The brGDGT distribution in the SPM of the Yenisei River was fairly constant and characterized by high abundances of the 6-Me brGDGTs, reflecting their production at the neutral pH of the river water. However, the brGDGT distribution showed marked shifts in the marine system. Firstly, in the Yenisei River Mouth, the fractional abundance of the 6-Me brGDGTs decreases sharply. The brGDGT signature in the Yenisei River Mouth possibly reflects brGDGTs delivered during the spring floods that may carry a different distribution. Also, coastal cliffs were shown to contain brGDGTs and to influence especially those sites without major river inputs (e.g. Khalmyer Bay). Further removed from the river mouth, in-situ production of brGDGTs in the marine system influences the distribution. However, also the fractional abundance of the tetramethylated brGDGT Ia increases, resulting in a distribution that is distinct from in-situ produced signals at similar latitudes (Svalbard). We suggest that this shift may be caused by preferential degradation of labile (riverine in-situ produced) brGDGTs and the subsequent enrichment in less labile (soil) material. The offshore distribution indeed agrees with the brGDGT distribution encountered in a lowland peat. This implies that the offshore Kara Sea sediments possibly carry a soil-dominated signal, indicating potential for palaeoclimate reconstructions at this site. Both in the river system and coastal cliffs, brGDGTs were much more abundant than crenarchaeol, an archaeal isoprenoid GDGT, resulting in high (〉0.93) Branched and Isoprenoid Tetraether (BIT) index values. Moving downstream in the marine sediments, a decrease in brGDGT concentrations, coeval with an increase in crenarchaeol, resulted in decreasing BIT index values. This decrease correlates with changes in bulk proxies for terrigenous input (d13Corg, C/N), confirming the use of the BIT index to trace the delivery of river-transported and coastal cliff-derived terrigenous organic matter.
    Keywords: NIOZ_UU; NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: De Jonge, Cindy; Talbot, Helen M; Bischoff, James L; Stadnitskaia, Alina; Cherkashov, Georgy A; Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S (2016): Bacteriohopanepolyol distribution in Yenisei River and Kara Sea suspended particulate matter and sediments traces terrigenous organic matter input. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 174, 85-101, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2015.11.008
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: Bacteriohopanepolyols (BHPs) are ubiquitous bacterial membrane lipids, encountered in soils, river and marine suspended particulate matter (SPM) and sediments. Their abundance and distribution provides a direct means to identify bacterial inputs and can be used to trace soil-derived bacterial organic matter (OM) and in some cases the presence of bacterial groups and their activities in aquatic systems. We have studied the BHP distribution in the SPM of a major Siberian River (Yenisei River) that crosses a large latitudinal gradient, draining a large part of Mongolia and Siberian Russia. The Yenisei River is the main river to flow into the Kara Sea, a shelf sea of the Arctic Ocean. We show that the BHP distribution and concentration of SPM and surface sediments of the Yenisei Outflow in the Kara Sea allow to trace soil-marker BHPs and evaluate the performance of the R'soil index, a proxy developed to trace bacterial soil-derived OM. Soil-marker BHPs are present in the Yenisei River, and their concentration decreases from the Yenisei River Outflow into the offshore marine sediments. The R'soil correlates well with an independent proxy for bacterial OM, the BIT-index (r**2 = 0.82) and has a moderate correlation with the d13Corg values, a bulk OM proxy for terrigenous input (r**2 = 0.44). Consequently, the R'soil index performs well in the Kara Sea, strengthening its application for tracing bacterial OM in the Arctic Ocean, both in modern and downcore sediments. Furthermore, a suite of BHPs that are characteristic for methanotrophic bacteria, i.e. 35-aminobacteriohopane-30,31,32,33,34-pentol (aminopentol) and 35-aminobacteriohopane-31,32,33,34-tetrol (aminotetrol), is encountered in the Yenisei Outflow sediments. These components are partly sourced from terrigenous sources, but are likely also produced in-situ in the marine sediments. The distribution of the pentafunctionalized cyclitol ether BHP in the marine systems is noteworthy, and indicates that it can possibly be applied as a marker for cyanobacterial biomass in marine sediments.
    Keywords: NIOZ_UU; NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Keywords: Belgica; BG09/14b; BG09/14b-track; CT; DATE/TIME; Gulf of Cádiz, Atlantic Ocean; HERMIONE; Hotspot Ecosystem Research and Mans Impact On European Seas; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Underway cruise track measurements; Uniform resource locator/link to raw data file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 730 data points
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: De Jonge, Cindy; Stadnitskaia, Alina; Fedotov, Andrey; Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S (2015): Impact of riverine suspended particulate matter on the branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether composition of lakes: The outflow of the Selenga River in Lake Baikal (Russia). Organic Geochemistry, 83-84, 241-252, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orggeochem.2015.04.004
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: Branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) are bacterial membrane lipids found in several environments, including soils, rivers and lakes, whose distribution varies with temperature and pH, although this dependence is apparently not the same for the different environments. Mixing of brGDGT sources may thus complicate palaeoenvironmental reconstruction. The extent to which brGDGTs in a lake outflow reflect the distribution delivered by upstream rivers was studied for Lake Baikal (Russia), one of the largest freshwater lakes worldwide. Fifteen brGDGTs in suspended particulate matter (SPM) of the Selenga River and its outflow from the lake were quantified. The river and lake SPM had rather different distributions. The riverine distribution was still apparent in the SPM of the lake surface water 5 km from the river mouth, but shifts in the distribution were already apparent in the SPM of the surface water after 1 km. Based on the brGDGT distributions of the SPM of the Selenga outflow and that of the lake, conservative mixing between the river and the lake brGDGT distributions could not fully explain the observed shifts in distributions. Both preferential degradation and in situ production of brGDGTs in the surface and, especially, bottom water of the river outflow were potentially responsible. This implies that a riverine lipid distribution delivered to a lake can be modified prior to being transported downstream. The lacustrine brGDGT distribution, that possibly could have reflected a mixture of mountainous and Selenga River SPM, was not recognized in downstream Yenisei River SPM. The watershed of Lake Baikal thus does not seem to contribute to the brGDGTs transported to the marine system. As many large rivers have major lakes in their watershed, this has implications for palaeoclimate reconstruction from river fan sediments globally.
    Keywords: NIOZ_UU; NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: De Jonge, Cindy; Stadnitskaia, Alina; Cherkashov, Georgy A; Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S (2016): Branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers and crenarchaeol record post-glacial sea level rise and shift in source of terrigenous brGDGTs in the Kara Sea (Arctic Ocean). Organic Geochemistry, 92, 42-54, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orggeochem.2015.11.009
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Description: Sediments (spanning a minimum of 13.3 ka) from the St. Anna Trough (Northern Kara Sea). The site has experienced extensive fluctuation in the delivery of river-derived organic matter (OM), caused by a eustatic change in sea level. This is in line with the record of the concentration of the isoprenoid GDGT, crenarchaeol, produced by marine Thaumarchaota, which was low at the bottom of the core, increasing gradually in the most shallow unit. The concentration of branched (br)GDGTs showed an opposite trend and a marked shift in distribution. The deepest sediments (〉10 ka), with a distribution currently encountered in surface sediments in front of the Yenisei River, are characterized by terrigenous brGDGTs, whereas the distribution in the shallowest unit (〈10 ka) is strongly influenced by marine, in-situ brGDGTs. During the shift from terrigenous to marine-sourced brGDGTs, there was one horizon where a pronounced shift in the brGDGT distribution was observed and the brGDGT concentration significantly decreased. As the brGDGTs delivered to the current Kara Sea system are derived from several sources, we postulate that a temporary change in the relative importance of the brGDGT sources happened during this interval. Both in-situ production and changing brGDGT provenance have implications for paleoclimate reconstruction using brGDGTs. In-situ production of marine brGDGTs results in a higher reconstructed pH. However, these in-situ produced brGDGTs did not influence the reconstructed mean annual air temperature (MAT), when the MATmrs calibration was used. Changes in the relative contribution of brGDGT sub-pools were shown, however, to influence both soil pH reconstruction and MAT reconstruction.
    Keywords: AMK_N9; GC; Gravity corer; Kara Sea; NIOZ_UU; NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Keywords: Baikal_B1; Baikal_B3; Baikal_B5; Baikal_Ba; Baikal_MIR; Baikal_S1; Baikal_S3; Baikal_S5; Baikal_SR; Baikal_SRM; Baikal_Y1; Baikal_Y2; Carbon, organic, particulate; DEPTH, water; Distance; Event label; Lake Baikal, Russia; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; NIOZ_UU; NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University; pH; Temperature, water; Water sample; WS; Yenisei, Siberia, Russia; δ13C, organic carbon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 55 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Keywords: Carbon, organic, particulate; DEPTH, water; Event label; Kara Sea; Khalmyer Bay, Siberia, Russia; Latitude of event; Location of event; Longitude of event; Mountain River, Siberia, Russia; MULT; Multiple investigations; NIOZ_UU; NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University; Ob outflow, Siberia, Russia; Siberia_KB1; Siberia_KB2; Siberia_KB3; Siberia_KB4; Siberia_KG1; Siberia_KG2; Siberia_KS1; Siberia_KS2; Siberia_KS3; Siberia_KS4; Siberia_MR1; Siberia_MR2; Siberia_OO1; Siberia_OO2; Siberia_SR1; Siberia_YG1; Siberia_YG2a; Siberia_YG2b; Siberia_YG3; Siberia_YG4; Siberia_YG5; Siberia_YG6; Siberia_YG7; Siberia_YG8; Siberia_YG9; Siberia_YM1; Siberia_YM2; Siberia_YM3; Siberia_YM4; Siberia_YM5; Siberia_YO1; Siberia_YO2; Siberia_YO3; Siberia_YR1; Siberia_YR2; Siberia_YR3; Siberia_YR4; Siberia_YR5; Siberia_YR6; Siberia_YR7; Siberia_YR8; Siberia_YR9; Yenisei, Siberia, Russia; Yenisei Gulf, Siberia, Russia; Yenisei Outflow, Siberia, Russia; Yenisei River Mouth, Siberia, Russia; δ13C, organic carbon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 65 data points
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