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  • OceanRep  (4)
  • Other types  (1)
  • 2020-2023  (5)
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  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  [Talk] In: YOUMARES 11, 13.-16.10.2020, Online / Hamburg, Germany .
    Publication Date: 2022-01-27
    Description: Particular heavy metals e.g. zinc serve as micronutrients for eukaryotic life and play an important role for cellular metabolism, growth of organisms, reproduction and enzymatic activity. They occur naturally in the environment as trace ingredient in soils, water, rocks, plants and animals. However, in higher concentrations, most heavy metals become toxic and have serious hazard effects on marine biota. Furthermore, they are highly persistent in the marine environment and can be hardly degraded by organisms. Especially coastal environments act as natural catchment basins for anthropogenic pollutants because these areas are highly affected by industry, agriculture and urban runoff. Therefore, it is vitally important to assess past spatial and temporal distribution patterns and to compare those with recent pollution in order to evaluate contemporary emission reduction measures. An emerging paleo-tool is the heavy metal incorporation into foraminiferal shells calcite, which offers monitoring of anthropogenic footprints on the environmental system. Heavy metal records in foraminiferal tests along a sediment core from the North Sea track pollution events of local (e.g. shipyard, ironworks and metallurgy) and global (e.g. market cycles) origin. We analysed the heavy metal concentrations in tests of Ammonia batava (Mn, Zn, Cd Cu etc.) by laser ablation ICP – MS measurements. These metals reveal the pollution history of the North Sea during the last 500 years with focus on the Early Modern Period.
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: slideshow
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  [Poster] In: International Coral Reef Symposium 2021, 19.– 23.07.2021, Online, Bremen .
    Publication Date: 2022-01-27
    Description: Heavy metal pollution originating from anthropogenic sources, e.g. mining, industry and extensive land use, increasingly influence tropical marine environments. The elevated input of heavy metals into the marine system potentially affects the biota because of their toxicity, persistence and bioaccumulation. Corals are increasingly used as an indicator for reconstructions of past dynamics of environmental factors like temperature or carbonate system parameters. Especially the massive scleractinian coral Porites provides an excellent tool for reconstructions because of their wide distribution (e.g. Great Barrier Reef, Caribbean, Australia or the tropical region of the Indo – Pacific) and because of their high growth rates allowing measurements at sub - annual resolution as well as building environmental archives covering hundreds of years. Furthermore, recent studies demonstrated that the trace metal concentration in the coral skeleton is most likely linked to local (or global) seawater chemistry including contaminations at various scales. Therefore, the metal concentration in the coral skeleton offers the opportunity of monitoring the spatial and temporal distribution patterns of heavy metals in the environment so contemporary emission reduction measures can be evaluated. Here we will present the final results of culturing studies addressing the relationship of heavy metal concentrations in the seawater and those in the coral skeleton. The partitioning factor between the ambient seawater and the aragonite of the corals is constrained by continuous water monitoring with weekly to biweekly sampling intervals and laser ablation measurements of grown skeleton. Culturing experiments with Porites lobata, Porites lichen, Montipora sp., Seriatopora sp. and Stylophora sp. are performed. The concentrations of heavy metals in the culturing medium are increased in four phases by a factor between 5 and 10 over a time period of more than a year. The results will facilitate a new way to monitor anthropogenic footprints in presumably pristine tropical environments as well as areas of high human impact.
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-12-06
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2022-12-06
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 5
    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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