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  • Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM  (3)
  • 06MT41_3; Amazon Shelf/Fan; Angola Basin; Atlantic Caribbean Margin; Brazil Basin; Ceara Rise; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Continental slope off Brazil; Date; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Elevation of event; Event label; GeoB3603-1; GeoB3723-2; GeoB3804-2; GeoB3812-2; GeoB3827-1; GeoB3910-3; GeoB3925-2; GeoB3935-1; GeoB4306-1; GeoB4311-1; GeoB4401-3; GeoB4421-2; GeoB4908-3; GeoB5004-2; GeoB5008-3; GeoB5121-2; GeoB5130-1; GeoB5132-2; GeoB5140-3; GeoB5204-11; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; M34/1; M34/2; M34/3; M34/4; M38/1; M38/2; M41/1; M41/2; M41/3; M41/4; MARUM; Mass spectrometer Finnigan MAT 251; Meteor (1986); Midatlantic Ridge; Mid Atlantic Ridge; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; MUC; MultiCorer; Northeast Brasilian Margin; Northern Brazil Basin; Northern Cape Basin; off Gabun; Southern Cape Basin; Thoracosphaera heimii, δ13C; Thoracosphaera heimii, δ18O
  • 1 sec resolution; Atlantic Ocean; CT; DAM_Underway; DAM Underway Research Data; Maria S. Merian; MSM104; MSM104-track; Underway cruise track measurements
  • 120-748B; Biopolymer; Cyst; Diagenesis; Dinoflagellate; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Geopolymer; Infrared Spectroscopy; Joides Resolution; Leg120; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Organic Geochemistry; Pyrolysis; Sample code/label; South Indian Ridge, South Indian Ocean; Sulphurization; Transmittance; Wave number
  • 562; Bicarinellum tricarinelloides; Calcicarpinum bivalvum; Calciodinellum albatrosianum; Calciodinellum elongatum; Calciodinellum levantinum; Calciodinellum operosum; Calciperidinium asymmetricum; Counting, dinoflagellate cysts; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Follisdinellum splendidum; GeoB; Geosciences, University of Bremen; GeoTü; Lebessphaera urania; Leonella granifera; Lybia; M51/3; M51/3_562-5; Melodomuncula berlinensis; Meteor (1986); MUC; MultiCorer; Paleoceanography at Tübingen University; Praecalcigonellum schizosaeptum; Sample mass; Sample volume; Scrippsiella regalis; Scrippsiella triquetracapitata; Scrippsiella trochoidea; see reference(s); SESAME; Slide volume; Southern European Seas: Assessing and Modelling Ecosystem Changes; Thoracosphaera heimii
  • 2010-2014  (3)
Document type
Keywords
Publisher
Years
Year
  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bogus, Kara A; Zonneveld, Karin A F; Fischer, David; Kasten, Sabine; Bohrmann, Gerhard; Versteegh, Gerard J M (2012): The effect of meter-scale lateral oxygen gradients at the sediment-water interface on selected organic matter based alteration, productivity and temperature proxies. Biogeosciences, 9, 1553-1570, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-9-1553-2012
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: A valid assessment of selective aerobic degradation on organic matter (OM) and its impact on OM-based proxies is vital to produce accurate environmental reconstructions. However, most studies investigating these effects suffer from inherent environmental heterogeneities. In this study, we used surface samples collected along two meter-scale transects and one longer transect in the northeastern Arabian Sea to constrain initial OM heterogeneity, in order to evaluate selective aerobic degradation on temperature, productivity and alteration indices at the sediment-water interface. All of the studied alteration indices, the higher plant alkane index, alcohol preservation index, and diol oxidation index, demonstrated that they are sensitive indicators for changes in the oxygen regime. Several export production indices, a cholesterol-based stanol/stenol index and dinoflagellate lipid- and cyst-based ratios, showed significant (more than 20%) change only over the lateral oxygen gradients. Therefore, these compounds do not exclusively reflect surface water productivity, but are significantly altered after deposition. Two of the proxies, glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraether-based TEX86 sea surface temperature indices and indices based on phytol, phytane and pristane, did not show any trends related to oxygen. Nevertheless, unrealistic sea surface temperatures were obtained after application of the TEX86, TEX86L, and TEX86H proxies. The phytol-based ratios were likely affected by the sedimentary production of pristane. Our results demonstrate the selective impact of aerobic organic matter degradation on the lipid and palynomorph composition of surface sediments along a short lateral oxygen gradient and suggest that some of the investigated proxies may be useful tracers of changing redox conditions at the sediment-water interface.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Goudeau, Marie-Louise Sophie; Grauel, Anna-Lena; Tessarolo, Chiara; Leider, Arne; Chen, Liang; Bernasconi, Stefano M; Versteegh, Gerard J M; Zonneveld, Karin A F; Boer, Wim; Alonso-Hernandez, C M; de Lange, Gert J (2014): The Glacial-Interglacial transition and Holocene environmental changes in sediments from the Gulf of Taranto, Central Mediterranean. Marine Geology, 348, 88-102, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2013.12.003
    Publication Date: 2023-11-08
    Description: An extensive, high-resolution, sedimentological-geochemical survey was done using geo-acoustics, XRF-core scans, ICP-AES, AMS 14C-dating and grain size analyses of sediments in 11 cores from the Gulf of Taranto, the southern Adriatic Sea, and the central Ionian Sea spanning the last 16 cal. ka BP. Comparable results were obtained for cores from the Gallipoli Shelf (eastern Gulf of Taranto), and the southern Adriatic Sea suggesting that the dominant provenance of Gallipoli Shelf sediments is from the western Adriatic mud belt. The 210Pb and 14C-dated high-accumulation-rate sediments permit a detailed reconstruction of climate variability over the last 16 cal. ka BP. Although, the Glacial-Interglacial transition is generally dry and stable these conditions are interrupted by two phases of increased detrital input during the Bølling-Allerød and the late Younger Dryas. The event during the Younger Dryas period is characterized by increased sediment inputs from southern Italian sources. This suggests that run-off was higher in southern- compared to northern Italy. At approximately ~ 7 cal. ka BP, increased detrital input from the Adriatic mud belt, related to sea level rise and the onset of deep water formation in the Adriatic Sea, is observed and is coincident with the end of sapropel S1 formation in the southern Adriatic Sea. During the mid-to-late Holocene we observed millennial-scale events of increased detrital input, e.g. during the Roman Humid Period, and of decreased detrital input, e.g., Medieval Warm Period. These dry/wet spells are consistent with variability in the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). A negative state of the NAO and thus a more advanced penetration of the westerlies into the central Mediterranean, that result in wet conditions in the research area concord with events of high detrital input e.g., during the Roman Humid Period. In contrast, a positive state of the NAO, resulting in dry conditions in the Mediterranean, dominated during events of rapid climate change such as the Medieval Warm Period and the Bronze Age.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 11 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bouimetarhan, Ilham; Groeneveld, Jeroen; Dupont, Lydie M; Zonneveld, Karin A F (2013): Low- to high- productivity pattern within Heinrich stadial 1: Inferrences from dinoflagellate cyst records off Senegal. Global and Planetary Change, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2013.03.007
    Publication Date: 2024-05-27
    Description: In order to investigate a possible connection between tropical northeast (NE) Atlantic primary productivity, Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), and drought in the Sahel region during Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1), we used dinoflagellate cyst (dinocyst) assemblages, Mg/Ca based reconstructed temperatures, stable carbon isotopes (d13C) and geochemical parameters of a marine sediment core (GeoB 9508-5) from the continental slope offshore Senegal. Our results show a two-phase productivity pattern within HS1 that progressed from an interval of low marine productivity between ~ 19 and 16 kyr BP to a phase with an abrupt and large productivity increase from ~ 16 to 15 kyr BP. The second phase is characterized by distinct heavy planktonic d13C values and high concentrations of heterotrophic dinocysts in addition to a significant cooling signal based on reconstructions of past sea surface temperatures (SST). We conclude that productivity variations within HS1 can be attributed to a substantial shift of West African atmospheric processes. Taken together our results indicate a significant intensification of the North East (NE) trade winds over West Africa leading to more intense upwelling during the last millennium of HS1 between ~ 16 and 15 kyr BP, thus leaving a strong imprint on the dinocyst assemblages and sea surface conditions. Therefore, the two-phase productivity pattern indicates a complex hydrographic setting suggesting that HS1 cannot be regarded as uniform as previously thought.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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