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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bielefeld :transcript Verlag,
    Keywords: Climatic changes -- Political aspects. ; Global warming -- Political aspects. ; Environmentalism. ; Climate change mitigation -- Political aspects. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (389 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783839426104
    Series Statement: Image Series ; v.55
    DDC: 320.6
    Language: English
    Note: Cover Image Politics of Climate Change -- Table of Contents -- Image Politics of Climate Change: lntroduction -- CHAPTER 1 THE EPISTEMIC VALUE OF VISUALIZATION IN CLIMATE SeiENCES -- The Creation of Global lmaginaries: The Antarctic Ozone Hole and the lsoline Tradition in the Atmospheric Seiences -- Images for Data Analysis: The Role of Visualization in Climate Research Processes -- CHAPTER 2 COMMUNICATING RESUL TS: THE STATUS OF CLIMATE EXPERT GRAPHS IN IPCC REPORTS -- Tricks," Hockey Sticks, and the Myth of Natural lnscription: How the Visual Rhetoric of Climategate Conflated Climate with Character -- The Color of Risk: Expert Judgment and Diagrammatic Reasoning in the IPCC's 'Burning Embers' -- CHAPTER 3 IMAGES OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE PRESS AND ON THE WEB -- Between Risk, Beauty and the Sublime: The Visualization of Climate Change in Media Coverage during COP 15 in Copenhagen 2009 -- Twist and Shout: Images and Graphs in Skeptical Climate Media -- Towards an lnteractive Visual Understanding of Climate Change Findings on the Net: Promises and Challenges -- Color Plates -- CHAPTER 4 FROM VISION TO ACTION? MAKING THEINVISIBLE IMAGINABLE THROUGH ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY -- Picturing the Clima(c)tic: Greenpeace and the Representational Politics of Climate Change Communication -- The Uncanny Polar Bear: Activists Visually Attack an Overly Emotionalized Image Clone -- How Photography Matters: On Producing Meaning in Photobooks on Climate Change -- The Pensive Photograph as Agent: What Can Non-lilustrative Images Do to Galvanize Public Support for Climate Change Action? -- CHAPTER 5 IMAGES OF CLIMATE CONTROL -- Picturing the State of the Nation's Environment: Early Aerial Photography in the United States from the 1930s to the late 1960s -- Picturing Climate Control: Visualizing the Unimaginable. , Images of Feasibility: On the Viscourse of Climate Engineering -- Authors.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-09-13
    Description: The soilscapes along the southern and western coast of Crete (Greece) are dominated by coarse-grained reddish-brown slope sediments whose natural (pre-anthropogenic) configuration and properties are difficult to reconstruct due to the long history of intense land use. As a consequence, datable terrestrial sediment archives of pre-anthropogenic genesis are scarce. We present preliminary results of a study performed on an accumulation within an alluvial fan south of Stomio Bay in southwestern Crete. The studied profile is located in a small depression and is composed of a sequence of sandy to silty yellowish-brown calcareous sediments overlying coarse-grained slope sediments, including a fossil topsoil horizon. Based on macroscopic, micromorphological, geochemical, geophysical and mineralogical analysis, we interpret the fine-grained sediments to have a local aeolian origin. OSL dating indicates a final deposition phase during the early Holocene. Considering the scarcity of early Holocene terrestrial archives in Crete, the analysed profile provides valuable data for the reconstruction of landscape dynamics and paleoecological conditions as well as soil-sediment configurations during this time period. Additional research is needed to address the specific source area(s) as well as the ages of the deposition of slope sediments and formation of the fossil topsoil.
    Description: Freie Universität Berlin (1008)
    Keywords: ddc:551.3 ; Aeolian sediments ; Fossil soil ; Early Holocene ; Crete ; Eastern Mediterranean
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-01-31
    Description: Ice- and organic-rich deposits of late Pleistocene age, known as Yedoma Ice Complex (IC), are widespread across large permafrost regions in Northeast Siberia. To reconstruct Yedoma IC formation in Central Yakutia, we analyzed the geochemistry, sedimentology, and stratigraphy of thawed and frozen deposits below two thermokarst lakes in different evolutionary stages (a mature alas lake and a initial Yedoma lake) from the Yukechi site in the Lena-Aldan interfluve. We focused on inorganic geochemical characteristics and mineral weathering in two ∼17 m long sediment cores to trace syngenetic permafrost aggradation and degradation over time. Geochemical properties, element ratios, and specific weathering indices reflect varying sedimentation processes and seasonal thaw depths under variable environmental conditions. Deeper thaw during the interstadial Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 enabled increasing mineral weathering and initial thermokarst processes. Sedimentological proxies reflect high transport energy and short transport paths and mainly terrestrial sediment supply. The Yedoma formation resulted from fluvial, alluvial and aeolian processes. Low mean TOC contents in both cores contrast with Yedoma deposits elsewhere. Likely, this is a result of the very low organic matter content of the source material of the Yukechi Yedoma. Pronounced cryostructures and strongly depleted pore water stable isotopes show a perennially frozen state and preserved organic matter for the lower part of the Yedoma lake core, while changing permafrost conditions, conditions promoting weathering, and strong organic matter decomposition are suggested by our proxies for its middle and upper parts. For the alas lake core, less depleted water stable isotopes reflect the influence of recent precipitation, i.e. the infiltration of rain and lake water into the unfrozen ground. The FENG, MIA(R), and ICV weathering indices have proven to be promising proxies for the identification of conditions that promote mineral weathering to different degrees in the stratigraphy of the thawed and frozen Yedoma deposits, for which we assume a rather homogeneous chemical composition of the parent material. Our study highlights that the understanding of environmental conditions during Yedoma formation and degradation processes by specific geochemical proxies is crucial for assessing the potential decomposition and preservation of the frozen and unfrozen Yedoma inventories.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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