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  • PANGAEA  (401)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Keywords: Antarctic sea ice; AWI_Envi; File content; File format; File name; File size; highly branched isoprenoids; IPSO25; Paleoclimate; Polar Terrestrial Environmental Systems @ AWI; sea ice proxy; Uniform resource locator/link to file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 10 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Toyos, Maria H; Lamy, Frank; Lange, Carina B; Lembke-Jene, Lester; Saavedra-Pellitero, Mariem; Esper, Oliver; Arz, Helge Wolfgang (accepted): Antarctic Circumpolar Current dynamics at the Pacific entrance to the Drake Passage over the past 1.3 million years. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019PA003773
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Description: The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is the world's largest current system connecting all three major basins of the global ocean. Our knowledge of glacial‐interglacial changes in ACC dynamics in the southeast Pacific is not well constrained and presently only based on reconstructions covering the last glacial cycle. Here we use a combination of mean sortable silt grain size of the terrigenous sediment fraction (10–63 μm, ) and X‐ray fluorescence scanner‐derived Zr/Rb ratios as flow strength proxies to examine ACC variations at the Pacific entrance to the Drake Passage (DP) in the vicinity of the Subantarctic Front. Our results indicate that at the DP entrance, ACC strength varied by ~6–16% on glacial‐interglacial time scales, yielding higher current speeds during interglacial times and reduced current speeds during glacials. We provide evidence that previous observations of a reduction in DP throughflow during the last glacial period are part of a consistent pattern extending for at least the last 1.3 Ma. The orbital‐scale cyclicity follows well‐known global climate changes from prevailing ca. 41‐kyr cycles in the early part of the record (1.3 Ma to 850 ka; marine isotope stage 21) across the mid‐Pleistocene transition into the middle and late Pleistocene 100‐kyr world. A comparison to a bottom water flow record from the deep western boundary current off New Zealand (Ocean Drilling Program Site 1123) reveals anti‐phased changes between the two sites. The enhanced supply of deep water along the DP and into the Atlantic Ocean during interglacials corresponds to a weakened flow of the SW Pacific deep western boundary current.
    Keywords: Antarctic Circumpolar Current; AWI_Paleo; Drake Passage; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; sortable silt; XRF-Ca counts; XRF-Fe counts; Zr/Rb
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Maier, Edith; Chapligin, Bernhard; Abelmann, Andrea; Gersonde, Rainer; Esper, Oliver; Ren, Jian; Friedrichsen, Hans; Meyer, Hanno; Tiedemann, Ralf (2013): Combined oxygen and silicon isotope analysis of diatom silica from a deglacial subarctic Pacific record. Journal of Quaternary Science, 28(6), 571-581, https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.2649
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: We present an SiF4 separation line, coupled to a laser fluorination system, which allows for an efficient combined silica d18O and d30Si analysis (50 min per sample). The required sample weight of 1.5-2.0 mg allows for high-resolution isotope studies on biogenic opal. Besides analytical tests, the new instrumentation set-up was used to analyse two marine diatom fractions (〉63 µm, 10-20 µm) with different diatom species compositions extracted from a Bølling/Allerød-Holocene core section [MD01-2416, North-West (NW) Pacific] to evaluate the palaeoceanographic significance of the diatom isotopic signals and to address isotopic effects related to contamination and species-related isotope effects (vital and environmental effects). While d30Si offsets between the two fractions were not discernible, supporting the absence of species-related silicon isotope effects, systematic offsets occur between the d18O records. Although small, these offsets point to species-related isotope effects, as bias by contamination can be discarded. The new records strengthen the palaeoceanographic history during the last deglaciation in the NW Pacific characterized by a sequence of events with varying surface water structure and biological productivity. With such palaeoceanographic evolution it becomes unlikely that the observed systematic d18O offsets signal seasonal temperature variability. This calls for reconsideration of vital effects, generally excluded to affect d18O measurements.
    Keywords: AWI_Paleo; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Benz, Verena; Esper, Oliver; Gersonde, Rainer; Lamy, Frank; Tiedemann, Ralf (2016): Last Glacial Maximum sea surface temperature and sea-ice extent in the Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean. Quaternary Science Reviews, 146, 216-237, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.06.006
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: Sea surface temperatures and sea-ice extent are the most critical variables to evaluate the Southern Ocean paleoceanographic evolution in relation to the development of the global carbon cycle, atmospheric CO2 variability and ocean-atmosphere circulation. In contrast to the Atlantic and the Indian sectors, the Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean has been insufficiently investigated so far. To cover this gap of information we present diatom-based estimates of summer sea surface temperature (SSST) and winter sea-ice concentration (WSI) from 17 sites in the polar South Pacific to study the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) at the EPILOG time slice (19,000-23,000 cal. years BP). Applied statistical methods are the Imbrie and Kipp Method (IKM) and the Modern Analog Technique (MAT) to estimate temperature and sea-ice concentration, respectively. Our data display a distinct LGM east-west differentiation in SSST and WSI with steeper latitudinal temperature gradients and a winter sea-ice edge located consistently north of the Pacific-Antarctic Ridge in the Ross sea sector. In the eastern sector of our study area, which is governed by the Amundsen Abyssal Plain, the estimates yield weaker latitudinal SSST gradients together with a variable extended winter sea-ice field. In this sector, sea-ice extent may have reached sporadically the area of the present Subantarctic Front at its maximum LGM expansion. This pattern points to topographic forcing as major controller of the frontal system location and sea-ice extent in the western Pacific sector whereas atmospheric conditions like the Southern Annular Mode and the ENSO affected the oceanographic conditions in the eastern Pacific sector. Although it is difficult to depict the location and the physical nature of frontal systems separating the glacial Southern Ocean water masses into different zones, we found a distinct temperature gradient in latitudes straddled by the modern Southern Subtropical Front. Considering that the glacial temperatures north of this zone are similar to the modern, we suggest that this represents the Glacial Southern Subtropical Front (GSSTF), which delimits the zone of strongest glacial SSST cooling (〉4K) to its North. The southern boundary of the zone of maximum cooling is close to the glacial 4°C isotherm. This isotherm, which is in the range of SSST at the modern Antarctic Polar Front (APF), represents a circum-Antarctic feature and marks the northern edge of the glacial Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC). We also assume that a glacial front was established at the northern average winter sea ice edge, comparable with the modern Southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current Front (SACCF). During the glacial, this front would be located in the area of the modern APF. The northward deflection of colder than modern surface waters along the South American continent leads to a significant cooling of the glacial Humboldt Current surface waters (4-8K), which affects the temperature regimes as far north as into tropical latitudes. The glacial reduction of ACC temperatures may also result in the significant cooling in the Atlantic and Indian Southern Ocean, thus may enhance thermal differentiation of the Southern Ocean and Antarctic continental cooling. Comparison with temperature and sea ice simulations for the last glacial based on numerical simulations show that the majority of modern models overestimate summer and winter sea ice cover and that there exists few models that reproduce our temperature data rather well.
    Keywords: AWI_Paleo; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 29 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Abelmann, Andrea; Gersonde, Rainer; Knorr, Gregor; Zhang, Xu; Chapligin, Bernhard; Maier, Edith; Esper, Oliver; Friedrichsen, Hans; Lohmann, Gerrit; Meyer, Hanno; Tiedemann, Ralf (2015): The seasonal sea-ice zone in the glacial Southern Ocean as a carbon sink. Nature Communications, 6, 8136, https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9136
    Publication Date: 2023-03-30
    Description: Reduced surface-deep ocean exchange and enhanced nutrient consumption by phytoplankton in the Southern Ocean have been linked to lower glacial atmospheric CO2. However, identification of the biological and physical conditions involved and the related processes remains incomplete. Here we specify Southern Ocean surface-subsurface contrasts using a new tool, the combined oxygen and silicon isotope measurement of diatom and radiolarian opal, in combination with numerical simulations. Our data do not indicate a permanent glacial halocline related to melt water from icebergs. Corroborated by numerical simulations, we find that glacial surface stratification was variable and linked to seasonal sea-ice changes. During glacial spring-summer, the mixed layer was relatively shallow, while deeper mixing occurred during fall-winter, allowing for surface-ocean refueling with nutrients from the deep reservoir, which was potentially richer in nutrients than today. This generated specific carbon and opal export regimes turning the glacial seasonal sea-ice zone into a carbon sink.
    Keywords: AWI_Paleo; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 12 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Description: Organic geochemical and micropaleontological analyses of surface sediments collected in the southern Drake Passage and the Bransfield Strait, Antarctic Peninsula, enable a proxy-based reconstruction of recent sea ice conditions in this climate sensitive area. The distribution of the sea ice biomarker IPSO25 supports earlier suggestions that the source diatoms seem to be common in near-coastal environments characterized by an annually recurring sea ice cover. We here propose and evaluate the combination of IPSO25 with a more unsaturated highly branched isoprenoid alkene and phytosterols and introduce the PIPSO25 index as a potentially semi-quantitative sea ice proxy. This organic geochemical approach is complemented with diatom data. PIPSO25 sea ice estimates are used to discriminate between areas characterized by permanently ice-free conditions, seasonal sea ice cover and extended sea ice cover. These trends are consistent with satellite sea ice data and winter sea ice concentrations estimated by diatom transfer functions. Minor offsets between proxy-based and satellite-based sea ice data are attributed to the different time intervals recorded within the sediments and the instrumental records from the study area, which experienced rapid environmental changes during the past 100 years.
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Holzwarth, Ulrike; Esper, Oliver; Zonneveld, Karin A F (2007): Distribution of organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts in shelf surface sediments of the Benguela upwelling system in relationship to environmental conditions. Marine Micropaleontology, 64(1-2), 91-119, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2007.04.001
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: To obtain insight in the relationship between the spatial distribution of organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts (dinocysts) and local environmental conditions, fifty-eight surface sediment samples from the coastal shelf off SW Africa were investigated on their dinocyst content with special focus on the two main river systems and the active upwelling that characterise this region. To avoid possible overprint by species-selective preservation, samples have been selected mainly from shelf sites where high sedimentation rates and/or low bottom water oxygen concentrations prevail. Multivariate ordination analyses have been carried out to investigate the relationship between the distribution patterns of individual species to environmental parameters of the upper water column and sediment transport processes. The main oceanographical variables at the surface (temperature, salinity, nutrients chlorophyll-a) in the region show onshore-offshore gradients. This pattern is reflected in the dinocyst associations with high relative abundances of heterotrophic dinocyst species in neritic regions characterised by high chlorophyll-aand low salinity conditions in surface waters. Phototrophic dinocyst species, notably Operculodinium centrocarpum, dominate in the more oceanic area. Differences in the distribution of phototrophic dinocyst species can be related to sea surface salinity and sea surface temperature gradients and to a lesser extent to chlorophyll-a concentrations. Apart from longitudinal gradients the dinocyst distribution clearly reflects regional environmental features. Six groups of species can be distinguished, characteristic for (1) coastal regions (cysts of Polykrikos kofoidii and Selenopemphix quanta), (2) the vicinity of active upwelling (Brigantedinium spp., Echinidinium aculeatum, Echinidinium spp. and Echinidinium transparantum), (3) river mouths (Lejeunecysta oliva, cysts of Protoperidinium americanum, Selenopemphix nephroides and Votadinium calvum), (4) slope and open ocean sediments (Dalella chathamense, Impagidinium patulum and Operculodinium centrocarpum, (5) the southern Benguela region (south of 24°S) (Spiniferites ramosus) and (6) the northern Benguela region (north of 24°S) (Nematosphaeropsis labyrinthus and Pyxidinopsis reticulata). No indication of overprint of the palaeo-ecological signal by lateral transport of allochthonous species could be observed.
    Keywords: 2278; 2282; 2340; 2341; 2682; 2684; 2687; 2727; 2736; 2753; 2861; 2865; 3091; 3175; 3177; 3179; 3183; 3187; 3255; 3265; 3292; 3318; 3347; 3457; 3513; 3540; 3634; 3639; 3642; 3651; 3664; 3666; 3674; 3700; 3807; 3816; 3820; 3821; 3844; 3883; 3884; 3885; 3886; 3889; 3901; 3902; 3908; 3917; 3918; 3933; 4649; 4668; 4687; 4724; 4741; 4804; 6314; 6320; Benguela Upwelling; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; GC; Gravity corer; MARUM; TBD236; TBD236_2278; TBD236_2282; TBD239; TBD239_2340; TBD239_2341; TBD257; TBD257_2682; TBD257_2684; TBD257_2687; TBD257_2727; TBD257_2736; TBD257_2753; TBD261; TBD261_2861; TBD261_2865; TBD268; TBD268_3091; TBD268_3175; TBD268_3177; TBD268_3179; TBD268_3183; TBD268_3187; TBD268_3255; TBD268_3265; TBD268_3292; TBD268_3318; TBD273; TBD273_3347; TBD273_3457; TBD273_3513; TBD273_3540; TBD279; TBD279_3634; TBD279_3639; TBD279_3642; TBD279_3651; TBD279_3664; TBD279_3666; TBD279_3674; TBD279_3700; TBD283; TBD283_3807; TBD283_3816; TBD283_3820; TBD283_3821; TBD283_3844; TBD283_3883; TBD283_3884; TBD283_3885; TBD283_3886; TBD283_3889; TBD283_3901; TBD283_3902; TBD283_3908; TBD283_3917; TBD283_3918; TBD283_3933; TBD300; TBD300_4649; TBD300_4668; TBD300_4687; TBD300_4724; TBD300_4741; TBD300_4804; TBD398; TBD398_6314; TBD398_6320; Thomas B. Davie
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-07-06
    Description: In the last decades, changing climate conditions have had a severe impact on sea ice at the Western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP), an area rapidly transforming under global warming. To study the development of spring sea ice and environmental conditions in the pre-satellite era we investigated three short marine sediment cores for their biomarker inventory with particular focus on the sea ice proxy IPSO25 and micropaleontological proxies. The core sites are located in the Bransfield Strait, in shelf to deep basin areas characterized by a complex oceanographic frontal system, coastal influence and sensitivity to large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns. We analyzed geochemical bulk parameters, biomarkers (highly branched isoprenoids, glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers, sterols), as well as diatom abundances and diversity over the past 240 years, and compared them to observational data, sedimentary and ice core climate archives as well as results from numerical models. Based on biomarker results we identified four different environmental units characterized by (A) low sea ice cover and high ocean temperatures, (B) moderate sea ice cover with decreasing ocean temperatures, (C) high but variable sea ice cover during intervals of lower ocean temperatures and (D) extended sea ice cover coincident with a rapid ocean warming. While IPSO25 concentrations correspond quite well with satellite sea ice observations for the past 40 years, we note discrepancies between the biomarker-based sea ice estimates and the long-term model output for the past 240 years, ice core records and reconstructed atmospheric circulation patterns such as the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Southern Annular Mode (SAM). We propose that the sea ice biomarker proxies IPSO25 and PIPSO25 are not linearly related to sea ice cover and, additionally, each core site reflects specific, local environmental conditions. High IPSO25 and PIPSO25 values may not be directly interpreted as referring to high spring sea ice cover because variable sea ice conditions and enhanced nutrient supply may affect the production of both the sea-ice associated and phytoplankton-derived (open marine, pelagic) biomarker lipids. For future interpretations we recommend to carefully consider individual biomarker records to distinguish between cold, sea ice favoring and warm, sea ice diminishing environmental conditions.
    Keywords: Antarctic sea ice; AWI_Envi; AWI_Paleo; highly branched isoprenoids; IPSO25; Paleoclimate; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polar Terrestrial Environmental Systems @ AWI; sea ice proxy
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: Age, 14C AMS; Age, dated; Age, dated material; Age, dated standard deviation; Amundsen Sea; BC; BC423; Box corer; Carbon, organic, total; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Element analyser CHN, LECO CS 125; James Clark Ross; JR141_BC423; JR141 JR150; JR20060109; Lithologic unit/sequence; Lithology/composition/facies; Sample, optional label/labor no; δ13C, organic carbon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 10 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: Age, 14C AMS; Age, dated; Age, dated material; Age, dated standard deviation; Amundsen Sea; Carbon, organic, total; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Element analyser CHN, LECO CS 125; James Clark Ross; JR141_VC424; JR141 JR150; JR20060109; Lithologic unit/sequence; Lithology/composition/facies; Sample, optional label/labor no; VC; VC424; Vibro corer; δ13C, organic carbon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 40 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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