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  • Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM  (21)
  • Aridity index; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Evapotranspiration, potential; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; MARUM; Precipitation, annual mean; Temperature, annual mean  (2)
  • Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research; MARUM; ZMT  (2)
  • Hochschulschrift  (2)
  • Radiocarbon  (2)
  • (9Z)-2,6,10,14-Tetramethyl-7-(3-methylpent-4-enyliden)pentadeca-9-ene, per unit mass total organic carbon; 2,6,10,14-Tetramethyl-7-(3-methylpent-4-enyl)pentadecane, per unit mass total organic carbon; 4alpha,23,24-Trimethyl-5alpha-cholest-22E-en-3beta-ol, per unit mass total organic carbon; Accumulation rate, (9Z)-2,6,10,14-Tetramethyl-7-(3-methylpent-4-enyliden)pentadeca-9-ene; Accumulation rate, 2,6,10,14-Tetramethyl-7-(3-methylpent-4-enyl)pentadecane; Accumulation rate, 4alpha,23,24-Trimethyl-5alpha-cholest-22E-en-3beta-ol; AGE; Alkenone; ArcTrain; Calculated; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Gas chromatography - Mass spectrometry (GC-MS); GC; Gravity corer; IP25; Labrador Sea; Maria S. Merian; Meltwater pulse; MSM12/2; MSM12/2_647-1; MSM12/2-05-01; Phytoplankton biomarker Brassicasterol IP25 index; Phytoplankton biomarker C25 HBI (Z) triene IP25 index; Phytoplankton biomarker Dinosterol IP25 index; Processes and impacts of climate change in the North Atlantic Ocean and the Canadian Arctic; Sea ice; SST; sterols; XRF  (1)
  • 053-1; 054-2; 055-1; 056-3; 057-2; 063-2; 064-2; 065-2; 067-2; 075-2; 076-1; 078-3; 086-1; 088-2; Aluminium/Silicon ratio; AMADEUS; Amazon Basin; Amazon Shelf/Fan; Amazon Submarine Delta; BC; BC14; BC17; BC24; BC3; BC44C; BC50; BC55; BC61; BC71; Bc75; BC80; Bc82; BC90; Box corer; Carbon, organic, total; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Cinnamyl phenols/vanillyl phenols ratio; Continental Slope Northeast Brazil; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Element analyser CS, LECO CS-200; Event label; French Guiana; GeoB16202-1; GeoB16203-2; GeoB16204-1; GeoB16205-3; GeoB16206-2; GeoB16209-2; GeoB16210-2; GeoB16211-2; GeoB16212-2; GeoB16216-2; GeoB16217-1; GeoB16218-3; GeoB16223-1; GeoB16225-2; Grain size, mean; Knorr; KNR197-4; KNR197-4-12MC; KNR197-4-14BC; KNR197-4-17BC; KNR197-4-24BC; KNR197-4-33MC; KNR197-4-3BC; KNR197-4-44cBC; KNR197-4-50BC; KNR197-4-55BC; KNR197-4-61BC; KNR197-4-6AMC; KNR197-4-71BC; KNR197-4-75BC; KNR197-4-80BC; KNR197-4-82BC; KNR197-4-90BC; Latitude of event; Lignin, per unit mass organic carbon; Lignin per unit sediment mass; Location; Longitude of event; Maria S. Merian; MARUM; MC12; MC33; MC6A; MSM20/3; MUC; MultiCorer; Sample code/label; Syringic acid/syringaldehyde ratio; Syringyl phenols/vanillyl phenols ratio; Vanillic acid/vanillin ratio; δ13C, organic carbon  (1)
Document type
Keywords
Language
  • 1
    Keywords: climate change ; Dissertation ; Pleistocene ; environmental change ; Atlantic Ocean ; Africa ; Hochschulschrift ; Paläoklimatologie ; Mittelpleistozän ; Tropenklima ; Atlantischer Ozean Süd ; Zentralafrika
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: 187 S , graph. Darst., Kt
    ISBN: 9057440814
    Series Statement: Geologica Ultraiectina 223
    Language: English
    Note: Zsfassung in niederländ. und dt. Sprache , Zugl.: Utrecht, Univ., Diss., 2003
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  • 2
    Keywords: Hochschulschrift
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (108 Seiten = 5 MB) , Graphen, Karte
    Edition: Online-Ausgabe 2023
    Language: English
    Note: Zusammenfassung in deutscher und englischer Sprache
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2017. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here under a nonexclusive, irrevocable, paid-up, worldwide license granted to WHOI. It is made available for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Chemical Geology 466 (2017): 454-465, doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2017.06.034.
    Description: We present dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations, particulate organic matter (POM) composition (δ13C, δ15N, ∆14C, N/C), and particulate glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT) distributions from a 34-month time-series near the mouth of the Congo River. An end-member mixing model using δ13C and N/C indicates that exported POM is consistently dominated by C3 rainforest soil sources, with increasing contribution from C3 vegetation and decreasing contribution from phytoplankton at high discharge. Large C4 inputs are never observed despite covering ≈ 13 % of the catchment. Low and variable ∆14C values during 2011 [annual mean = (-148 ± 82) ‰], when discharge from left-bank tributaries located in the southern hemisphere reached record lows, likely reflect a bias toward pre-aged POM derived from the Cuvette Congolaise swamp forest. In contrast, ∆14C values were stable near -50 ‰ between January and June 2013, when left-bank discharge was highest. We suggest that headwater POM is replaced and/or diluted by C3 vegetation and pre-aged soils during transit through the Cuvette Congolaise, whereas left-bank tributaries export significantly less pre-aged material. GDGT distributions provide further evidence for seasonal and inter-annual variability in soil provenance. The cyclization of branched tetraethers and the GDGT-0 to crenarchaeol ratio are positively correlated with discharge (r ≥ 0.70; p-value ≤ 4.3×10-5) due to the incorporation of swamp-forest soils when discharge from right-bank tributaries located in the northern hemisphere is high. Both metrics reach record lows during 2013, supporting our interpretation of increased left-bank contribution at this time. We conclude that hydrologic variability is a major control of POM provenance in the Congo River Basin and that tropical wetlands can be a significant POM source despite their small geographic coverage.
    Description: J.D.H. was supported by the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program under grant number 2012126152; E.S. was supported by the DFG Research Center/Cluster of Excellence “The Ocean in the Earth System” at MARUM – Center for Environmental Sciences; V.V.G. was partly supported by the US National Science Foundation, grants OCE-0851015 and OCE-0928582; R.G.M.S. was partly supported by the US National Science Foundation, grants OCE-0851101, OCE-1333157, and OCE-1464396; and T.I.E. was partly supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF Grant No. 200021_140850).
    Keywords: Biomarkers ; Congo River ; GDGTs ; Particulate Organic Matter ; Radiocarbon
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Preprint
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2022-10-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2021. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Eglinton, T. I., Galy, V. V., Hemingway, J. D., Feng, X., Bao, H., Blattmann, T. M., Dickens, A. F., Gies, H., Giosan, L., Haghipour, N., Hou, P., Lupker, M., McIntyre, C. P., Montluçon, D. B., Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B., Ponton, C., Schefuß, E., Schwab, M. S., Voss, B. M., Wacker, L., Wu, Y., & Zhao, M. Climate control on terrestrial biospheric carbon turnover. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(8), (2021): e2011585118, htps://doi.org/ 10.1073/pnas.2011585118.
    Description: Terrestrial vegetation and soils hold three times more carbon than the atmosphere. Much debate concerns how anthropogenic activity will perturb these surface reservoirs, potentially exacerbating ongoing changes to the climate system. Uncertainties specifically persist in extrapolating point-source observations to ecosystem-scale budgets and fluxes, which require consideration of vertical and lateral processes on multiple temporal and spatial scales. To explore controls on organic carbon (OC) turnover at the river basin scale, we present radiocarbon (14C) ages on two groups of molecular tracers of plant-derived carbon—leaf-wax lipids and lignin phenols—from a globally distributed suite of rivers. We find significant negative relationships between the 14C age of these biomarkers and mean annual temperature and precipitation. Moreover, riverine biospheric-carbon ages scale proportionally with basin-wide soil carbon turnover times and soil 14C ages, implicating OC cycling within soils as a primary control on exported biomarker ages and revealing a broad distribution of soil OC reactivities. The ubiquitous occurrence of a long-lived soil OC pool suggests soil OC is globally vulnerable to perturbations by future temperature and precipitation increase. Scaling of riverine biospheric-carbon ages with soil OC turnover shows the former can constrain the sensitivity of carbon dynamics to environmental controls on broad spatial scales. Extracting this information from fluvially dominated sedimentary sequences may inform past variations in soil OC turnover in response to anthropogenic and/or climate perturbations. In turn, monitoring riverine OC composition may help detect future climate-change–induced perturbations of soil OC turnover and stocks.
    Description: This work was supported by grants from the US NSF (OCE-0928582 to T.I.E. and V.V.G.; OCE-0851015 to B.P.-E., T.I.E., and V.V.G.; and EAR-1226818 to B.P.-E.), Swiss National Science Foundation (200021_140850, 200020_163162, and 200020_184865 to T.I.E.), and National Natural Science Foundation of China (41520104009 to M.Z.).
    Keywords: Radiocarbon ; Plant biomarkers ; Carbon turnover times ; Fluvial carbon ; Carbon cycle
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Keywords: Aridity index; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Evapotranspiration, potential; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; MARUM; Precipitation, annual mean; Temperature, annual mean
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 304 data points
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  • 6
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    In:  Supplement to: Collins, James A; Schefuß, Enno; Mulitza, Stefan; Prange, Matthias; Werner, Martin; Tharammal, Thejna; Paul, André; Wefer, Gerold (2013): Estimating the hydrogen isotopic composition of past precipitation using leaf-waxes from western Africa. Quaternary Science Reviews, 65, 88-101, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.01.007
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The hydrogen isotopic composition of plant leaf-wax n-alkanes (dDwax) is a novel proxy for estimating dD of past precipitation (dDp). However, vegetation life-form and relative humidity exert secondary effects on dDwax, preventing quantitative estimates of past dDp. Here, we present an approach for removing the effect of vegetation-type and relative humidity from dDwax and thus for directly estimating past dDp. We test this approach on modern day (late Holocene; 0-3 ka) sediments from a transect of 9 marine cores spanning 21°N-23°S off the western coast of Africa. We estimate vegetation type (C3 tree versus C4 grass) using d13C of leaf-wax n-alkanes and correct dDwax for vegetation-type with previously-derived apparent fractionation factors for each vegetation type. Late Holocene vegetation-corrected dDwax (dDvc) displays a good fit with modern-day dDp, suggesting that the effects of vegetation type and relative humidity have both been removed and thus that dDvc is a good estimate of dDp. We find that the magnitude of the effect of C3 tree - C4 grass changes on dDwax is small compared to dDp changes. We go on to estimate dDvc for the mid-Holocene (6-8 ka), the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 19-23 ka) and Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1; 16-18.5 ka). In terms of past hydrological changes, our leaf-wax based estimates of dDp mostly reflect changes in wet season intensity, which is complementary to estimates of wet season length based on leaf-wax d13C.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Leider, Arne; Hinrichs, Kai-Uwe; Schefuß, Enno; Versteegh, Gerard J M (2013): Distribution and stable isotopes of plant wax derived n-alkanes in lacustrine, fluvial and marine surface sediments along an Eastern Italian transect and their potential to reconstruct the hydrological cycle. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 117, 16-32, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2013.04.018
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Reconstructing terrestrial water budgets is of prime importance for understanding past climate and environment. To shed more light on how plant-wax derived n-alkanes may be used for this purpose we investigated the distribution and stable isotopic compositions of hydrogen (dD) and carbon (d13C) of plant-wax derived n-C29 and -C31 alkanes in terrestrial, coastal and offshore surface sediments in relation to hydrology along a NW-SE transect east of the Italian Apennines from the Po River to the Eastern Gulf of Taranto. The plant wax average chain length increases southward and may relate to increasing temperature and/or aridity. The plant wax dD of the terrestrial and coastal samples also increases southward and mainly reflects changes in the dD of precipitation. The d13C of plant waxes is primarily interpreted in terms of C3 vegetation changes rather than varying contributions by C4 plants. The plant wax d13C-dD composition of the Po River and Apennine rivers differs considerably from that in southern Italy, and suggests a mainly southern source for plant waxes in marine sediments of the Gulf of Taranto. This calibration provides a basis for the reconstruction of past changes in the Italian water balance and n-alkane source areas.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Dupont, Lydie M; Rommerskirchen, Florian; Mollenhauer, Gesine; Schefuß, Enno (2013): Miocene to Pliocene changes in South African hydrology and vegetation in relation to the expansion of C4 plants. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 375, 408-417, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2013.06.005
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Pollen and stable carbon (d13C) and hydrogen (dD) isotope ratios of terrestrial plant wax from the South Atlantic sediment core, ODP Site 1085, is used to reconstruct Miocene to Pliocene changes of vegetation and rainfall regime of western southern Africa. Our results reveal changes in the relative amount of precipitation and indicate a shift of the main moisture source from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean during the onset of a major aridification 8 Ma ago. We emphasise the importance of declining precipitation during the expansion of C4 and CAM (mainly succulent) vegetation in South Africa. We suggest that the C4 plant expansion resulted from an increased equator-pole temperature gradient caused by the initiation of strong Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation following the shoaling of the Central American Seaway during the Late Miocene.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 9
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    In:  Supplement to: Collins, James A; Schefuß, Enno; Govin, Aline; Mulitza, Stefan; Tiedemann, Ralf (2014): Insolation and glacial–interglacial control on southwestern African hydroclimate over the past 140 000 years. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 398, 1-10, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2014.04.034
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The past climate evolution of southwestern Africa is poorly understood and interpretations of past hydrological changes are sometimes contradictory. Here we present a record of leaf-wax dD and View the MathML source taken from a marine sediment core at 23°S off the coast of Namibia to reconstruct the hydrology and C3 versus C4 vegetation of southwestern Africa over the last 140 000 years (140 ka). We find lower leaf-wax dD and higher View the MathML source (more C4 grasses), which we interpret to indicate wetter Southern Hemisphere (SH) summer conditions and increased seasonality, during SH insolation maxima relative to minima and during the last glacial period relative to the Holocene and the last interglacial period. Nonetheless, the dominance of C4 grasses throughout the record indicates that the wet season remained brief and that this region has remained semi-arid. Our data suggest that past precipitation increases were derived from the tropics rather than from the winter westerlies. Comparison with a record from the Congo Basin indicates that hydroclimate in southwestern Africa has evolved in antiphase with that of central Africa over the last 140 ka.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Contreras-Rosales, Lorena Astrid; Jennerjahn, Tim C; Tharammal, Thejna; Meyer, Vera D; Lückge, Andreas; Paul, André; Schefuß, Enno (2014): Evolution of the Indian Summer Monsoon and terrestrial vegetation in the Bengal region during the past 18 ka. Quaternary Science Reviews, 102, 133-148, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.08.010
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) is a major global climatic phenomenon. Long-term precipitation proxy records of the ISM, however, are often fragmented and discontinuous, impeding an estimation of the magnitude of precipitation variability from the Last Glacial to the present. To improve our understanding of past ISM variability, we provide a continuous reconstructed record of precipitation and continental vegetation changes from the lower Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna catchment and the Indo-Burman ranges over the last 18,000 years (18 ka). The records derive from a marine sediment core from the northern Bay of Bengal (NBoB), and are complemented by numerical model results of spatial moisture transport and precipitation distribution over the Bengal region. The isotopic composition of terrestrial plant waxes (dD and d13C of n-alkanes) are compared to results from an isotope-enabled general atmospheric circulation model (IsoCAM) for selected time slices (pre-industrial, mid-Holocene and Heinrich Stadial 1). Comparison of proxy and model results indicate that past changes in the dD of precipitation and plant waxes were mainly driven by the amount effect, and strongly influenced by ISM rainfall. Maximum precipitation is detected for the Early Holocene Climatic Optimum (EHCO; 10.5-6 ka BP), whereas minimum precipitation occurred during the Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1; 16.9-15.4 ka BP). The IsoCAM model results support the hypothesis of a constant moisture source (i.e. the NBoB) throughout the study period. Relative to the pre-industrial period the model reconstructions show 20% more rain during the mid-Holocene (6 ka BP) and 20% less rain during the Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1), respectively. A shift from C4-plant dominated ecosystems during the glacial to subsequent C3/C4-mixed ones during the interglacial took place. Vegetation changes were predominantly driven by precipitation variability, as evidenced by the significant correlation between the dD and d13C alkane records. When compared to other records across the ISM domain, precipitation and vegetation changes inferred from our records and the numerical model results provide evidence for a coherent regional variability of the ISM from the Last Glacial to the present.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research; MARUM; ZMT
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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