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  • 2,10,14-Trimethyl-6-enyl-7-(3-methylpent-1-enyl)pentadecene, per unit mass total organic carbon; 4alpha,23,24-Trimethyl-5alpha-cholest-22E-en-3beta-ol, per unit mass total organic carbon; Antarctica; ANT-XXIII/4; AWI_Paleo; DEPTH, sediment/rock; GC; Gravity corer; HBIs; IPSO25; palaeoclimatology; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Phytoplankton biomarker Dinosterol IPSO25 index; Polarstern; PS69; PS69/274-1; Sea ice  (2)
  • Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM  (2)
  • Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; SPP1158  (2)
Document type
Keywords
Publisher
Years
  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Warratz, Grit; Henrich, Rüdiger; Voigt, Ines; Chiessi, Cristiano Mazur; Kuhn, Gerhard; Lantzsch, Hendrik (2017): Deglacial changes in the strength of deep southern component water and sediment supply at the Argentine continental margin. Paleoceanography, 32(8), 796-812, https://doi.org/10.1002/2016PA003079
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: The deep southern component water (SCW), comprising Lower Circumpolar Deep Water (LCDW) and Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW), is a major component of the global oceanic circulation. It has been suggested that the deep Atlantic water mass structure changed significantly during the last glacial/interglacial cycle. However, deep SCW source-proximal records remain sparse. Here we present three coherent deep SCW paleo-current records from the deep Argentine continental margin shedding light on deep-water circulation and SCW flow strength in the Southwest Atlantic since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Based on coherently increased sortable silt values, we propose enhanced deep SCW flow strength from 14 to 10 cal ka BP relative to the early deglacial/LGM and the Holocene. We propose a direct influence of deep northern component water (NCW) on deep SCW flow strength due to vertical narrowing of deep SCW spreading concurrent with a migration of the high-energetic LCDW/AABW interface occupying our core sites. We suggest a shoaled NCW until 13 cal ka BP, thereby providing space for deep SCW spreading that resulted in reduced carbonate preservation at our core sites. Only from 13 cal ka BP on, increased carbonate content indicates that NCW expanded vertically leading to a deeper NCW-SCW interface. This NCW expansion changed deep-water properties in the deep Southwest Atlantic causing enhanced carbonate preservation at our core sites. We further show that southern-sourced terrigenous sediment-supply to our core sites was uninterrupted since the LGM due to a persistent deep SCW flow leading to contourite drifts at the Argentine continental margin.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 14 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Korff, Lucia; von Dobeneck, Tilo; Frederichs, Thomas; Kasten, Sabine; Kuhn, Gerhard; Gersonde, Rainer; Diekmann, Bernhard (2016): Cyclic magnetite dissolution in Pleistocene sediments of the abyssal northwest Pacific Ocean: Evidence for glacial oxygen depletion and carbon trapping. Paleoceanography, 31(5), 600-624, https://doi.org/10.1002/2015PA002882
    Publication Date: 2023-03-13
    Description: The carbonate-free abyss of the North Pacific defies most paleoceanographic proxy methods and hence remains a "blank spot" in ocean and climate history. Paleomagnetic and rock magnetic, geochemical, and sedimentological methods were combined to date and analyze seven middle to late Pleistocene northwest Pacific sediment cores from water depths of 5100 to 5700 m. Besides largely coherent tephra layers, the most striking features of these records are nearly magnetite-free zones corresponding to glacial marine isotope stages (MISs) 22, 12, 10, 8, 6, and 2. Magnetite depletion is correlated with organic carbon and quartz content and anticorrelated with biogenic barite and opal content. Within interglacial sections and mid-Pleistocene transition glacial stages MIS 20, 18, 16, and 14, magnetite fractions of detrital, volcanic, and bacterial origin are all well preserved. Such alternating successions of magnetic iron mineral preservation and depletion are known from sapropel-marl cycles, which accumulated under periodically changing bottom water oxygen and redox conditions. In the open central northwest Pacific Ocean, the only conceivable mechanism to cause such abrupt change is a modified glacial bottom water circulation. During all major glaciations since MIS 12, oxygen-depleted Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW)-sourced bottom water seems to have crept into the abyssal northwest Pacific below ~5000 m depth, thereby changing redox conditions in the sediment, trapping and preserving dissolved and particulate organic matter and, in consequence, reducing and dissolving both, biogenic and detrital magnetite. At deglaciation, a downward progressing oxidation front apparently remineralized and released these sedimentary carbon reservoirs without replenishing the magnetite losses.
    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: Weber, Michael E; Reichelt, Lucia; Kuhn, Gerhard; Pfeiffer, Miriam; Korff, Björn; Thurow, Juergen W; Ricken, Werner (2010): BMPix and PEAK tools: New methods for automated laminae recognition and counting-Application to glacial varves from Antarctic marine sediment. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 11(3), Q0AA05, https://doi.org/10.1029/2009GC002611
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Description: We present tools for rapid and quantitative detection of sediment lamination. The BMPix tool extracts color and gray-scale curves from images at pixel resolution. The PEAK tool uses the gray-scale curve and performs, for the first time, fully automated counting of laminae based on three methods. The maximum count algorithm counts every bright peak of a couplet of two laminae (annual resolution) in a smoothed curve. The zero-crossing algorithm counts every positive and negative halfway-passage of the curve through a wide moving average, separating the record into bright and dark intervals (seasonal resolution). The same is true for the frequency truncation method, which uses Fourier transformation to decompose the curve into its frequency components before counting positive and negative passages. We applied the new methods successfully to tree rings, to well-dated and already manually counted marine varves from Saanich Inlet, and to marine laminae from the Antarctic continental margin. In combination with AMS14C dating, we found convincing evidence that laminations in Weddell Sea sites represent varves, deposited continuously over several millennia during the last glacial maximum. The new tools offer several advantages over previous methods. The counting procedures are based on a moving average generated from gray-scale curves instead of manual counting. Hence, results are highly objective and rely on reproducible mathematical criteria. Also, the PEAK tool measures the thickness of each year or season. Since all information required is displayed graphically, interactive optimization of the counting algorithms can be achieved quickly and conveniently.
    Keywords: Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; SPP1158
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 1.5 MBytes
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Borchers, Andreas; Voigt, Ines; Kuhn, Gerhard; Diekmann, Bernhard (2011): Mineralogy of glaciomarine sediments from the Prydz Bay-Kerguelen region: relation to modern depositional environments. Antarctic Science, 23(2), 164-179, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954102010000830
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Description: Surface mineralogical compositions and their association to modern processes are well known from the east Atlantic and south-west Indian sectors of the Southern Ocean, but data from the interface of these areas - the Prydz Bay-Kerguelen region - is still missing. The objective of our study was to provide mineralogical data of reference samples from this region and to relate these mineralogical assemblages to hinterland geology, weathering, transport and depositional processes. Clay mineral assemblages were analysed by means of X-ray diffraction technique. Heavy mineral assemblages were determined by counting of gravity-separated grains under a polarizing microscope. Results show that by use of clay mineral assemblages four mineralogical provinces can be subdivided: i) continental shelf, ii) continental slope, iii) deep sea, iv) Kerguelen Plateau. Heavy mineral assemblages in the fine sand fraction are relatively uniform except for samples taken from the East Antarctic shelf. Our findings show that mineralogical studies on sediment cores from the study area have the potential to provide insights into past shifts in ice-supported transport and activity and provenance of different water masses (e.g. Antarctic slope current and deep western boundary current) in the Prydz Bay-Kerguelen region.
    Keywords: Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; SPP1158
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-02-16
    Keywords: 2,10,14-Trimethyl-6-enyl-7-(3-methylpent-1-enyl)pentadecene, per unit mass total organic carbon; 4alpha,23,24-Trimethyl-5alpha-cholest-22E-en-3beta-ol, per unit mass total organic carbon; Antarctica; ANT-XXIII/4; AWI_Paleo; DEPTH, sediment/rock; GC; Gravity corer; HBIs; IPSO25; palaeoclimatology; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Phytoplankton biomarker Dinosterol IPSO25 index; Polarstern; PS69; PS69/274-1; Sea ice
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 336 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-02-16
    Keywords: 2,10,14-Trimethyl-6-enyl-7-(3-methylpent-1-enyl)pentadecene, per unit mass total organic carbon; 4alpha,23,24-Trimethyl-5alpha-cholest-22E-en-3beta-ol, per unit mass total organic carbon; Antarctica; ANT-XXIII/4; AWI_Paleo; DEPTH, sediment/rock; GC; Gravity corer; HBIs; IPSO25; palaeoclimatology; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Phytoplankton biomarker Dinosterol IPSO25 index; Polarstern; PS69; PS69/274-1; Sea ice
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 335 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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