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  • 1
    Keywords: Micropaleontology North Atlantic Ocean ; Paleoceanography North Atlantic Ocean ; Foraminifera, Fossil North Atlantic Ocean ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Atlantischer Ozean Nord ; Mikropaläontologie ; Fossile Foraminiferen ; Paläoozeanographie
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: VIII, 271 S , Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 8390116456
    Series Statement: Grzybowski Foundation special publication 5
    DDC: 560.45731
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Uetikon-Zuerich : Trans Tech Publications
    Keywords: Sedimentation and deposition ; Sediments Geology ; Sedimentation and deposition ; Sediments Geology ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Sedimentologie ; Quartär ; Sedimentation ; Sedimentationsrate ; Messung ; Sediment ; Akkumulation ; Sedimenttransport ; Altersbestimmung ; Geochronologie ; Stratigraphie ; Sedimentologie ; Quartär ; Sedimentation ; Sedimentationsrate ; Messung ; Sediment ; Akkumulation ; Sedimenttransport ; Altersbestimmung ; Geochronologie ; Stratigraphie
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: X, 244 S. , graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 0878498370
    Series Statement: GeoResearch forum 5
    DDC: 551.3/03
    Language: English , German
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and indexes
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Polar research 21 (2002), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1751-8369
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
    Notes: The granulometric composition of terrigenous deep-sea sediments provides information on current speed if certain frame conditions are fulfilled. These include that current transport is the only transport process. At high latitudes this type of investigation is impaired due to the influence of ice-rafted debris (IRD) which contaminates the current-sorted grain size fractions. This study presents a new method that addresses this problem by setting the ice-rafted sand in relation to the silt of both current- and ice-transported origin. Deviations from the resulting regression function are then used to determine the behaviour of the silt mean grain size as a function of current speed largely independent from IRD bias. The study is based on sediments from the Yermak Plateau, Arctic Ocean, a region influenced by IRD brought with the south-headed Transpolar Drift and by north-directed bottom currents. The IRD correction results in displaying changes of current speed at much higher clarity; climate forcing of the currents becomes more evident. For example, the 8200 year cold event shows up as a major event in the corrected record whereas it is hardly visible in the original record.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-09-13
    Description: Beach nourishments are a widely used method to mitigate erosion along sandy shorelines. In contrast to hard coastal protection structures, nourishments are considered as soft engineering, although little is known about the cumulative, long-term environmental effects of both marine sediment extraction and nourishment activities. Recent endeavours to sustain the marine ecosystem and research results on the environmental impact of sediment extraction and nourishment activities are driving the need for a comprehensive up-to-date review of beach nourishment practice, and to evaluate the physical and ecological sustainability of these activities. While existing reviews of nourishment practice have focused on the general design (motivation, techniques and methods, international overview of sites and volumes) as well as legal and financial aspects, this study reviews and compares not only nourishment practice but also the accompanying assessment and monitoring of environmental impacts in a number of developed countries around the world. For the study, we reviewed 205 openly-accessible coastal management strategies, legal texts, guidelines, EIA documents, websites, project reports, press releases and research publications about beach nourishments in several developed countries around the world (Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, UK, USA and Australia). Where information was not openly available, the responsible authorities were contacted directly. The study elaborates on the differences in coastal management strategies and legislation as well as the large dissimilarities in the EIA procedure (where applicable) for both marine sediment extraction and nourishment activities. The spatial disturbance of the marine environment that is considered a significant impact, a factor which determines the need for an Environmental Impact Assessment, varies substantially between the countries covered in this study. Combined with the large uncertainties of the long-term ecological and geomorphological impacts, these results underline the need to reconsider the sustainability of nourishments as “soft” coastal protection measures.
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
    Keywords: ddc:627.5 ; Coastal protection ; Coastal management ; Beach nourishment ; Sustainability ; Ecology ; Environmental impact assessment
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: A sediment core from the West Spitsbergen continental margin was studied to reconstruct climate and paleoceanographic variability during the last ~9 ka in the eastern Fram Strait. Our multiproxy evidence suggests that the establishment of the modern oceanographic configuration in the eastern Fram Strait occurred stepwise, in response to the postglacial sea-level rise and the related onset of modern sea-ice production on the shallow Siberian shelves. The late Early and Mid Holocene interval (9 to 5 ka) was generally characterized by relatively unstable conditions. High abundance of the subpolar planktic foraminifer species Turborotalita quinqueloba implies strong intensity of Atlantic Water (AW) inflow with high productivity and/or high AW temperatures, resulting in a strong heat flux to the Arctic. A series of short-lived cooling events (8.2, 6.9. and 6.1 ka) occurred superimposed on the warm late Early and Mid Holocene conditions. Our proxy data imply that simultaneous to the complete postglacial flooding of Arctic shallow shelves and the initiation of modern sea-ice production, strong advance of polar waters initiated modern oceanographic conditions in the eastern Fram Strait at ~5.2 ka. The Late Holocene was marked by the dominance of the polar planktic foraminifer species Neogloboquadrina pachyderma, a significant expansion of sea ice/icebergs, and strong stratification of the water column. Although planktic foraminiferal assemblages as well as sea surface and subsurface temperatures suggest a return of slightly strengthened advection of subsurface Atlantic Water after 3 ka, a relatively stable cold-water layer prevailed at the sea surface and the study site was probably located within the seasonally fluctuating marginal ice zone during the Neoglacial period.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
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    Elsevier
    In:  Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 123 (1-4). pp. 121-145.
    Publication Date: 2016-02-04
    Description: Granulometric and stable oxygen isotope analyses of four sediment cores from two high accumulation areas in the Skagerrak (NE North Sea) were carried out in order to reconstruct climate fluctuations and to evaluate climate impact during the upper Holocene. Extremely high sedimentation rates, especially in the eastern Skagerrak, are explained by increased current activity which is responsible for the transport and deposition of high quantities of suspension load during periods of stormy zonal atmospheric circulation patterns. These were most frequent during colder periods, while warmer phases are characterized by calmer meridional to zonal atmospheric circulation patterns. While the Subatlantic climate deterioration and the Subboreal climate optimum left only indistinct traces in the sediments, the Roman climate optimum and a colder period between ca. 400 and 700 AD are well documented. The following Medieval Warm period is characterized by a clear temperature increase of the waterbody in connection with less frequent advances of Atlantic water masses into the Skagerak deep and a decrease in bottom current strength. A mode of sedimentation prevails, similar to that of recent summer conditions, suggesting short and mild winters during that period. The onset of the Little Ice Age (around 1350 AD), however, shows an intensified bottom current circulation most probably due to amplifying westerly winds and a decrease in water temperatures in connection with more frequent advances of higher saline Atlantic waters. The Little Ice Age can be divided into 3 phases: a stormy “zonal” onset, a calm “meridional” maximum and a stormy “zonal” end. The stormy phases are characterized by a sedimentation mode similar to that of recent winter conditions while the Little Ice Age Maximum shows conditions comparable to exceptional cold modern winters. From 1900 AD, at the onset of the Modern Climate Optimum, the winter type sedimentation decreases and conditions change again to a level comparable to the Medieval Warm Period.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
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    In:  [Talk] In: 2. PAST Gateways International Conference and Workshop, 19.05.-23.05.2014, Trieste, Italy . Proceedings of the II PAST Gateways International Conference and Workshop : Trieste, May 19-­23, 2014 / Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale. Eds.: Renata G. Lucchi ; Colm O’Cofaigh ; Michele Rebesco ; Carlo Barbante ; pp. 48-49 .
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Mg to Ca ratios of the epibenthic foraminifer species Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi have been identified to be strongly controlled by temperature and thus to have great potential for reconstructing bottom water temperatures, especially from the lower end of the temperature range (0-6°C; Tisserand et al., 2013). In the Fram Strait, where main water mass exchanges between the Arctic Ocean and the world’s oceans occur, new temperature estimation tools independent from faunal assemblages can help to better understand the complex interaction of different water masses with possible implications to changes in the meridional overturning circulation and the heat flux to the Arctic Ocean. Furthermore, Mg/Ca temperatures can help unravelling the local impact (e.g., of brine-enriched waters) from general trends in bottom water circulation. In order to apply Mg/Ca-derived temperatures to paleo-records from the Fram Strait, a calibration relationship between modern Mg/Ca ratios to bottom water temperatures which fits the environmental conditions of the Fram Strait needs to be developed. We therefore studied Mg/Ca ratios of C. wuellerstorfi in a set of coretop samples from the Fram Strait and the Norwegian margin where bottom temperatures range between -0.5 and -1°C. For the calibration to modern temperatures, we used modern oceanographic data from both existing conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) casts and the World Ocean Data Base 2013 (Boyer et. al., 2013). Benthic Mg/Ca ratios are relatively high suggesting a preference of C. wuellerstorfi to incorporate Mg at temperatures below 0°C. Although no correlation has been found to existing temperature calibrations using higher temperature ranges (0-6°C), the data are in line with existing Mg/Ca data from C. wuellerstorfi from the Norwegian Sea and the Fram Strait (Martin et al., 2002; Elderfield et al., 2006).While correlation between Mg/Ca ratios to either temperature or salinity is difficult to constrain, better correlation exists to water depth. We therefore consider the carbonate ion effect as one possible explanation for the relatively high Mg/Ca ratios found in coretop samples from the Fram Strait and the Nordic Seas. Despite the difficulties to constrain a temperature calibration for this low temperature range down to -1°C, variations in benthic Mg/Ca ratios investigated in Holocene records from the eastern Fram Strait display trends similar to those found in other benthic proxy indicators. A short-lived decrease in benthic carbon isotopes and sortable silt mean grain size thus seems to correlate to lower Mg/Ca ratios during the 8.2 ka event. Also, a Late Holocene trend towards significantly higher benthic oxygen isotopes may be related to decreasing Mg/Ca ratios. Essential bibliography Boyer, T.P., Antonov, J.I., Baranova, O.K., Coleman, C., Garcia, H.E., Grodsky, A., Johnson, D.R., Locarnini, R.A., Mishonov, A.V., O'Brien, T.D., Paver, C.R., Reagan, J.R., Seidov, D., Smolyar, I.V., Zweng, M.M. 2013. World Ocean Database 2013. Sydney Levitus, Ed., Alexey Mishonov, Technical Ed., NOAA Atlas NESDIS 72. 209 pp. Elderfield, H., Yu, J., Anand, P., Kiefer, T., Nyland, B. 2006. Calibrations for benthic foraminiferal Mg/Ca paleothermometry and the carbonate ion hypothesis. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 250, 633-649. Martin, P.A., Lea, D.W., Rosenthal, Y., Shackleton, N., Sarnthein, M., Papenfuss, T. 2002. Quaternary deep sea temperature histories derived from benthic foraminiferal Mg/Ca. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 198, 193-209. Tisserand, A.A., Dokken, T.M., Waelbroeck, C., Gherardi, J.-M., Scao, V., Fontanier, C., Jorissen, F. 2013. Refining benthic foraminiferal Mg/Ca-temperature calibrations using core-tops from the western tropical Atlantic: Implication for paleotemperature estimation. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 14(4), 929-946.
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 8
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    Grzybowski Foundation
    In:  In: Contributions to the micropaleontology and paleoceanography of the northern North Atlantic (collected results from the GEOMAR Bungalow Working Group). , ed. by Hass, H. C. and Kaminski, M. A. Grzybowski Foundation, Krakow, pp. 217-226.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-19
    Description: Agglutinated foraminifers from 4 box cores spanning the past ca. 140 years (maximum) taken from the southern flank of the Skagerrak (NE North Sea) were studied. Fourtyseven species were identified, among them Liebusella goesi, Eggerelloides spp., Rhabdammina discreta, and Haplophragmoides bradyi are the most common. The two more westerly locations reveal significantly higher amounts of agglutinated foraminifers, which may be caused by a better supply of suitable food provided by east headed bottom currents. Extremely high sedimentation rates and a higher degree of pollution suggest environmental stress that may be one reason for lower amounts of agglutinated foraminifers at the two more easterly stations close to the Skagerrak deep. Increasing numbers of specimens within the present century suggests a combination of instability of the tests and ecological controls.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 9
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    Grzybowski Foundation
    In:  In: Contributions to the micropaleontology and paleoceanography of the northern North Atlantic (collected results from the GEOMAR Bungalow Working Group). , ed. by Hass, H. C. and Kaminski, M. A. Grzybowski Foundation, Krakow, pp. 199-216.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-19
    Description: Calcareous benthic foraminifera from four cores from the southern flank of the Skagerrak (NE North Sea) were investigated in order to estimate the response of this fossil group to climate fluctuations during the upper part of the Holocene. Q-mode factor analyses were carried out for the most abundant taxa. The results reveal C. laeuigata, H. baltllica, M. barleeanus, G. turgida, B. mal;yirintn, and U. yeregrirtn as most conm~on/importantta xa. In the upper part of all cores B. skagerrakensis shows a significant increase and dominates the foraminifer fauna in cores from greater water depth. The data suggest no direct relation between the fluctuations of foraminifer assemblages and climate change. However, climate forced fluctuations in the strength of the water-circulation caused considerable changes in the foraminifer assemblages. Three major assemblages were used for environmental analysis: H. baltlticn dominated assemblages were identified as indicators for stagnant conditions. They characterize the oldest core sections, most probably the Holocene climate optimum. Cassidl~linala euigata assemblages seem to indicate increasing current strength, a process that is often associated with deteriorating climatic conditions. Briznlirtn skaCqcrrnkensis appears to have a certain relation to unstable water masses, and probably a tolerance for increasing polution of the North Sea since the advent of modern industrialization.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2020-08-07
    Description: A multiproxy data set of an AMS radiocarbon dated 46 cm long sediment core from the continental margin off western Svalbard reveals multidecadal climatic variability during the past two millennia. Investigation of planktic and benthic stable isotopes, planktic foraminiferal fauna, and lithogenic parameters aims to unveil the Atlantic Water advection to the eastern Fram Strait by intensity, temperatures, and salinities. Atlantic Water has been continuously present at the site over the last 2,000 years. Superimposed on the increase in sea ice/icebergs, a strengthened intensity of Atlantic Water inflow and seasonal ice-free conditions were detected at ~ 1000 to 1200 AD, during the well-known Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA). However, temperatures of the MCA never exceeded those of the 20th century. Since ~ 1400 AD significantly higher portions of ice rafted debris and high planktic foraminifer fluxes suggest that the site was located in the region of a seasonal highly fluctuating sea ice margin. A sharp reduction in planktic foraminifer fluxes around 800 AD and after 1730 AD indicates cool summer conditions with major influence of sea ice/icebergs. High amounts of the subpolar planktic foraminifer species Turborotalia quinqueloba in size fraction 150–250 μm indicate strengthened Atlantic Water inflow to the eastern Fram Strait already after ~ 1860 AD. Nevertheless surface conditions stayed cold well into the 20th century indicated by low planktic foraminiferal fluxes. Most likely at the beginning of the 20th century, cold conditions of the terminating Little Ice Age period persisted at the surface whereas warm and saline Atlantic Water already strengthened, hereby subsiding below the cold upper mixed layer. Surface sediments with high abundances of subpolar planktic foraminifers indicate a strong inflow of Atlantic Water providing seasonal ice-free conditions in the eastern Fram Strait during the last few decades.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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