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  • 1
    Publikationsdatum: 2020-07-15
    Beschreibung: Benthic foraminifera Mg/Ca is a well-established bottom water temperature (BWT) proxy used in paleoclimate studies. The relationship between Mg/Ca and BWT for numerous species has been determined using core-top and culturing studies. However, the scarcity of calcareous microfossils in Antarctic shelf sediments and poorly defined calibrations at low temperatures has limited the use of the foraminiferal Mg/Ca paleothermometer in ice proximal Antarctic sediments. Here we present paired ocean temperature and modern benthic foraminifera Mg/Ca data for three species, Trifarina angulosa, Bulimina aculeata, and Globocassidulina subglobosa, but with a particular focus on Trifarina angulosa. The core-top data from several Antarctic sectors span a BWT range of −1.7 to +1.2 °C and constrain the relationship between Mg/Ca and cold temperatures. We compare our results to published lower-latitude core-top data for species in the same or related genera, and in the case of Trifarina angulosa, produce a regional calibration. The resulting regional equation for Trifarina angulosa is Temperature (°C) = (Mg/Ca −1.14 ± 0.035)/0.069 ± 0.033). Addition of our Trifarina angulosa data to the previously published Uvigerina spp. dataset provides an alternative global calibration, although some data points appear to be offset from this relationship and are discussed. Mg-temperature relationships for Bulimina aculeata and Globocassidulina subglobosa are also combined with previously published data to produce calibration equations of Temperature (°C) = (Mg/Ca-1.04 ± 0.07)/0.099 ± 0.01 and Temperature (°C) = (Mg/Ca-0.99 ± 0.03)/0.087 ± 0.01, respectively. These refined calibrations highlight the potential utility of benthic foraminifera Mg/Ca-paleothermometry for reconstructing past BWT in Antarctic margin settings.
    Repository-Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Materialart: Article , isiRev
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    Publikationsdatum: 2022-04-12
    Beschreibung: The West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) is one of the largest potential sources of future sea-level rise, with glaciers draining the WAIS thinning at an accelerating rate over the past 40 years. Due to complexities in calibrating palaeoceanographic proxies for the Southern Ocean, it remains difficult to assess whether similar changes have occurred earlier during the Holocene or whether there is underlying centennial- to millennial-scale forcing in oceanic variability. Archaeal lipid-based proxies, specifically glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT; e.g. TEX86 and TEXL86), are powerful tools for reconstructing ocean temperature, but these proxies have been shown previously to be difficult to apply to the Southern Ocean. A greater understanding of the parameters that control Southern Ocean GDGT distributions would improve the application of these biomarker proxies and thus help provide a longer-term perspective on ocean forcing of Antarctic ice sheet changes. In this study, we characterised intact polar lipid (IPL)-GDGTs, representing (recently) living archaeal populations in suspended particulate matter (SPM) from the Amundsen Sea and the Scotia Sea. SPM samples from the Amundsen Sea were collected from up to four water column depths representing the surface waters through to Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW), whereas the Scotia Sea samples were collected along a transect encompassing the sub-Antarctic front through to the southern boundary of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. IPL-GDGTs with low cyclic diversity were detected throughout the water column with high relative abundances of hydroxylated IPL-GDGTs identified in both the Amundsen and Scotia seas. Results from the Scotia Sea show shifts in IPL-GDGT signatures across well-defined fronts of the Southern Ocean. Indicating that the physicochemical parameters of these water masses determine changes in IPL-GDGT distributions. The Amundsen Sea results identified GDGTs with hexose-phosphohexose head groups in the CDW, suggesting active GDGT synthesis at these depths. These results suggest that GDGTs synthesised at CDW depths may be a significant source of GDGTs exported to the sedimentary record and that temperature reconstructions based on TEX86 or TEXL86 proxies may be significantly influenced by the warmer waters of the CDW.
    Repository-Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Materialart: Article , isiRev , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    Publikationsdatum: 2022-03-07
    Beschreibung: Antarctic sea ice is a critical component of the climate system affecting a range of physical and biogeochemical feedbacks and supporting unique ecosystems. During the last glacial stage, Antarctic sea ice was more extensive than today, but uncertainties in geological (marine sediments), glaciological (ice core), and climate model reconstructions of past sea-ice extent continue to limit our understanding of its role in the Earth system. Here, we present a novel archive of past sea-ice environments from regurgitated stomach oils of snow petrels (Pagodroma nivea) preserved at nesting sites in Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica. We show that by combining information from fatty acid distributions and their stable carbon isotope ratios with measurements of bulk carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes and trace metal data, it is possible to reconstruct changing snow petrel diet within Marine Isotope Stage 2 (ca. 24.3–30.3 cal kyr BP). We show that, as today, a mixed diet of krill and fish characterizes much of the record. However, between 27.4 and 28.7 cal kyr BP signals of krill almost disappear. By linking dietary signals in the stomach-oil deposits to modern feeding habits and foraging ranges, we infer the use by snow petrels of open-water habitats (“polynyas”) in the sea ice during our interval of study. The periods when consumption of krill was reduced are interpreted to correspond to the opening of polynyas over the continental shelf, which became the preferred foraging habitat. Our results show that extensive, thick, and multiyear sea ice was not always present close to the continent during the last glacial stage and highlight the potential of stomach-oil deposits as a palaeoenvironmental archive of Southern Ocean conditions.
    Repository-Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Materialart: Article , isiRev
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 4
    Publikationsdatum: 2022-05-25
    Beschreibung: Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2016. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Nature Publishing Group for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nature Geoscience 9 (2016): 687-690, doi:10.1038/ngeo2778.
    Beschreibung: The age of organic material discharged by rivers provides information about its sources and carbon cycling processes within watersheds. While elevated ages in fluvially-transported organic matter are usually explained by erosion of soils and sediments deposits it is commonly assumed that mainly young organic material is discharged from flat tropical watersheds due to their extensive plant cover and rapid carbon turnover. Here we present compound-specific radiocarbon data of terrigenous organic fractions from a sedimentary archive offshore the Congo River in conjunction with molecular markers for methane-producing land cover reflecting wetland extent. We find that the Congo River has been discharging aged organic matter for several thousand years with apparently increasing ages from the Mid- to the Late Holocene. This suggests that aged organic matter in modern samples is concealed by radiocarbon from atmospheric nuclear weapons testing. By comparison to indicators for past rainfall changes we detect a systematic control of organic matter sequestration and release by continental hydrology mediating temporary carbon storage in wetlands. As aridification also leads to exposure and rapid remineralization of large amounts of previously stored labile organic matter we infer that this process may cause a profound direct climate feedback currently underestimated in carbon cycle assessments.
    Beschreibung: This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grants SCHN 621/3-3, RU 458/29-3, GR 1845/2-3, SCHE 903/1), the US National Science Foundation (grant OCE-0137005), a Starting Grant from the European Research Council (ERC) awarded to HMT for project AMOPROX (No. 258734) and grants ICM-NC120066 and FONDAP15110009 to RDP-H. This work was supported by the DFG Research Center/Cluster of Excellence ‘The Ocean in the Earth System’ at MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University of Bremen.
    Beschreibung: 2017-02-15
    Repository-Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Materialart: Preprint
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unbekannt
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schefuß, Enno; Eglinton, Timothy Ian; Spencer-Jones, Charlotte L; Rullkötter, Jürgen; De Pol-Holz, Ricardo; Talbot, Helen M; Grootes, Pieter Meiert; Schneider, Ralph R (2016): Hydrologic control of carbon cycling and aged carbon discharge in the Congo River basin. Nature Geoscience, 9(9), 687-690, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2778
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-03-11
    Beschreibung: The age of organic material discharged by rivers provides information about its sources and carbon cycling processes within watersheds. While elevated ages in fluvially-transported organic matter are usually explained by erosion of soils and sediments, it is commonly assumed that mainly young organic material is discharged from flat tropical watersheds due to their extensive plant cover and high carbon turnover. Here we present compound-specific radiocarbon data of terrigenous organic fractions from a sedimentary archive offshore the Congo River in conjunction with molecular markers for methane-producing land cover reflecting wetland extent in the watershed. We find that the Congo River has been discharging aged organic matter for several thousand years with increasing ages from the mid- to the Late Holocene. This suggests that aged organic matter in modern samples is concealed by radiocarbon from nuclear weapons testing. By comparison to indicators for past rainfall changes we detect a systematic control of organic matter sequestration and release by continental hydrology mediating temporary carbon storage in wetlands. As aridification also leads to exposure and rapid remineralization of large amounts of previously stored labile organic matter we infer that this process may cause a profound direct climate feedback currently underestimated in carbon cycle assessments.
    Schlagwort(e): Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 6
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-11-24
    Beschreibung: Elemental scans, organic geochemistry and stable isotope analysis is presented here from a stomach-oil deposit collected at Lake Untersee in central Dronning Maud Land (DML). Deposit WMM7 (sometimes called Antarctic mumiyo) was collected at -71.367 degN, 13.317 degE during the GeoMaud expedition (1995/1996), from the Untersee Oasis, Dronning Maud Land. The aim of the analysis is to investigate snow petrel diet during the Last Glacial stage (22-29 ka) and in turn to infer changing sea-ice conditions in the South Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean (McClymont et al., Climate of the Past Discussions, submitted). The data include results from non-destructive XRF scanning (ITRAX core scanner, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, U.K.), fatty acid distributions and fatty acid stable isotope ratios (Department of Geography, Durham University, Durham, U.K.) and bulk stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios (Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, Durham, U.K.). The age-depth model is constrained by 6 new bulk radiocarbon measurements (CologneAMS, Cologne, Germany).
    Schlagwort(e): Antarctica; ANTarctic Sea Ice Evolution from a novel biological archive; ANTSIE; Biomarker; fatty acid; Last Glacial; mumiyo; Sea ice; Stable isotope; XRF
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 7
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-11-24
    Beschreibung: XRF analysis of stomach-oil deposit WMM7.
    Schlagwort(e): AGE; Aluminium; Antarctica; ANTarctic Sea Ice Evolution from a novel biological archive; ANTSIE; Arsenic; Barium; Bromine; Calcium; Cerium; Chlorine; Chromium; Copper; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Gallium; GeoMaud95/96; Iron; Last Glacial; Lead; Manganese; MULT; Multiple investigations; mumiyo; Nickel; Phosphorus; Potassium; Rubidium; Sampling on land; Sea ice; Silicon; Strontium; Sulfur; Titanium; Unterseeoase; Vanadium; WMM-7; X-ray fluorescence ITRAX core scanner; XRF; Zinc; Zirconium
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 18960 data points
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 8
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-11-24
    Beschreibung: Total nitrogen %, total organic carbon % and bulk stable isotope ratios of carbon and nitrogen for stomach-oil deposit WMM7. Standard deviations reported for replicate analyses.
    Schlagwort(e): AGE; Antarctica; ANTarctic Sea Ice Evolution from a novel biological archive; ANTSIE; Biomarker; Carbon, organic, total; Carbon/Nitrogen ratio; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Element analyser isotope ratio mass spectrometer (EA-IRMS); GeoMaud95/96; Last Glacial; MULT; Multiple investigations; mumiyo; Nitrogen, total; Sampling on land; Sea ice; Stable isotope; Unterseeoase; WMM-7; δ13C; δ13C, standard deviation; δ15N; δ15N, standard deviation
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 105 data points
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 9
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-11-24
    Beschreibung: Fatty acid and selected pigment distributions from stomach-oil deposit WMM7. Pigments are reported according to the absorbance at 4 key wavelengths (e.g. P410 = absorbance at 410 nm). Absorbances are reported normalised to extracted mass of stomach-oil deposit (abs g-1) and normalised to total organic carbon content (abs gTOC-1).
    Schlagwort(e): AGE; Antarctica; ANTarctic Sea Ice Evolution from a novel biological archive; ANTSIE; Biomarker; cis-9-Octadecenoic acid of total fatty acids (IUPAC: Octadec-9-enoic acid); DEPTH, sediment/rock; fatty acid; Gas chromatography - Mass spectrometry (GC-MS); GeoMaud95/96; Hexadecanoic acid of total fatty acids; Hexadecenoic acid of total fatty acids; Last Glacial; MULT; Multiple investigations; mumiyo; Octadecanoic acid of total fatty acids; Pigments, absorbance at 410 nm, per unit mass total organic carbon; Pigments, absorbance at 410 nm per unit mass; Pigments, absorbance at 435 nm, per unit mass total organic carbon; Pigments, absorbance at 435 nm per unit mass; Pigments, absorbance at 660 nm, per unit mass total organic carbon; Pigments, absorbance at 660 nm per unit mass; Pigments, absorbance at 665 nm, per unit mass total organic carbon; Pigments, absorbance at 665 nm per unit mass; Sampling on land; Sea ice; Tetradecanoic acid of total fatty acids; Unterseeoase; UV-visible spectrophotometer; WMM-7
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 195 data points
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 10
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-11-24
    Beschreibung: Fatty acid stable carbon isotope ratios from stomach-oil deposit WMM7. Standard deviations reported for duplicate measurements.
    Schlagwort(e): AGE; Antarctica; ANTarctic Sea Ice Evolution from a novel biological archive; ANTSIE; Biomarker; cis-9-Octadecenoic acid, δ13C; cis-9-Octadecenoic acid, δ13C, standard deviation; DEPTH, sediment/rock; fatty acid; Gas chromatography - Isotope ratio mass spectrometer (GC-IRMS); GeoMaud95/96; Hexadecanoic acid, δ13C; Hexadecanoic acid, δ13C, standard deviation; Last Glacial; MULT; Multiple investigations; mumiyo; Octadecanoic acid, δ13C; Octadecanoic acid, δ13C, standard deviation; Sampling on land; Sea ice; Stable isotope; Tetradecanoic acid, δ13C; Tetradecanoic acid, δ13C, standard deviation; Unterseeoase; WMM-7
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 96 data points
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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