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  • 1975-1979  (6)
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  • 1
    Keywords: Diplomarbeit ; Ostsee ; Boknis Eck ; Hochschulschrift
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (98 Seiten = 6 MB) , Illustrationen, Graphen, Karte
    Edition: 2021
    Language: German
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Halle (Saale) : Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina, Nationale Akademie der Wissenschaften | Stuttgart : Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft
    Keywords: Konferenzschrift ; Kohlendioxid ; Atmosphäre ; Meer ; Kohlendioxid ; Atmosphäre ; Meer
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: 350 Seiten , Illustrationen, Karten
    ISBN: 9783804734333
    Series Statement: Nova acta Leopoldina Neue Folge, Nummer 408 = Band 121
    DDC: 530
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Note: Literaturangaben
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  • 3
    Keywords: Diplomarbeit ; Mauretanien ; Hochschulschrift
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (61 Seiten = 7 MB) , Graphen, Karten
    Edition: Online-Ausgabe 2023
    Language: German
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 272 (1978), S. 43-46 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Climatic conditions are largely characterised by temperature and wetness3. Temperature distribution on the Ice-Age Earth has been extensively studied by the CLIMAP group4"6, and their data base was used in numerical modelling by Manabe and Hahn7, who also included the distribution of sea-surface ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine Micropaleontology, 135 . pp. 45-55.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Highlights • Planktic foraminifera species show an Early Holocene 14C plateau analogous to the atmospheric 14C plateau at 10.2–9.6 cal ka. • Age-calibrated Early Holocene 14C plateau boundaries provide precise age control in 3 sediment cores on a 900 km long transect. • Differences between planktic foraminiferal and atmospheric 14C ages reveal the 14C reservoir age of local surface waters. • Different planktic species document different 14C reservoir ages characteristic of different surface and subsurface waters. To trace spatial variations in Holocene reservoir ages of surface and subsurface waters we studied narrowly spaced 14C records of planktic foraminifera in three high-sedimentation rate cores from the Nordic Seas, the Barents Sea continental margin and eastern Fram Strait. The two northern cores reveal a distinct Early Holocene 14C plateau in dates on the subsurface dweller Neogloboquadrina pachyderma at 9.3–9.1 14C ka. The plateau was tuned to an atmospheric 14C plateau at 9.0–8.7 14C ka that spans 10.2–9.6 calendar ka. These two plateau boundaries provide robust age control points to estimate short-term changes in sedimentation rate and to correlate paleoceanographic signals over 900 km along the West Spitsbergen Current. The difference between planktic and atmospheric 14C plateau ages suggests local 14C reservoir ages of 370–400 yr. Planktic foraminifera species that inhabit different water masses document different reservoir ages. By comparison, the subpolar N. incompta reveals a reservoir age of 150 yr, probably formed in well-mixed Atlantic-sourced waters during winter. The near-surface dweller Turborotalita quinqueloba shows an age of 290 yr in the Fram Strait, but one of 720 yr at the Barents Sea continental margin. The latter age suggests a calcification within old, meltwater-enriched Arctic surface waters admixed by the East Spitsbergen Current. Likewise, we assign an elevated reservoir age of 760 yr on mixed species at a Norwegian Sea site near 71°N to Preboreal meltwaters that spread from northern Norway far west, also documented by the spatial distribution of a coeval δ13C minimum of N. pachyderma.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: The last deglacial was marked by tremendous changes in ocean temperature and circulation as well as atmospheric CO2 and 14C. We employed the “14C plateau-tuning technique” to a centennial-scale planktic 14C record of core MD08-3180 retrieved S.W. of the Azores Islands at ∼3060 m water depth to establish both a new standard of absolute age control and a record of past 14C reservoir ages of ocean surface waters. Both δ18O minima of G. bulloides and high planktic reservoir ages of ∼1600 to 2170 yr suggest two major melt water incursions that reached from the Labrador Sea up to the subtropics over Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS-1). In parallel, we established a record of (apparent) benthic ventilation ages that add the planktic 14C reservoir ages together with the benthic-planktic 14C age difference at the site and time of deposition, a sum finally adjusted to past changes in atmospheric 14C that occurred since the time of deep-water formation. Near the Azores apparent deep-water ages of the Last Glacial Maximum were as low as 340–740 yr, which suggests a lateral advection of young North Atlantic Deep Waters (NADW) from subpolar regions south of Iceland, in harmony with recent model simulation and in contrast to a widely assumed major shoaling of glacial deep-water formation. During HS-1, local benthic ventilation ages increased up to 2200–2550 yr, thus suggest an incursion of old southern-source deep waters, an unstable regime that was interrupted by brief pulses of NADW incursion near 16, 15.6 cal. ka, and most salient, near 14.9/14.7 ka.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: The ultimate, possibly geodynamic control and potential impact of changes in circulation activity and salt discharge of Mediterranean outflow waters (MOW) on Atlantic meridional overturning circulation have formed long-standing objectives in paleoceanography. Late Pliocene changes in the distal advection of MOW were reconstructed on orbital timescales for northeast Atlantic DSDP/ODP sites 548 and 982 off Brittany and on Rockall Plateau, supplemented by a proximal record from Site U1389 west off Gibraltar, and compared to Western Mediterranean surface and deep-water records of Alboran Sea Site 978. From ~3.43 to 3.3 Ma, MOW temperatures and salinities form a prominent rise by 2–4 °C and ~3 psu, induced by a preceding and coeval rise in sea surface and deep-water salinity and increased summer aridity in the Mediterranean Sea. We speculate that these changes triggered an increased MOW flow and were ultimately induced by a persistent 2.5 °C cooling of Indonesian Through-Flow waters. The temperature drop resulted from the northward drift of Australia that crossed a threshold value near 3.6–3.3 Ma and led to a large-scale cooling of the eastern subtropical Indian Ocean and in turn, to a reduction of African monsoon rains. Vice versa, we show that the distinct rise in Mediterranean salt export after ~3.4 Ma induced a unique long-term rise in the formation of Upper North Atlantic Deep Water, that followed with a phase lag of ~100 ky. In summary, we present evidence for an interhemispheric teleconnection of processes in the Indonesian Gateways, the Mediterranean and Labrador Seas, jointly affecting Pliocene climate.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
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    Schweizerbart Science Publishers
    In:  Senckenbergiana Maritima, 8 (4/6). pp. 189-269.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-21
    Description: Great Belt, Vejsnäs Rinne and Boknis Rinne form a major interconnected channel System of approximately 80 km length and 30 m depth on the Kiel Bay sea floor, which generally is only some 10 to 20 m deep. 1971 to 1973, 32 transects were sampled across the channel slopes using narrow Station distances and systematically adding data (T°, S°/oo) from 5 hydrographic cross sections over a one and a half year period. A quantitative, combined study of the molluscan fauna, dead shells and Sediments yielded the following results. 30 species of bivalves and 19 of gastropods were sampled as livingspecimens. According to their long life span, Cypritta islandica is dominant in the deep and the Astarte species on the upper part of the channel slope. Macoma baltica is dominantin a third, more shallow Zone, which is actually outside of the channels. Abra alba is the most persistent species of the channels being present in 86% of all samples. Except for Hydrobia, gastropods display low numbers of presence and abundance and are almost never dominant. The bottom level of the thermohaline pycnocline impinges on the channel slope as a rule between (15-)18 and 22 (-25) m depth. This boundary layer is clearly reflected by the fauna, i.e. by maximum numbers of species and species richness, of species presence and abundance, as well as of the biomass of total molluscs and of most of the single mollusc species. The faunal Optimum is explained by the favourable combination of a suite of factors, such as relatively stable temperatures and increased salinity, sufficient aeration, and a strong “rain” of larvae and nutrition where the upper water mass is barred by the pycnocline. Substrate conditions (± 50 % of Sediment 〈 63 p) might be favourable as well. The deeper water mass of the channel System is increasingly plumbed by the pycnocline and correspondingly poor in oxygen concentration towards the inner end of the bay. The oxygen deficiency more and more confines the Optimum beit of the molluscs from below, and causes a distinct elevation of the maximum numbers of species, species richness, species dominance and biomass from the entrance towards the inner part of the bay from 20-24 to 15 -20 m depth. Increasing distance from the bay ’s entrance , (the Great Belt) does not exert any other influence on the molluscan fauna. Averaging the whole transects, the mean numbers of species, species richness, species presence and biomass stay constant in line with constant T-S conditions. The molluscan Optimum belt is widened on the slope towards the deep and partly doubled at current and water exposed parts of the slope, where it also achieves its absolute maximum numbers. No molluscan species is bound to a specific type of Sediment, though eventually certain Sediments may be preferred. Mud forms an exception in showing a clear decrease of the number of specimens (by an overlap with the factor oxygen deficiency). Except for the well known general reduction of species in the Kiel Bay, the distribution pattern of temp erature and salinity exerts only minor influences on the fauna. The dead-shell species as semblage generally reflects the living one. On the whole, they correspond with their composition of species, the zonation of dominant species (middle, emergent Astarte beit) and the distribution and elevation pattern of the maxima of species, species richness and dead-shell quantities. A downslope transport of shells is inferred, among other things, from a stronger presence of (dead-shell) species in the deeper part of the channel. As measured by the lateral displacement of the mollusc maximum belts, the transport amounts 1 to 3 m in vertical distance, rarely up to 7 m at current exposed slopes. These numbers correspond to 30-75 m horizontal distance. Besides currents, extreme wave action is a possible cause. Current induced long-distance transport of dead shells generates increased numbers of species, species presence and dead-shell quantities at the channel bottom, especially behind narrow passes. Hotvever, taking into account the undisturbed distribution of dominant species, the quantity of reworked shells must be insignificant. First indications of the shell production can be derived from the living-dead ratio of shell samples — notwithstanding the varying amounts of carbonate dissolution. For instance, the production of Astarte species is some 13 times smaller than the one of Abra alba and 7 times smaller than that of Cyprina islandica. — A general strong change from living to dead-shell dominance occurs below the pycnocline at 20 to 24 m depth. In the case of a fossil analogue of a Baltic Sea channel, marked shell horizons with a broad species spectrum most probably correspond to a molluscan zone at the level of the mean pycnocline Position.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-09-01
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 10
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