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  • AGU (American Geophysical Union)  (2)
  • Gutachterpanel Forschungsschiffe  (1)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-04-22
    Description: Cruise M140 combined sampling of plankton, mineral dust and other particles in the water column with recovery of data and samples from long-term observational platforms (sediment traps and dust-collecting buoys). The aim of the cruise was to provide new observations to improve our understanding of the ecology of planktonic foraminifera as important carriers of paleoceanographic proxies and to investigate how mineral dust deposition and the production of marine snow and biogenic particle ballast vary in space and time and how they affect the marine biological pump. To this end, the cruise followed a transect in the central western Atlantic between oligotrophic waters of the subtropical gyre and the productive coastal waters off Mauretania affected by coastal upwelling. To characterise population dynamics, ecology and physiology of planktonic foraminifera, we obtained a series of fourteen vertically resolved plankton net profiles along the cruise track, together with profiles of physical and chemical properties of the ambient water masses. Live foraminifera extracted from these profiles were used to quantify photosynthetic activity of selected species and determine their photoadaptation. High-resolution spatial and temporal sampling of the upper 300 m over 24 hours was carried out at two locations (recovering 41 and 46 vertical profiles), allowing the characterisation of patchiness and daily vertical migration of planktonic foraminifera. Moorings with sediment traps monitoring the seasonal and short-term variability of particle fluxes and buoys monitoring atmospheric dust deposition in the region were successfully recovered in the central Atlantic (M3), south of Cabo Verde (M1) and off Mauretania (CB and CBi) and redeployed in the latter two regions to continue the monitoring. Short-term variability of sizes and types of sinking particles in the water column were characterised in each of the monitoring regions with drifting sediment traps and in the Cape Blanc region off Mauretania also with continuous vertical particle camera profile. All aims of the cruise have been met – the plankton sampling and particle characterization studies were carried out successfully and all moorings and buoys could be recovered and/or redeployed as planned.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Neogloboquadrina pachyderma is the dominant species of planktonic foraminifera found in polar waters and is therefore invaluable for paleoceanographic studies of the high latitudes. However, the geochemistry of this species is complicated due to the development of a thick calcite crust in its final growth stage and at greater depths within the water column. We analyzed the in situ Mg/Ca and δ18O in discrete calcite zones using LA‐ICP‐MS, EPMA and SIMS within modern N. pachyderma shells from the highly dynamic Fram Strait and the seasonally isothermal/isohaline Irminger Sea. Here we compare shell geochemistry to the measured temperature, salinity and δ18Osw in which the shells calcified to better understand the controls on N. pachyderma geochemical heterogeneity. We present a relationship between Mg/Ca and temperature in N. pachyderma lamellar calcite that is significantly different than published equations for shells that contained both crust and lamellar calcite. We also document highly variable SIMS δ18O results (up to a 3.3‰ range in single shells) on plankton tow samples which we hypothesize is due to the granular texture of shell walls. Finally, we document that the δ18O of the crust and lamellar calcite of N. pachyderma from an isothermal/isohaline environment are indistinguishable from each other, indicating that shifts in N. pachyderma δ18O are primarily controlled by changes in environmental temperature and/or salinity rather than differences in the sensitivities of the two calcite types to environmental conditions.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: The climate of the last two millennia was characterised by decadal to multi‐centennial variations which were recorded in terrestrial records and had important societal impacts. The cause of these climatic events is still under debate but changes in the North Atlantic circulation have often been proposed to play an important role. In this review we compile available high‐resolution paleoceanographic datasets from the northern North Atlantic and Nordic Seas. The records are grouped into regions related to modern ocean conditions and their variability is discussed. We additionally discuss our current knowledge from modelling studies, with a specific focus on the dynamical changes that are not well inferred from the proxy records. An illustration is provided through the analysis of two climate model ensembles and an individual simulation of the last millennium. This review thereby provides an up‐to‐date paleo‐perspective on the North Atlantic multidecadal to multi‐centennial ocean variability across the last two millennia.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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