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  • Lake Ohrid, Macedonian/Albanian border; Lz1120; ohrid-exp; PCUWI; Piston corer, UWITEC; Sampling/drilling in lake  (2)
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  • 1
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wagner, Bernd; Lotter, André F; Nowaczyk, Norbert R; Reed, Jane M; Schwalb, Antje; Sulpizio, Roberto; Valsecchi, Verushka; Wessels, Martin; Zanchetta, Giovanni (2009): A 40,000-year record of environmental change from ancient Lake Ohrid (Albania and Macedonia). Journal of Paleolimnology, 41, 407-430, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-008-9234-2
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Description: Lake Ohrid is considered to be of Pliocene origin and is the oldest extant lake in Europe. A 1,075- cm-long sediment core was recovered from the southeastern part of the lake, from a water depth of 105 m. The core was investigated using geophysical, granulometric, biogeochemical, diatom, ostracod, and pollen analyses. Tephrochronology and AMS radiocarbon dating of plant macrofossils reveals that the sediment sequence spans the past ca. 39,500 years and features a hiatus between ca. 14,600 and 9,400 cal. year BP. The Pleistocene sequence indicates relatively stable and cold conditions, with steppe vegetation in the catchment, at least partial winter ice-cover of the lake, and oxygenated bottom waters at the coring site. The Holocene sequence indicates that the catchment vegetation had changed to forest dominated by pine and summer-green oak. Several of the proxies suggest the impact of abrupt climate oscillations such as the 8.2 or 4.0 ka event. The observed changes, however, cannot be related clearly to a change in temperature or humidity. Human impact started about 5,000 cal. year BP and increased significantly during the past 2,400 years. Water column mixing conditions, inflow from subaquatic springs, and human impact are the most important parameters influencing internal lake processes, notably affecting the composition and characteristics of the sediments.
    Keywords: Lake Ohrid, Macedonian/Albanian border; Lz1120; ohrid-exp; PCUWI; Piston corer, UWITEC; Sampling/drilling in lake
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wagner, Bernd; Sulpizio, Roberto; Zanchetta, Giovanni; Wulf, Sabine; Wessels, Martin; Daut, Gerhard; Nowaczyk, Norbert R (2008): The last 40 ka tephrostratigraphic record of Lake Ohrid, Albania and Macedonia: a very distal archive for ash dispersal from Italian volcanoes. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 177, 71-80, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2007.08.018
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Description: A 1075 cm long core (Lz1120) was recovered in the south-eastern part of the Lake Ohrid (Republics of Macedonia and Albania) and sampled for identification of tephra layers. Magnetic susceptibility investigations show rather high magnetic values throughout the core, with peaks unrelated to the occurrence of tephra layers but instead to the relative abundance of detrital magnetic minerals in the sediment. Naked-eye inspection of the core allowed us to identify of two tephra layers, at 896-897 cm and 1070-1075 cm. Laboratory inspection of the grain-size fraction 〉125 µm allowed for the identification of a third cryptotephra at 310-315 cm. Major element analyses on glass shards of the tephra layers at 896-897 cm and 1070-1075 cm show a trachytic composition, and indicate a correlation with the regionally dispersed Y-3 and Y-5 tephra layers, dated at ca 30 and 39 cal ka BP. The cryptotephra at 310-315 cm has a mugearitic- benmoreitic composition, and was correlated with the FL eruption of Mt. Etna, dated at 3370±70 cal yr BP. These ages are in agreement with five 14C AMS measurements carried out on plant remains and macrofossils from the lake sediments at different depths along the core. The recognition of distal tephra from Italian volcanoes allows us to link the Lake Ohrid succession to other archives located in the Mediterranean area and in eastern Europe. The benmoreitic-mugearitic tephra layer at 310-315 cm is the first recognition in the Balkan area of a distal ash deposit from a mid-intensity explosive eruption of Mt. Etna, as far as 600 km from the source.
    Keywords: Lake Ohrid, Macedonian/Albanian border; Lz1120; ohrid-exp; PCUWI; Piston corer, UWITEC; Sampling/drilling in lake
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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