5 results on '"Bernd R. Schöne"'
Search Results
2. Paleoceanography of the Late Cretaceous northwestern Tethys Ocean: Seasonal upwelling or steady thermocline?
- Author
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Eric Otto Walliser and Bernd R. Schöne
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Composite Particles ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Marine and Aquatic Sciences ,Oxygen Isotopes ,Oceanography ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Isotopes ,Climatology ,Cretaceous Period ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Physics ,Stable Isotopes ,Temperature ,Eukaryota ,Geology ,Cretaceous ,Physical Sciences ,Medicine ,Mesozoic Era ,Seasons ,Paleotemperature ,Research Article ,Shallow Water ,Inoceramus ,Bivalves ,Atoms ,Water mass ,Science ,Oceans and Seas ,Paleoenvironments ,Paleoceanography ,Animals ,Paleoclimatology ,Particle Physics ,Ocean Temperature ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Organisms ,Paleontology ,Water ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Geologic Time ,Molluscs ,Tethys Ocean ,biology.organism_classification ,Invertebrates ,Bivalvia ,Waves and shallow water ,Earth Sciences ,Upwelling ,Hydrology ,Zoology ,Thermocline - Abstract
In this study we attempted to assess whether seasonal upwelling or a steady thermocline persisted at the western margin of the Tethys Ocean during the late Turonian-early Coniacian interval. For this scope, we employed novel and published stable oxygen isotope (δ18O) data of various organisms (bivalves, bivalves, brachiopods, fish and belemnites). New seasonally resolved temperature estimates were based on the δ18O record of sequentially sampled inoceramid (Inoceramus sp.) and rudist (Hippurites resectus) shells from the Scaglia Rossa and Gosau deposits of northern Italy and western Austria, respectively. Diagenetic screening was performed using reflected light, cathodoluminescence (CL), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and stable isotope analysis. Originally preserved δ13C and δ18O values were used to characterize the lifestyle of the bivalves and detect vital effects that could have biased oxygen isotope-based temperature reconstructions. Inoceramid δ18O values provide-for the first time-information on temperatures of Tethyan benthic waters, which were, on average, 14.4 ± 0.6 °C and fluctuated seasonally within a range of less than 2 °C. Such a thermal regime is in line with the temperatures postulated for late Turonian boreal water masses and support the existence of a cold water supply from the North Atlantic to the Tethyan bottom. Bottom cooling, however, did not affect the shallow water environment. In fact, the rudist-based temperature estimates for shallow water environment revealed a mean annual range of 11 °C, between 24 and 35 °C (assuming a seasonally constant δ18Ow = 1.0 ‰), which are among the warmest temperatures recorded over the entire Late Cretaceous. Our findings, thus, suggest a strong thermal and food web decoupling between the two environments. The absence of a seasonal vertical homogenization of different water bodies suggests the existence of a steady thermocline and, therefore, contrasts with the presence of an active coastal upwelling in the region as hypothesized by previous authors.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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3. Lombards on the move--an integrative study of the migration period cemetery at Szólád, Hungary
- Author
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Kurt W. Alt, Isabelle Kollig, Bernd R. Schöne, Christiane Müller, Daniel Peters, Wolfgang Müller, Martin Rosner, Uta von Freeden, Sarah Karimnia, Guido Brandt, Nicole Nicklisch, Anne-France Maurer, Balász Mende, Corina Knipper, Tivadar Vida, and Christina Roth
- Subjects
Male ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,Biochemistry ,Haplogroup ,Families ,Sociology ,Kinship ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Cemeteries ,lcsh:Science ,Historical archaeology ,Isotope analysis ,Genetics ,Multidisciplinary ,δ13C ,Human migration ,Biogeochemistry ,Infectious Diseases ,Archaeology ,Female ,Collagen ,Physical Anthropology ,Research Article ,Human Migration ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Bone and Bones ,Strontium Isotopes ,Humans ,Dental Enamel ,Molecular Biology ,Nutrition ,Hungary ,Base Sequence ,Nitrogen Isotopes ,Population Biology ,business.industry ,Ecology and Environmental Sciences ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,History, Medieval ,Health Care ,Geochemistry ,Anthropology ,People and Places ,Period (geology) ,Earth Sciences ,Population Groupings ,lcsh:Q ,business ,Demography - Abstract
In 2005 to 2007 45 skeletons of adults and subadults were excavated at the Lombard period cemetery at Szólád (6th century A.D.), Hungary. Embedded into the well-recorded historical context, the article presents the results obtained by an integrative investigation including anthropological, molecular genetic and isotopic (δ(15)N, δ(13)C, (87)Sr/(86)Sr) analyses. Skeletal stress markers as well as traces of interpersonal violence were found to occur frequently. The mitochondrial DNA profiles revealed a heterogeneous spectrum of lineages that belong to the haplogroups H, U, J, HV, T2, I, and K, which are common in present-day Europe and in the Near East, while N1a and N1b are today quite rare. Evidence of possible direct maternal kinship was identified in only three pairs of individuals. According to enamel strontium isotope ratios, at least 31% of the individuals died at a location other than their birthplace and/or had moved during childhood. Based on the peculiar 87 Sr/86 Sr ratio distribution between females, males, and subadults in comparison to local vegetation and soil samples, we propose a three-phase model of group movement. An initial patrilocal group with narrower male but wider female Sr isotope distribution settled at Szólád, whilst the majority of subadults represented in the cemetery yielded a distinct Sr isotope signature. Owing to the virtual absence of Szólád-born adults in the cemetery, we may conclude that the settlement was abandoned after approx. one generation. Population heterogeneity is furthermore supported by the carbon and nitrogen isotope data. They indicate that a group of high-ranking men had access to larger shares of animal-derived food whilst a few individuals consumed remarkable amounts of millet. The inferred dynamics of the burial community are in agreement with hypotheses of a highly mobile lifestyle during the Migration Period and a short-term occupation of Pannonia by Lombard settlers as conveyed by written sources.
- Published
- 2014
4. Temperature-induced microstructural changes in shells of laboratory-grown Arctica islandica (Bivalvia).
- Author
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Nils Höche, Eric O Walliser, Niels J de Winter, Rob Witbaard, and Bernd R Schöne
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Bivalve shells are increasingly used as archives for high-resolution paleoclimate analyses. However, there is still an urgent need for quantitative temperature proxies that work without knowledge of the water chemistry-as is required for δ18O-based paleothermometry-and can better withstand diagenetic overprint. Recently, microstructural properties have been identified as a potential candidate fulfilling these requirements. So far, only few different microstructure categories (nacreous, prismatic and crossed-lamellar) of some short-lived species have been studied in detail, and in all such studies, the size and/or shape of individual biomineral units was found to increase with water temperature. Here, we explore whether the same applies to properties of the crossed-acicular microstructure in the hinge plate of Arctica islandica, the microstructurally most uniform shell portion in this species. In order to focus solely on the effect of temperature on microstructural properties, this study uses bivalves that grew their shells under controlled temperature conditions (1, 3, 6, 9, 12 and 15°C) in the laboratory. With increasing temperature, the size of the largest individual biomineral units and the relative proportion of shell occupied by the crystalline phase increased. The size of the largest pores, a specific microstructural feature of A. islandica, whose potential role in biomineralization is discussed here, increased exponentially with culturing temperature. This study employs scanning electron microscopy in combination with automated image processing software, including an innovative machine learning-based image segmentation method. The new method greatly facilitates the recognition of microstructural entities and enables a faster and more reliable microstructural analysis than previously used techniques. Results of this study establish the new microstructural temperature proxy in the crossed-acicular microstructures of A. islandica and point to an overarching control mechanism of temperature on the micrometer-scale architecture of bivalve shells across species boundaries.
- Published
- 2021
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5. Ligament, hinge, and shell cross-sections of the Atlantic surfclam (Spisula solidissima): Promising marine environmental archives in NE North America.
- Author
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Pierre Poitevin, Julien Thébault, Bernd R Schöne, Aurélie Jolivet, Pascal Lazure, and Laurent Chauvaud
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The Atlantic surfclam (Spisula solidissima) is a commercially important species in North American waters, undergoing biological and ecological shifts. These are attributed, in part, to environmental modifications in its habitat and driven by climate change. Investigation of shell growth patterns, trace elements, and isotopic compositions require an examination of growth lines and increments preserved in biogenic carbonates. However, growth pattern analysis of S. solidissima is challenging due to multiple disturbance lines caused by environmental stress, erosion in umbonal shell regions, and constraints related to sample size and preparation techniques. The present study proposes an alternative method for describing chronology. First, we analyzed growth patterns using growth lines within the shell and hinge. To validate the assumption of annual periodicity of growth line formation, we analyzed the oxygen isotope composition of the outer shell layer of two specimens (46°54'20"N; 56°18'58"W). Maximum δ18Oshell values occurred at the exact same location as internal growth lines in both specimens, confirming that they are formed annually and that growth ceases during winter. Next, we used growth increment width data to build a standardized growth index (SGI) time-series (25-year chronology) for each of the three parts of the shell. Highly significant correlations were found between the three SGI chronologies (p < 0.001; 0.55 < τ < 0.68) of all specimens. Thus, ligament growth lines provide a new method of determining ontogenetic age and growth rate in S. solidissima. In a biogeographic approach, the shell growth performance of S. solidissima in Saint-Pierre and Miquelon was compared to those in other populations along its distribution range in order to place this population in a temporal and regional context.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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