1,172 results on '"Leng, Melanie"'
Search Results
2. Indian Ocean glacial deoxygenation and respired carbon accumulation during mid-late Quaternary ice ages
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Chang, Liao, Hoogakker, Babette A. A., Heslop, David, Zhao, Xiang, Roberts, Andrew P., De Deckker, Patrick, Xue, Pengfei, Pei, Zhaowen, Zeng, Fan, Huang, Rong, Huang, Baoqi, Wang, Shishun, Berndt, Thomas A., Leng, Melanie, Stuut, Jan-Berend W., and Harrison, Richard J.
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- 2023
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3. Sustained year-round oceanographic measurements from Rothera Research Station, Antarctica, 1997–2017
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Venables, Hugh, Meredith, Michael P., Hendry, Katharine R., ten Hoopen, Petra, Peat, Helen, Chapman, Alice, Beaumont, Jennifer, Piper, Rayner, Miller, Andrew J., Mann, Paul, Rossetti, Helen, Massey, Ali, Souster, Terri, Reeves, Simon, Fenton, Mairi, Heiser, Sabrina, Pountney, Sam, Reed, Sarah, Waring, Zoë, Clark, Marlon, Bolton, Emma, Mathews, Ryan, London, Hollie, Clement, Alice, Stuart, Emma, Reichardt, Aurelia, Brandon, Mark, Leng, Melanie, Arrowsmith, Carol, Annett, Amber, Henley, Sian F., and Clarke, Andrew
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- 2023
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4. Paleocene/Eocene carbon feedbacks triggered by volcanic activity.
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Kender, Sev, Bogus, Kara, Pedersen, Gunver K, Dybkjær, Karen, Mather, Tamsin A, Mariani, Erica, Ridgwell, Andy, Riding, James B, Wagner, Thomas, Hesselbo, Stephen P, and Leng, Melanie J
- Abstract
The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) was a period of geologically-rapid carbon release and global warming ~56 million years ago. Although modelling, outcrop and proxy records suggest volcanic carbon release occurred, it has not yet been possible to identify the PETM trigger, or if multiple reservoirs of carbon were involved. Here we report elevated levels of mercury relative to organic carbon-a proxy for volcanism-directly preceding and within the early PETM from two North Sea sedimentary cores, signifying pulsed volcanism from the North Atlantic Igneous Province likely provided the trigger and subsequently sustained elevated CO2. However, the PETM onset coincides with a mercury low, suggesting at least one other carbon reservoir released significant greenhouse gases in response to initial warming. Our results support the existence of 'tipping points' in the Earth system, which can trigger release of additional carbon reservoirs and drive Earth's climate into a hotter state.
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- 2021
5. The contemporary stable isotope hydrology of Lake Suigetsu and surrounding catchment (Japan) and its implications for sediment-derived palaeoclimate records
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Rex, Charlie L., Tyler, Jonathan J., Nagaya, Kazuyoshi, Staff, Richard A., Leng, Melanie J., Yamada, Keitaro, Kitaba, Ikuko, Kitagawa, Junko, Kojima, Hideaki, and Nakagawa, Takeshi
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- 2024
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6. Deep drilling reveals massive shifts in evolutionary dynamics after formation of ancient ecosystem
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Wilke, Thomas, Hauffe, Torsten, Jovanovska, Elena, Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Donders, Timme, Ekschmitt, Klemens, Francke, Alexander, Lacey, Jack H, Levkov, Zlatko, Marshall, Charles R, Neubauer, Thomas A, Silvestro, Daniele, Stelbrink, Björn, Vogel, Hendrik, Albrecht, Christian, Holtvoeth, Jens, Krastel, Sebastian, Leicher, Niklas, Leng, Melanie J, Lindhorst, Katja, Masi, Alessia, Ognjanova-Rumenova, Nadja, Panagiotopoulos, Konstantinos, Reed, Jane M, Sadori, Laura, Tofilovska, Slavica, Van Bocxlaer, Bert, Wagner-Cremer, Friederike, Wesselingh, Frank P, Wolters, Volkmar, Zanchetta, Giovanni, Zhang, Xiaosen, and Wagner, Bernd
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Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Evolutionary Biology ,Earth Sciences ,Geology ,Biodiversity ,Biological Evolution ,Climate Change ,Ecosystem ,Fossils ,Lakes - Abstract
The scarcity of high-resolution empirical data directly tracking diversity over time limits our understanding of speciation and extinction dynamics and the drivers of rate changes. Here, we analyze a continuous species-level fossil record of endemic diatoms from ancient Lake Ohrid, along with environmental and climate indicator time series since lake formation 1.36 million years (Ma) ago. We show that speciation and extinction rates nearly simultaneously decreased in the environmentally dynamic phase after ecosystem formation and stabilized after deep-water conditions established in Lake Ohrid. As the lake deepens, we also see a switch in the macroevolutionary trade-off, resulting in a transition from a volatile assemblage of short-lived endemic species to a stable community of long-lived species. Our results emphasize the importance of the interplay between environmental/climate change, ecosystem stability, and environmental limits to diversity for diversification processes. The study also provides a new understanding of evolutionary dynamics in long-lived ecosystems.
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- 2020
7. Extensive primary production promoted the recovery of the Ediacaran Shuram excursion
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Cañadas, Fuencisla, Papineau, Dominic, Leng, Melanie J., and Li, Chao
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- 2022
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8. Detrital Input Sustains Diatom Production off a Glaciated Arctic Coast
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Ng, Hong Chin, primary, Hendry, Katharine R., additional, Ward, Rachael, additional, Woodward, E. M. S., additional, Leng, Melanie J., additional, Pickering, Rebecca A., additional, and Krause, Jeffrey W., additional
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- 2024
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9. Coupled impacts of sea ice variability and North Pacific atmospheric circulation on Holocene hydroclimate in Arctic Alaska
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Broadman, Ellie, Kaufman, Darrell S., Henderson, Andrew C. G., Malmierca-Vallet, Irene, Leng, Melanie J., and Lacey, Jack H.
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- 2020
10. Human settlement of East Polynesia earlier, incremental, and coincident with prolonged South Pacific drought
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Sear, David A., Allen, Melinda S., Hassall, Jonathan D., Maloney, Ashley E., Langdon, Peter G., Morrison, Alex E., Henderson, Andrew C. G., Mackay, Helen, Croudace, Ian W., Clarke, Charlotte, Sachs, Julian P., Macdonald, Georgiana, Chiverrell, Richard C., Leng, Melanie J., Cisneros-Dozal, L. M., Fonville, Thierry, and Pearson, Emma
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- 2020
11. Orbital pacing and secular evolution of the Early Jurassic carbon cycle
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Storm, Marisa S., Hesselbo, Stephen P., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Ruhl, Micha, Ullmann, Clemens V., Xu, Weimu, Leng, Melanie J., Riding, James B., and Gorbanenko, Olga
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- 2020
12. Dynamics of sediment flux to a bathyal continental margin section through the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum
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Jones, Tom Dunkley, Manners, Hayley R, Hoggett, Murray, Turner, Sandra Kirtland, Westerhold, Thomas, Leng, Melanie J, Pancost, Richard D, Ridgwell, Andy, Alegret, Laia, Duller, Rob, and Grimes, Stephen T
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Earth Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Climate Change Science ,Geology ,Climate Action ,Life on Land ,Paleontology ,Climate change science - Abstract
The response of the Earth system to greenhouse-gas-driven warming is of critical importance for the future trajectory of our planetary environment. Hyperthermal events - past climate transients with global-scale warming significantly above background climate variability - can provide insights into the nature and magnitude of these responses. The largest hyperthermal of the Cenozoic was the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM ∼ 56 Ma). Here we present new high-resolution bulk sediment stable isotope and major element data for the classic PETM section at Zumaia, Spain. With these data we provide a new detailed stratigraphic correlation to other key deep-ocean and terrestrial PETM reference sections. With this new correlation and age model we are able to demonstrate that detrital sediment accumulation rates within the Zumaia continental margin section increased more than 4-fold during the PETM, representing a radical change in regional hydrology that drove dramatic increases in terrestrial-to-marine sediment flux. Most remarkable is that detrital accumulation rates remain high throughout the body of the PETM, and even reach peak values during the recovery phase of the characteristic PETM carbon isotope excursion (CIE). Using a series of Earth system model inversions, driven by the new Zumaia carbon isotope record, we demonstrate that the silicate weathering feedback alone is insufficient to recover the PETM CIE, and that active organic carbon burial is required to match the observed dynamics of the CIE. Further, we demonstrate that the period of maximum organic carbon sequestration coincides with the peak in detrital accumulation rates observed at Zumaia. Based on these results, we hypothesise that orbital-scale variations in subtropical hydro-climates, and their subsequent impact on sediment dynamics, may contribute to the rapid climate and CIE recovery from peak-PETM conditions.
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- 2018
13. South Georgia marine productivity over the past 15 ka and implications for glacial evolution
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Wilkin, Jack T.R., Kender, Sev, Dejardin, Rowan, Allen, Claire S., Peck, Victoria L., Swann, George E.A., McClymont, Erin L., Scourse, James D., Littler, Kate, Leng, Melanie J., Wilkin, Jack T.R., Kender, Sev, Dejardin, Rowan, Allen, Claire S., Peck, Victoria L., Swann, George E.A., McClymont, Erin L., Scourse, James D., Littler, Kate, and Leng, Melanie J.
- Abstract
The subantarctic islands of South Georgia are located in the Southern Ocean, and they may be sensitive to future climate warming. However, due to a lack of well-dated subantarctic palaeoclimate archives, there is still uncertainty about South Georgia's response to past climate change. Here, we reconstruct primary productivity changes and infer Holocene glacial evolution by analysing two marine gravity cores: one near Cumberland Bay on the inner South Georgia shelf (GC673: ca. 9.5 to 0.3 cal. kyr BP) and one offshore of Royal Bay on the mid-shelf (GC666: ca. 15.2 cal. kyr BP to present). We identify three distinct benthic foraminiferal assemblages characterised by the dominance of Miliammina earlandi, Fursenkoina fusiformis, and Cassidulinoides parkerianus that are considered alongside foraminiferal stable isotopes and the organic carbon and biogenic silica accumulation rates of the host sediment. The M. earlandi assemblage is prevalent during intervals of dissolution in GC666 and reduced productivity in GC673. The F. fusiformis assemblage coincides with enhanced productivity in both cores. Our multiproxy analysis provides evidence that the latest Pleistocene to earliest Holocene (ca. 15.2 to 10.5 cal. kyr BP) was a period of high productivity associated with increased glacial meltwater discharge. The mid–late Holocene (ca. 8 to 1 cal. kyr BP), coinciding with a fall in sedimentation rates and lower productivity, was likely a period of reduced glacial extent but with several short-lived episodes of increased productivity from minor glacial readvances. The latest Holocene (from ca. 1 cal. kyr BP) saw an increase in productivity and glacial advance associated with cooling temperatures and increased precipitation which may have been influenced by changes in the southwesterly winds over South Georgia. We interpret the elevated relative abundance of F. fusiformis as a proxy for increased primary productivity which, at proximal site GC673, was forced by terrestrial runoff
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- 2024
14. A global compilation of diatom silica oxygen isotope records from lake sediment – trends and implications for climate reconstruction
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Meister, Philip, Alexandre, Anne, Bailey, Hannah, Barker, Philip, Biskaborn, Boris K., Broadman, Ellie, Cartier, Rosine, Chapligin, Bernhard, Couapel, Martine, Dean, Jonathan R., Diekmann, Bernhard, Harding, Poppy, Henderson, Andrew C. G., Hernandez, Armand, Herzschuh, Ulrike, Kostrova, Svetlana S., Lacey, Jack, Leng, Melanie J., Lücke, Andreas, Mackay, Anson W., Magyari, Eniko Katalin, Narancic, Biljana, Porchier, Cécile, Rosqvist, Gunhild, Shemesh, Aldo, Sonzogni, Corinne, Swann, George E. A., Sylvestre, Florence, Meyer, Hanno, Meister, Philip, Alexandre, Anne, Bailey, Hannah, Barker, Philip, Biskaborn, Boris K., Broadman, Ellie, Cartier, Rosine, Chapligin, Bernhard, Couapel, Martine, Dean, Jonathan R., Diekmann, Bernhard, Harding, Poppy, Henderson, Andrew C. G., Hernandez, Armand, Herzschuh, Ulrike, Kostrova, Svetlana S., Lacey, Jack, Leng, Melanie J., Lücke, Andreas, Mackay, Anson W., Magyari, Eniko Katalin, Narancic, Biljana, Porchier, Cécile, Rosqvist, Gunhild, Shemesh, Aldo, Sonzogni, Corinne, Swann, George E. A., Sylvestre, Florence, and Meyer, Hanno
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- 2024
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15. The >250-kyr Lake Chala record: a tephrostratotype correlating archaeological, palaeoenvironmental and volcanic sequences across eastern Africa
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Martin-Jones, Catherine, Lane, Christine S., Blaauw, Maarten, Mark, Darren F., Verschuren, Dirk, Van der Meeren, Thijs, Van Daele, Maarten, Wynton, Hannah, Blegen, Nick, Kisaka, Mary, Leng, Melanie J., Barker, Philip, Martin-Jones, Catherine, Lane, Christine S., Blaauw, Maarten, Mark, Darren F., Verschuren, Dirk, Van der Meeren, Thijs, Van Daele, Maarten, Wynton, Hannah, Blegen, Nick, Kisaka, Mary, Leng, Melanie J., and Barker, Philip
- Abstract
Regional tephrostratigraphic frameworks connect palaeoclimate, archaeological and volcanological records preserved in soils or lake sediments via shared volcanic ash (tephra) layers. In eastern Africa, tracing of tephra isochrons between geoarchaeological sequences is an established chronostratigraphic approach. However, to date, few long tephra records exist from sites with continuous depositional sequences, such as lake sediments, which offer the potential to connect local and discontinuous sequences at the regional scale. Long lake sediment sequences may also capture more complete eruptive histories of understudied volcanic centres. Here, we present and date the tephrostratigraphic record of a >250,000-year (>250-kyr) continuous sediment sequence extracted from Lake Chala, a crater lake on the Kenya-Tanzania border near Mt Kilimanjaro. Single-grain glass major and minor element analyses of visible and six cryptotephra layers reveal compositions ranging from mafic foidites and basanites to more evolved tephri-phonolites, phonolites, trachytes and a single rhyolite. Of these, nine are correlated to scoria cone eruptions of neighbouring Mt Kilimanjaro or the Chyulu volcanic field ∼60 km to the north; seven are correlated to phonolitic eruptions of Mt Meru, ∼100 km to the west; and four to voluminous trachytic eruptions of Central Kenyan Rift (CKR) volcanoes located ∼350 km to the north. The only rhyolitic tephra layer, a cryptotephra, correlates to the 73.7-ka BP (before present, taken as 1950 CE) Younger Toba Tuff (YTT) from Sumatra. Two of the CKR tephra layers provide direct ties with terrestrial sequences relevant to Middle Stone Age archaeology of the eastern Lake Victoria basin in Kenya. Absolute age estimates obtained by direct 40Ar/39Ar dating of 10 tephra layers are combined with six 210Pb and 162 14C dates covering the last 25-kyr and the well-constrained known age of the YTT to build a first absolute chronology for the full Lake Chala sediment sequence. T
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- 2024
16. Large Igneous Province Control on Ocean Anoxia and Eutrophication in the North Sea at the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum
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Mariani, Erica, Kender, Sev, Hesselbo, Stephen P., Bogus, Kara, Littler, Kate, Riding, James B., Leng, Melanie J., Kemp, Simon J., Dybkjær, Karen, Pedersen, Gunver K., Wagner, Thomas, Dickson, Alexander J., Mariani, Erica, Kender, Sev, Hesselbo, Stephen P., Bogus, Kara, Littler, Kate, Riding, James B., Leng, Melanie J., Kemp, Simon J., Dybkjær, Karen, Pedersen, Gunver K., Wagner, Thomas, and Dickson, Alexander J.
- Abstract
The Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) was a global hyperthermal event ∼56 Ma characterized by massive input of carbon into the ocean–atmosphere system and global warming. A leading hypothesis for its trigger is the emplacement of the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP), with extensive extrusion/intrusion of igneous material into nearby sedimentary basins, forcing local uplift and warming-inducing carbon emissions. It remains unclear if oceanographic changes in the North Sea–Norwegian Sea–Arctic basins, such as anoxia and productivity, were causally linked to local NAIP uplift/activity, and at what time scales these perturbations occurred. To test mechanisms and time scales, we present geochemical proxies (XRF analysis, clay mineralogy, molybdenum isotopes, and pyrite framboid size distribution) in undisrupted marine sediment core E−8X located in the central North Sea. We find evidence for a rapid onset of anoxia/euxinia at the negative carbon isotope excursion from redox proxies, followed by a gradual drawdown of molybdenum/total organic carbon (Mo/TOC) during the PETM main phase indicative of tectonically-restricted basin likely from NAIP uplift. A short-lived increase in Mo, pyrite and TOC occurred during a precursor event associated with a sedimentary mercury pulse indicative of volcanic activity. We suggest thermal uplift and flood basalt volcanism tectonically restricted the North Sea and tipped it into an euxinic state via volcanic emission–oceanographic feedbacks inducing eutrophication. This fine temporal separation of tectonic versus climatic geochemical proxies, combined with pulsed NAIP volcanism, demonstrates that Large Igneous Province emplacements can, at least locally, result in ocean biogeochemical feedbacks operating on relatively short timescales.
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- 2024
17. Detrital input sustains diatom production off a glaciated Arctic coast
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Ng, Hong Chin, Hendry, Katharine R., Ward, Rachael, Woodward, E.M.S., Leng, Melanie J., Pickering, Rebecca A., Krause, Jeffrey W., Ng, Hong Chin, Hendry, Katharine R., Ward, Rachael, Woodward, E.M.S., Leng, Melanie J., Pickering, Rebecca A., and Krause, Jeffrey W.
- Abstract
In the Arctic and subarctic oceans, the relatively low supply of silicon (compared to other nutrients) can make it limiting for the growth of diatoms, a fundamental building block of the oceanic food web. Glaciers release large quantities of dissolved silicon and dissolvable solid amorphous silica phases into high-latitude estuaries (fjords), but the role of these glacially-derived silica phases in sustaining diatom growth in the coastal and open-water sectors remains unknown. Here we show how stable and radiogenic silicon isotopes can be used together to address this question, using southwest Greenland as a case study. This study finds enhanced levels of detrital (i.e., mineral) amorphous silica, likely glacially-sourced, sustaining a large portion of diatom growth observed off the coast, revealing how the phytoplankton community can function during high-meltwater periods.
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- 2024
18. Hydroclimate changes in eastern Africa over the past 200,000 years may have influenced early human dispersal
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Schaebitz, Frank, Asrat, Asfawossen, Lamb, Henry F., Cohen, Andrew S., Foerster, Verena, Duesing, Walter, Kaboth-Bahr, Stefanie, Opitz, Stephan, Viehberg, Finn A., Vogelsang, Ralf, Dean, Jonathan, Leng, Melanie J., Junginger, Annett, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Chapot, Melissa S., Deino, Alan, Lane, Christine S., Roberts, Helen M., Vidal, Céline, Tiedemann, Ralph, and Trauth, Martin H.
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- 2021
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19. Publisher Correction: Ventilation of the abyss in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
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Akhoudas, Camille Hayatte, Sallée, Jean-Baptiste, Haumann, F. Alexander, Meredith, Michael P., Garabato, Alberto Naveira, Reverdin, Gilles, Jullion, Loïc, Aloisi, Giovanni, Benetti, Marion, Leng, Melanie J., and Arrowsmith, Carol
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- 2021
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20. Ventilation of the abyss in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean
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Akhoudas, Camille Hayatte, Sallée, Jean-Baptiste, Haumann, F. Alexander, Meredith, Michael P., Garabato, Alberto Naveira, Reverdin, Gilles, Jullion, Loïc, Aloisi, Giovanni, Benetti, Marion, Leng, Melanie J., and Arrowsmith, Carol
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- 2021
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21. Dipole patterns in tropical precipitation were pervasive across landmasses throughout Marine Isotope Stage 5
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Nilsson-Kerr, Katrina, Anand, Pallavi, Holden, Philip B., Clemens, Steven C., and Leng, Melanie J.
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- 2021
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22. Seasonal scheduling of shellfish collection in the Middle and Later Stone Ages of southern Africa
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Loftus, Emma, Lee-Thorp, Julia, Leng, Melanie, Marean, Curtis, and Sealy, Judith
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- 2019
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23. Mediterranean winter rainfall in phase with African monsoons during the past 1.36 million years
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Wagner, Bernd, Vogel, Hendrik, Francke, Alexander, Friedrich, Tobias, Donders, Timme, Lacey, Jack H., and Leng, Melanie J.
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Africa -- Environmental aspects ,Mediterranean region -- Environmental aspects ,Paleoclimatology -- Analysis ,Precipitation variability -- Analysis ,Monsoons -- Analysis ,Winter -- Environmental aspects -- Natural history ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Mediterranean climates are characterized by strong seasonal contrasts between dry summers and wet winters. Changes in winter rainfall are critical for regional socioeconomic development, but are difficult to simulate accurately.sup.1 and reconstruct on Quaternary timescales. This is partly because regional hydroclimate records that cover multiple glacial-interglacial cycles.sup.2,3 with different orbital geometries, global ice volume and atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations are scarce. Moreover, the underlying mechanisms of change and their persistence remain unexplored. Here we show that, over the past 1.36 million years, wet winters in the northcentral Mediterranean tend to occur with high contrasts in local, seasonal insolation and a vigorous African summer monsoon. Our proxy time series from Lake Ohrid on the Balkan Peninsula, together with a 784,000-year transient climate model hindcast, suggest that increased sea surface temperatures amplify local cyclone development and refuel North Atlantic low-pressure systems that enter the Mediterranean during phases of low continental ice volume and high concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases. A comparison with modern reanalysis data shows that current drivers of the amount of rainfall in the Mediterranean share some similarities to those that drive the reconstructed increases in precipitation. Our data cover multiple insolation maxima and are therefore an important benchmark for testing climate model performance. Comparisons between past regional drivers of precipitation extremes found time series data from Lake Ohrid and modern climate models of the Mediterranean may help to reduce simulation uncertainties in predictions of the Mediterranean climate., Author(s): Bernd Wagner [sup.1] , Hendrik Vogel [sup.2] , Alexander Francke [sup.1] [sup.3] , Tobias Friedrich [sup.4] , Timme Donders [sup.5] , Jack H. Lacey [sup.6] , Melanie J. Leng [...]
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- 2019
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24. Vertical distribution and diurnal migration of atlantid heteropods
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Wall-Palmer, Deborah, Metcalfe, Brett, Leng, Melanie J., Sloane, Hilary J., Ganssen, Gerald, Vinayachandran, P. N., and Smart, Christopher W.
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- 2018
25. Initial results of coring at Prees, Cheshire Basin, UK (ICDP JET project): towards an integrated stratigraphy, timescale, and Earth system understanding for the Early Jurassic
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Hesselbo, Stephen P., primary, Al-Suwaidi, Aisha, additional, Baker, Sarah J., additional, Ballabio, Giorgia, additional, Belcher, Claire M., additional, Bond, Andrew, additional, Boomer, Ian, additional, Bos, Remco, additional, Bjerrum, Christian J., additional, Bogus, Kara, additional, Boyle, Richard, additional, Browning, James V., additional, Butcher, Alan R., additional, Condon, Daniel J., additional, Copestake, Philip, additional, Daines, Stuart, additional, Dalby, Christopher, additional, Damaschke, Magret, additional, Damborenea, Susana E., additional, Deconinck, Jean-Francois, additional, Dickson, Alexander J., additional, Fendley, Isabel M., additional, Fox, Calum P., additional, Fraguas, Angela, additional, Frieling, Joost, additional, Gibson, Thomas A., additional, He, Tianchen, additional, Hickey, Kat, additional, Hinnov, Linda A., additional, Hollaar, Teuntje P., additional, Huang, Chunju, additional, Hudson, Alexander J. L., additional, Jenkyns, Hugh C., additional, Idiz, Erdem, additional, Jiang, Mengjie, additional, Krijgsman, Wout, additional, Korte, Christoph, additional, Leng, Melanie J., additional, Lenton, Timothy M., additional, Leu, Katharina, additional, Little, Crispin T. S., additional, MacNiocaill, Conall, additional, Manceñido, Miguel O., additional, Mather, Tamsin A., additional, Mattioli, Emanuela, additional, Miller, Kenneth G., additional, Newton, Robert J., additional, Page, Kevin N., additional, Pálfy, József, additional, Pieńkowski, Gregory, additional, Porter, Richard J., additional, Poulton, Simon W., additional, Riccardi, Alberto C., additional, Riding, James B., additional, Roper, Ailsa, additional, Ruhl, Micha, additional, Silva, Ricardo L., additional, Storm, Marisa S., additional, Suan, Guillaume, additional, Szűcs, Dominika, additional, Thibault, Nicolas, additional, Uchman, Alfred, additional, Stanley, James N., additional, Ullmann, Clemens V., additional, van de Schootbrugge, Bas, additional, Vickers, Madeleine L., additional, Wadas, Sonja, additional, Whiteside, Jessica H., additional, Wignall, Paul B., additional, Wonik, Thomas, additional, Xu, Weimu, additional, Zeeden, Christian, additional, and Zhao, Ke, additional
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- 2023
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26. Stable isotope signatures reveal small-scale spatial separation in populations of European sea bass
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Cambiè, Giulia, Kaiser, Michel J., Marriott, Andrew L., Fox, Jennifer, Lambert, Gwladys, Hiddink, Jan G., Overy, Thomas, Bennet, Sarah A., Leng, Melanie J., and McCarthy, Ian D.
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- 2016
27. Initial results of coring at Prees, Cheshire Basin, UK (ICDP JET project): Towards an integrated stratigraphy, timescale, and Earth system understanding for the Early Jurassic
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Hesselbo, Stephen P., Al-Suwaidi, Aisha, Baker, Sarah J., Ballabio, Giorgia, Belcher, Claire M., Bond, Andrew, Boomer, Ian, Bos, Remco, Bjerrum, Christian J., Bogus, Kara, Boyle, Richard, Browning, James V., Butcher, Alan R., Condon, Daniel J., Copestake, Philip, Daines, Stuart, Dalby, Christopher, Damaschke, Magret, Damborenea, Susana E., Deconinck, Jean Francois, Dickson, Alexander J., Fendley, Isabel M., Fox, Calum P., Fraguas, Angela, Frieling, Joost, Gibson, Thomas A., He, Tianchen, Hickey, Kat, Hinnov, Linda A., Hollaar, Teuntje P., Huang, Chunju, Hudson, Alexander J.L., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Idiz, Erdem, Jiang, Mengjie, Krijgsman, Wout, Korte, Christoph, Leng, Melanie J., Lenton, Timothy M., Leu, Katharina, Little, Crispin T.S., Macniocaill, Conall, Manceñido, Miguel O., Mather, Tamsin A., Mattioli, Emanuela, Miller, Kenneth G., Newton, Robert J., Page, Kevin N., Pálfy, József, Pieńkowski, Gregory, Porter, Richard J., Poulton, Simon W., Riccardi, Alberto C., Riding, James B., Roper, Ailsa, Ruhl, Micha, Silva, Ricardo L., Storm, Marisa S., Suan, Guillaume, Szűcs, Dominika, Thibault, Nicolas, Uchman, Alfred, Stanley, James N., Ullmann, Clemens V., Van De Schootbrugge, Bas, Vickers, Madeleine L., Wadas, Sonja, Whiteside, Jessica H., Wignall, Paul B., Wonik, Thomas, Xu, Weimu, Zeeden, Christian, Zhao, Ke, Hesselbo, Stephen P., Al-Suwaidi, Aisha, Baker, Sarah J., Ballabio, Giorgia, Belcher, Claire M., Bond, Andrew, Boomer, Ian, Bos, Remco, Bjerrum, Christian J., Bogus, Kara, Boyle, Richard, Browning, James V., Butcher, Alan R., Condon, Daniel J., Copestake, Philip, Daines, Stuart, Dalby, Christopher, Damaschke, Magret, Damborenea, Susana E., Deconinck, Jean Francois, Dickson, Alexander J., Fendley, Isabel M., Fox, Calum P., Fraguas, Angela, Frieling, Joost, Gibson, Thomas A., He, Tianchen, Hickey, Kat, Hinnov, Linda A., Hollaar, Teuntje P., Huang, Chunju, Hudson, Alexander J.L., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Idiz, Erdem, Jiang, Mengjie, Krijgsman, Wout, Korte, Christoph, Leng, Melanie J., Lenton, Timothy M., Leu, Katharina, Little, Crispin T.S., Macniocaill, Conall, Manceñido, Miguel O., Mather, Tamsin A., Mattioli, Emanuela, Miller, Kenneth G., Newton, Robert J., Page, Kevin N., Pálfy, József, Pieńkowski, Gregory, Porter, Richard J., Poulton, Simon W., Riccardi, Alberto C., Riding, James B., Roper, Ailsa, Ruhl, Micha, Silva, Ricardo L., Storm, Marisa S., Suan, Guillaume, Szűcs, Dominika, Thibault, Nicolas, Uchman, Alfred, Stanley, James N., Ullmann, Clemens V., Van De Schootbrugge, Bas, Vickers, Madeleine L., Wadas, Sonja, Whiteside, Jessica H., Wignall, Paul B., Wonik, Thomas, Xu, Weimu, Zeeden, Christian, and Zhao, Ke
- Abstract
Drilling for the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) Early Jurassic Earth System and Timescale project (JET) was undertaken between October 2020 and January 2021. The drill site is situated in a small-scale synformal basin of the latest Triassic to Early Jurassic age that formed above the major Permian-Triassic half-graben system of the Cheshire Basin. The borehole is located to recover an expanded and complete succession to complement the legacy core from the Llanbedr (Mochras Farm) borehole drilled through 1967-1969 on the edge of the Cardigan Bay Basin, North Wales. The overall aim of the project is to construct an astronomically calibrated integrated timescale for the Early Jurassic and to provide insights into the operation of the Early Jurassic Earth system. Core of Quaternary age cover and Early Jurassic mudstone was obtained from two shallow partially cored geotechnical holes (Prees 2A to 32.2g¯m below surface (mg¯b.s.) and Prees 2B to 37.0g¯mg¯b.s.) together with Early Jurassic and Late Triassic mudstone from the principal hole, Prees 2C, which was cored from 32.92 to 651.32g¯m (corrected core depth scale). Core recovery was 99.7g¯% for Prees 2C. The ages of the recovered stratigraphy range from the Late Triassic (probably Rhaetian) to the Early Jurassic, Early Pliensbachian (Ibex Ammonoid Chronozone). All ammonoid chronozones have been identified for the drilled Early Jurassic strata. The full lithological succession comprises the Branscombe Mudstone and Blue Anchor formations of the Mercia Mudstone Group, the Westbury and Lilstock formations of the Penarth Group, and the Redcar Mudstone Formation of the Lias Group. A distinct interval of siltstone is recognized within the Late Sinemurian of the Redcar Mudstone Formation, and the name "Prees Siltstone Member"is proposed. Depositional environments range from playa lake in the Late Triassic to distal offshore marine in the Early Jurassic. Initial datasets compiled from the core in
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- 2023
28. The geodynamic and limnological evolution of Balkan Lake Ohrid, possibly the oldest extant lake in Europe
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Wagner, Bernd, Tauber, Paul, Francke, Alexander, Leicher, Niklas, Binnie, Steven A., Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Jovanovska, Elena, Just, Janna, Lacey, Jack H., Levkov, Zlatko, Lindhorst, Katja, Kouli, Katerina, Krastel, Sebastian, Panagiotopoulos, Konstantinos, Ulfers, Arne, Zaova, Dušica, Donders, Timme H., Grazhdani, Andon, Koutsodendris, Andreas, Leng, Melanie J., Sadori, Laura, Scheinert, Mirko, Vogel, Hendrik, Wonik, Thomas, Zanchetta, Giovanni, Wilke, Thomas, Wagner, Bernd, Tauber, Paul, Francke, Alexander, Leicher, Niklas, Binnie, Steven A., Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Jovanovska, Elena, Just, Janna, Lacey, Jack H., Levkov, Zlatko, Lindhorst, Katja, Kouli, Katerina, Krastel, Sebastian, Panagiotopoulos, Konstantinos, Ulfers, Arne, Zaova, Dušica, Donders, Timme H., Grazhdani, Andon, Koutsodendris, Andreas, Leng, Melanie J., Sadori, Laura, Scheinert, Mirko, Vogel, Hendrik, Wonik, Thomas, Zanchetta, Giovanni, and Wilke, Thomas
- Abstract
Studies of the upper 447 m of the DEEP site sediment succession from central Lake Ohrid, Balkan Peninsula, North Macedonia and Albania provided important insights into the regional climate history and evolutionary dynamics since permanent lacustrine conditions established at 1.36 million years ago (Ma). This paper focuses on the entire 584-m-long DEEP sediment succession and a comparison to a 197-m-long sediment succession from the Pestani site ~5 km to the east in the lake, where drilling ended close to the bedrock, to unravel the earliest history of Lake Ohrid and its basin development. 26Al/10Be dating of clasts from the base of the DEEP sediment succession implies that the sedimentation in the modern basin started at c. 2 Ma. Geophysical, sedimentological and micropalaeontological data allow for chronological information to be transposed from the DEEP to the Pestani succession. Fluvial conditions, slack water conditions, peat formation and/or complete desiccation prevailed at the DEEP and Pestani sites until 1.36 and 1.21 Ma, respectively, before a larger lake extended over both sites. Activation of karst aquifers to the east probably by tectonic activity and a potential existence of neighbouring Lake Prespa supported filling of Lake Ohrid. The lake deepened gradually, with a relatively constant vertical displacement rate of ~0.2 mm a−1 between the central and the eastern lateral basin and with greater water depth presumably during interglacial periods. Although the dynamic environment characterized by local processes and the fragmentary chronology of the basal sediment successions from both sites hamper palaeoclimatic significance prior to the existence of a larger lake, the new data provide an unprecedented and detailed picture of the geodynamic evolution of the basin and lake that is Europe’s presumed oldest extant freshwater lake.
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- 2023
29. The geodynamic and limnological evolution of Balkan Lake Ohrid, possibly the oldest extant lake in Europe
- Author
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Palaeo-ecologie, Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change, Wagner, Bernd, Tauber, Paul, Francke, Alexander, Leicher, Niklas, Binnie, Steven A., Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Jovanovska, Elena, Just, Janna, Lacey, Jack H., Levkov, Zlatko, Lindhorst, Katja, Kouli, Katerina, Krastel, Sebastian, Panagiotopoulos, Konstantinos, Ulfers, Arne, Zaova, Dušica, Donders, Timme H., Grazhdani, Andon, Koutsodendris, Andreas, Leng, Melanie J., Sadori, Laura, Scheinert, Mirko, Vogel, Hendrik, Wonik, Thomas, Zanchetta, Giovanni, Wilke, Thomas, Palaeo-ecologie, Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change, Wagner, Bernd, Tauber, Paul, Francke, Alexander, Leicher, Niklas, Binnie, Steven A., Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, Jovanovska, Elena, Just, Janna, Lacey, Jack H., Levkov, Zlatko, Lindhorst, Katja, Kouli, Katerina, Krastel, Sebastian, Panagiotopoulos, Konstantinos, Ulfers, Arne, Zaova, Dušica, Donders, Timme H., Grazhdani, Andon, Koutsodendris, Andreas, Leng, Melanie J., Sadori, Laura, Scheinert, Mirko, Vogel, Hendrik, Wonik, Thomas, Zanchetta, Giovanni, and Wilke, Thomas
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- 2023
30. Initial results of coring at Prees, Cheshire Basin, UK (ICDP JET project): Towards an integrated stratigraphy, timescale, and Earth system understanding for the Early Jurassic
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Marine palynology and palaeoceanography, Paleomagnetism, Marine Palynology, Hesselbo, Stephen P., Al-Suwaidi, Aisha, Baker, Sarah J., Ballabio, Giorgia, Belcher, Claire M., Bond, Andrew, Boomer, Ian, Bos, Remco, Bjerrum, Christian J., Bogus, Kara, Boyle, Richard, Browning, James V., Butcher, Alan R., Condon, Daniel J., Copestake, Philip, Daines, Stuart, Dalby, Christopher, Damaschke, Magret, Damborenea, Susana E., Deconinck, Jean Francois, Dickson, Alexander J., Fendley, Isabel M., Fox, Calum P., Fraguas, Angela, Frieling, Joost, Gibson, Thomas A., He, Tianchen, Hickey, Kat, Hinnov, Linda A., Hollaar, Teuntje P., Huang, Chunju, Hudson, Alexander J.L., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Idiz, Erdem, Jiang, Mengjie, Krijgsman, Wout, Korte, Christoph, Leng, Melanie J., Lenton, Timothy M., Leu, Katharina, Little, Crispin T.S., Macniocaill, Conall, Manceñido, Miguel O., Mather, Tamsin A., Mattioli, Emanuela, Miller, Kenneth G., Newton, Robert J., Page, Kevin N., Pálfy, József, Pieńkowski, Gregory, Porter, Richard J., Poulton, Simon W., Riccardi, Alberto C., Riding, James B., Roper, Ailsa, Ruhl, Micha, Silva, Ricardo L., Storm, Marisa S., Suan, Guillaume, Szűcs, Dominika, Thibault, Nicolas, Uchman, Alfred, Stanley, James N., Ullmann, Clemens V., Van De Schootbrugge, Bas, Vickers, Madeleine L., Wadas, Sonja, Whiteside, Jessica H., Wignall, Paul B., Wonik, Thomas, Xu, Weimu, Zeeden, Christian, Zhao, Ke, Marine palynology and palaeoceanography, Paleomagnetism, Marine Palynology, Hesselbo, Stephen P., Al-Suwaidi, Aisha, Baker, Sarah J., Ballabio, Giorgia, Belcher, Claire M., Bond, Andrew, Boomer, Ian, Bos, Remco, Bjerrum, Christian J., Bogus, Kara, Boyle, Richard, Browning, James V., Butcher, Alan R., Condon, Daniel J., Copestake, Philip, Daines, Stuart, Dalby, Christopher, Damaschke, Magret, Damborenea, Susana E., Deconinck, Jean Francois, Dickson, Alexander J., Fendley, Isabel M., Fox, Calum P., Fraguas, Angela, Frieling, Joost, Gibson, Thomas A., He, Tianchen, Hickey, Kat, Hinnov, Linda A., Hollaar, Teuntje P., Huang, Chunju, Hudson, Alexander J.L., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Idiz, Erdem, Jiang, Mengjie, Krijgsman, Wout, Korte, Christoph, Leng, Melanie J., Lenton, Timothy M., Leu, Katharina, Little, Crispin T.S., Macniocaill, Conall, Manceñido, Miguel O., Mather, Tamsin A., Mattioli, Emanuela, Miller, Kenneth G., Newton, Robert J., Page, Kevin N., Pálfy, József, Pieńkowski, Gregory, Porter, Richard J., Poulton, Simon W., Riccardi, Alberto C., Riding, James B., Roper, Ailsa, Ruhl, Micha, Silva, Ricardo L., Storm, Marisa S., Suan, Guillaume, Szűcs, Dominika, Thibault, Nicolas, Uchman, Alfred, Stanley, James N., Ullmann, Clemens V., Van De Schootbrugge, Bas, Vickers, Madeleine L., Wadas, Sonja, Whiteside, Jessica H., Wignall, Paul B., Wonik, Thomas, Xu, Weimu, Zeeden, Christian, and Zhao, Ke
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- 2023
31. Nitrate pollution in the Red River Delta
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Panizzo, Virginia, Thu Nga, Do, Anh Duc, Trinh, Smith, Andrew, Leng, Melanie, McGowan, Suzanne, Thu Trang Ngo, Thi, Nguyet Minh Luu, Thi, Matiatos, Ioannis, Thao Ta, Thi, Panizzo, Virginia, Thu Nga, Do, Anh Duc, Trinh, Smith, Andrew, Leng, Melanie, McGowan, Suzanne, Thu Trang Ngo, Thi, Nguyet Minh Luu, Thi, Matiatos, Ioannis, and Thao Ta, Thi
- Abstract
The Red River Delta is home to the capital of Vietnam, Hanoi. The large population relies on the catchment for the provision of primary water resources for its industry and agriculture. This critical reserve is rapidly becoming impacted by anthropogenic activities and we demonstrate how nitrate pollution, in particular, is influencing the health of the Red River Delta.
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- 2023
32. Terrestrial carbon isotope stratigraphy of the Eocene–Oligocene transition, Petrockstowe and Bovey basins, Devon, UK
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Chaanda, Mohammed S., Grimes, Stephen T., Jerrett, Rhodri M., Anderson, Mark, Leng, Melanie J., Fitzpatrick, Meriel E., Price, Gregory D., Chaanda, Mohammed S., Grimes, Stephen T., Jerrett, Rhodri M., Anderson, Mark, Leng, Melanie J., Fitzpatrick, Meriel E., and Price, Gregory D.
- Abstract
The terrestrial sediments of the Petrockstowe and Bovey basins in Devon, UK were examined. Their age is considered to be Eocene and Oligocene. The sediments (kaolinitic clays, silts, sands, gravels, and lignites) from both basins were analysed for carbon isotopes of organic material, in conjunction with total organic carbon and palynological analyses used to unravel the type of and provenance of organic matter present. Within the Petrockstowe Basin, the lowermost interval examined shows a palynological distribution dominated by phytoclasts, whilst the upper part of the core is dominated by higher concentrations of palynomorphs (up to 90 %) and an increase in amorphous organic matter consistent (up to 37 %) with a change from sand-filled fluvial channels followed by an ephemeral lake or lake margin setting. Our palynological data from the South John Acres Lane Quarry section, Bovey Basin, show that within the lignites palynomorphs are high again (up to 95 %) consistent with them representing more ephemeral lakes or lake margins periodically exposed with mires. Our palynological data set further allows us to determine that isotope trends are not overly determined by the source of carbon in the basins. Our study suggests that the observed patterns were primarily produced by variations of the isotope ratios of terrestrial atmospheric carbon reservoirs. Even with our less than well constrained biostratigraphical control, the data indicate that the carbon isotope excursions seen in the Eocene and Oligocene could be associated with several transient carbon isotopic shifts (associated with the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum). Our findings therefore appear to lend support to the surface ocean and atmosphere behaving as coupled reservoirs at this time.
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- 2023
33. Multi-proxy record of ocean-climate variability during the last two millennia on the Mackenzie Shelf, Beaufort Sea
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Gemery, Laura, Cronin, Thomas M., Cooper, Lee W., Roberts, Lucy R., Keigwin, Lloyd D., Addison, Jason A., Leng, Melanie J., Lin, Peigen, Magen, Cedric, Marot, Marci E., Schwartz, Valerie, Gemery, Laura, Cronin, Thomas M., Cooper, Lee W., Roberts, Lucy R., Keigwin, Lloyd D., Addison, Jason A., Leng, Melanie J., Lin, Peigen, Magen, Cedric, Marot, Marci E., and Schwartz, Valerie
- Abstract
A 2,000 year-long oceanographic history, in sub-centennial resolution, from a Canadian Beaufort Sea continental shelf site (60meters water depth) near the Mackenzie River outlet is reconstructed from ostracode and foraminifera faunal assemblages, shell stable isotopes (delta 18O, delta 13C) and sediment biogenic silica. The chronology of three sediment cores making up the composite section was established using 137Cs and 210Pb dating for the most recent 150 years and combined with linear interpolation of radiocarbon dates from bivalve shells and foraminifera tests.Continuous centimeter-sampling of the multicore and high-resolution sampling of a gravity and piston core yielded a time-averaged faunal record of every approximately 40 years from 0 to 1850 CE and every approximately 24 years from 1850 to 2013 CE. Proxy records were consistent with temperature oscillations and related changes in organic carbon cycling associated with the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) and the Little Ice Age (LIA). Abundance changes in dominant microfossil species, such as the ostracode Paracyprideis pseudopunctillata and agglutinated foraminifers Spiroplectammina biformis and S. earlandi, are used as indicators of less saline, and possibly corrosive/turbid bottom conditions associated with the MCA (approximately 800 to 1200 CE) and the most recent approximately 60 years (1950–2013). During these periods, pronounced fluctuations in these species suggest that prolonged seasonal sea-ice melting, changes in riverine inputs and sediment dynamics affected the benthic environment. Taxa analyzed for stable oxygen isotope composition of carbonates show the lowest delta 18O values during intervals within the MCA and the highest during the late LIA, which is consistent with a 1 degree to 2 degree C cooling of bottom waters. Faunal and isotopic changes during the cooler LIA (1300 to 1850 CE) are most apparent at approximately 1500 to 1850 CE and are particularly pronounced during 1850 to approximat
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- 2023
34. Finale: Impact of the ORCHESTRA/ENCORE programmes on Southern Ocean heat and carbon understanding
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Meijers, Andrew J.S., Meredith, Michael P., Shuckburgh, Emily F., Kent, Elizabeth C., Munday, David R., Firing, Yvonne L., King, Brian, Smyth, Timothy J., Leng, Melanie J., Nurser, A.J. George, Hewitt, Helene T., Abrahamsen, E. Povl, Weiss, Alexandra, Yang, Mingxi, Bell, Thomas G., Brearley, J. Alexander, Boland, Emma J.D., Jones, Daniel C., Josey, Simon A., Owen, Robyn P., Grist, Jeremy P., Blaker, Adam T., Biri, Stavroula, Yelland, Margaret J., Pimm, Ciara, Zhou, Shenjie, Harle, James, Cornes, Richard C., Meijers, Andrew J.S., Meredith, Michael P., Shuckburgh, Emily F., Kent, Elizabeth C., Munday, David R., Firing, Yvonne L., King, Brian, Smyth, Timothy J., Leng, Melanie J., Nurser, A.J. George, Hewitt, Helene T., Abrahamsen, E. Povl, Weiss, Alexandra, Yang, Mingxi, Bell, Thomas G., Brearley, J. Alexander, Boland, Emma J.D., Jones, Daniel C., Josey, Simon A., Owen, Robyn P., Grist, Jeremy P., Blaker, Adam T., Biri, Stavroula, Yelland, Margaret J., Pimm, Ciara, Zhou, Shenjie, Harle, James, and Cornes, Richard C.
- Abstract
The 5-year Ocean Regulation of Climate by Heat and Carbon Sequestration and Transports (ORCHESTRA) programme and its 1-year extension ENCORE (ENCORE is the National Capability ORCHESTRA Extension) was an approximately 11-million-pound programme involving seven UK research centres that finished in March 2022. The project sought to radically improve our ability to measure, understand and predict the exchange, storage and export of heat and carbon by the Southern Ocean. It achieved this through a series of milestone observational campaigns in combination with model development and analysis. Twelve cruises in the Weddell Sea and South Atlantic were undertaken, along with mooring, glider and profiler deployments and aircraft missions, all contributing to measurements of internal ocean and air–sea heat and carbon fluxes. Numerous forward and adjoint numerical experiments were developed and supported by the analysis of coupled climate models. The programme has resulted in over 100 peer-reviewed publications to date as well as significant impacts on climate assessments and policy and science coordination groups. Here, we summarize the research highlights of the programme and assess the progress achieved by ORCHESTRA/ENCORE and the questions it raises for the future. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Heat and carbon uptake in the Southern Ocean: the state of the art and future priorities’.
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- 2023
35. Tracing the impacts of recent rapid sea ice changes and the A68 megaberg on the surface freshwater balance of the Weddell and Scotia Seas
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Meredith, Michael P., Abrahamsen, E. Povl, Haumann, F. Alexander, Leng, Melanie J., Arrowsmith, Carol, Barham, Mark, Firing, Yvonne L., King, Brian A., Brown, Peter, Brearley, J. Alexander, Meijers, Andrew J.S., Sallée, Jean-Baptiste, Akhoudas, Camille, Tarling, Geraint A., Meredith, Michael P., Abrahamsen, E. Povl, Haumann, F. Alexander, Leng, Melanie J., Arrowsmith, Carol, Barham, Mark, Firing, Yvonne L., King, Brian A., Brown, Peter, Brearley, J. Alexander, Meijers, Andrew J.S., Sallée, Jean-Baptiste, Akhoudas, Camille, and Tarling, Geraint A.
- Abstract
The Southern Ocean upper-layer freshwater balance exerts a global climatic influence by modulating density stratification and biological productivity, and hence the exchange of heat and carbon between the atmosphere and the ocean interior. It is thus important to understand and quantify the time-varying freshwater inputs, which is challenging from measurements of salinity alone. Here we use seawater oxygen isotopes from samples collected between 2016 and 2021 along a transect spanning the Scotia and northern Weddell Seas to separate the freshwater contributions from sea ice and meteoric sources. The unprecedented retreat of sea ice in 2016 is evidenced as a strong increase in sea ice melt across the northern Weddell Sea, with surface values increasing approximately two percentage points between 2016 and 2018 and column inventories increasing approximately 1 to 2 m. Surface meteoric water concentrations exceeded 4% in early 2021 close to South Georgia due to meltwater from the A68 megaberg; smaller icebergs may influence meteoric water at other times also. Both these inputs highlight the importance of a changing cryosphere for upper-ocean freshening; potential future sea ice retreats and increases in iceberg calving would enhance the impacts of these freshwater sources on the ocean and climate. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Heat and carbon uptake in the Southern Ocean: the state of the art and future priorities’.
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- 2023
36. Water quality in rivers of the Red River Delta
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McGowan, Suzanne, Thu Nga, Do, Anh Duo, Trinh, Panizzo, Virginia, Salgado, Jorge, Roberts, Lucy, Leng, Melanie, Smith, Andi, Vane, Christopher, McGowan, Suzanne, Thu Nga, Do, Anh Duo, Trinh, Panizzo, Virginia, Salgado, Jorge, Roberts, Lucy, Leng, Melanie, Smith, Andi, and Vane, Christopher
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- 2023
37. Ecosystem deterioration in the middle Yangtze floodplain lakes over the last two centuries: evidence from sedimentary pigments
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Zeng, Linghan, Swann, George E.A., Leng, Melanie J., Chen, Xu, Ji, Jing, Huang, Xianyu, McGowan, Suzanne, Zeng, Linghan, Swann, George E.A., Leng, Melanie J., Chen, Xu, Ji, Jing, Huang, Xianyu, and McGowan, Suzanne
- Abstract
Water quality of floodplain lakes in the Yangtze region which supports ca. 450 million people is being severely compromised by nutrient pollution, climate change and dam installation resulting from intensive socio-economic development. However, due to a lack of long-term monitoring data, the onset and causes of ecosystem degradation are unclear. Here, we used chlorophyll and carotenoid pigments in dated sediment cores from six lakes spanning the region to reconstruct changes in algae and cyanobacterial HAB (harmful algal bloom) taxa alongside sedimentary nutrient flux measurements and historical archives. Sedimentary N fluxes are linked to changes in agriculture, while urbanization has had greater influences on P fluxes. Over the last 70 years algal and N2-fixing HAB pigments increased markedly in lakes (Luhu, Wanghu) that are strongly influenced by urbanization/industrialization. Algal assemblages in two other lakes (Futou, Honghu) changed gradually and responded primarily to agriculture and associated N fluxes; diazotrophic HAB pigments were absent and the lakes retained macrophyte cover. Local dam installation had no discernible effect on pigment assemblages in three of the four lakes in the past 70 years, but in the two hydrologically-open lakes (Poyang, Dongting), increasing algal production was significantly related to the upstream installation of the Three Gorges Dam (TGD) and to urban/industrial and agricultural stressors. Temperature only influenced phototrophs in the most degraded lakes (Luhu, Wanghu). This spatial and temporal overview identifies that nutrient pollution is the primary regional driver of lake phototrophs, but that diazotrophic HABs are stimulated by P-enriched urban wastewater pollution, and agriculturally-derived N pollution favors non-N2-fixing cyanobacteria. Despite negative effects of the Three Gorges project, free connection to the river appears to help mitigate excess HABs in freely connected lakes. Management thus needs to be tailor
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- 2023
38. Initial results of coring at Prees, Cheshire Basin, UK (ICDP JET project):Towards an integrated stratigraphy, timescale, and Earth system understanding for the Early Jurassic
- Author
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Hesselbo, Stephen P., Al-Suwaidi, Aisha, Baker, Sarah J., Ballabio, Giorgia, Belcher, Claire M., Bond, Andrew, Boomer, Ian, Bos, Remco, Bjerrum, Christian J., Bogus, Kara, Boyle, Richard, Browning, James V., Butcher, Alan R., Condon, Daniel J., Copestake, Philip, Daines, Stuart, Dalby, Christopher, Damaschke, Magret, Damborenea, Susana E., Deconinck, Jean Francois, Dickson, Alexander J., Fendley, Isabel M., Fox, Calum P., Fraguas, Angela, Frieling, Joost, Gibson, Thomas A., He, Tianchen, Hickey, Kat, Hinnov, Linda A., Hollaar, Teuntje P., Huang, Chunju, Hudson, Alexander J. L., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Idiz, Erdem, Jiang, Mengjie, Krijgsman, Wout, Korte, Christoph, Leng, Melanie J., Lenton, Timothy M., Leu, Katharina, Little, Crispin T.S., Macniocaill, Conall, Manceñido, Miguel O., Mather, Tamsin A., Mattioli, Emanuela, Miller, Kenneth G., Newton, Robert J., Page, Kevin N., Pálfy, József, Pieńkowski, Gregory, Porter, Richard J., Poulton, Simon W., Riccardi, Alberto C., Riding, James B., Roper, Ailsa, Ruhl, Micha, Silva, Ricardo L., Storm, Marisa S., Suan, Guillaume, Szúcs, Dominika, Thibault, Nicolas, Uchman, Alfred, Stanley, James N., Ullmann, Clemens V., Van De Schootbrugge, Bas, Vickers, Madeleine L., Wadas, Sonja, Whiteside, Jessica H., Wignall, Paul B., Wonik, Thomas, Xu, Weimu, Zeeden, Christian, Zhao, Ke, Hesselbo, Stephen P., Al-Suwaidi, Aisha, Baker, Sarah J., Ballabio, Giorgia, Belcher, Claire M., Bond, Andrew, Boomer, Ian, Bos, Remco, Bjerrum, Christian J., Bogus, Kara, Boyle, Richard, Browning, James V., Butcher, Alan R., Condon, Daniel J., Copestake, Philip, Daines, Stuart, Dalby, Christopher, Damaschke, Magret, Damborenea, Susana E., Deconinck, Jean Francois, Dickson, Alexander J., Fendley, Isabel M., Fox, Calum P., Fraguas, Angela, Frieling, Joost, Gibson, Thomas A., He, Tianchen, Hickey, Kat, Hinnov, Linda A., Hollaar, Teuntje P., Huang, Chunju, Hudson, Alexander J. L., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Idiz, Erdem, Jiang, Mengjie, Krijgsman, Wout, Korte, Christoph, Leng, Melanie J., Lenton, Timothy M., Leu, Katharina, Little, Crispin T.S., Macniocaill, Conall, Manceñido, Miguel O., Mather, Tamsin A., Mattioli, Emanuela, Miller, Kenneth G., Newton, Robert J., Page, Kevin N., Pálfy, József, Pieńkowski, Gregory, Porter, Richard J., Poulton, Simon W., Riccardi, Alberto C., Riding, James B., Roper, Ailsa, Ruhl, Micha, Silva, Ricardo L., Storm, Marisa S., Suan, Guillaume, Szúcs, Dominika, Thibault, Nicolas, Uchman, Alfred, Stanley, James N., Ullmann, Clemens V., Van De Schootbrugge, Bas, Vickers, Madeleine L., Wadas, Sonja, Whiteside, Jessica H., Wignall, Paul B., Wonik, Thomas, Xu, Weimu, Zeeden, Christian, and Zhao, Ke
- Abstract
Drilling for the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) Early Jurassic Earth System and Timescale project (JET) was undertaken between October 2020 and January 2021. The drill site is situated in a small-scale synformal basin of the latest Triassic to Early Jurassic age that formed above the major Permian-Triassic half-graben system of the Cheshire Basin. The borehole is located to recover an expanded and complete succession to complement the legacy core from the Llanbedr (Mochras Farm) borehole drilled through 1967-1969 on the edge of the Cardigan Bay Basin, North Wales. The overall aim of the project is to construct an astronomically calibrated integrated timescale for the Early Jurassic and to provide insights into the operation of the Early Jurassic Earth system. Core of Quaternary age cover and Early Jurassic mudstone was obtained from two shallow partially cored geotechnical holes (Prees 2A to 32.2g¯m below surface (mg¯b.s.) and Prees 2B to 37.0g¯mg¯b.s.) together with Early Jurassic and Late Triassic mudstone from the principal hole, Prees 2C, which was cored from 32.92 to 651.32g¯m (corrected core depth scale). Core recovery was 99.7g¯% for Prees 2C. The ages of the recovered stratigraphy range from the Late Triassic (probably Rhaetian) to the Early Jurassic, Early Pliensbachian (Ibex Ammonoid Chronozone). All ammonoid chronozones have been identified for the drilled Early Jurassic strata. The full lithological succession comprises the Branscombe Mudstone and Blue Anchor formations of the Mercia Mudstone Group, the Westbury and Lilstock formations of the Penarth Group, and the Redcar Mudstone Formation of the Lias Group. A distinct interval of siltstone is recognized within the Late Sinemurian of the Redcar Mudstone Formation, and the name "Prees Siltstone Member"is proposed. Depositional environments range from playa lake in the Late Triassic to distal offshore marine in the Early Jurassic. Initial datasets compiled from the core in
- Published
- 2023
39. South Georgia marine productivity over the past 15 ka and implications for glacial evolution.
- Author
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Wilkin, Jack T. R., Kender, Sev, Dejardin, Rowan, Allen, Claire S., Peck, Victoria L., Swann, George E. A., McClymont, Erin L., Scourse, James D., Littler, Kate, and Leng, Melanie J.
- Subjects
PLEISTOCENE-Holocene boundary ,GLOBAL warming ,GLACIAL melting ,MARINE productivity ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
The subantarctic islands of South Georgia are located in the Southern Ocean, and they may be sensitive to future climate warming. However, due to a lack of well-dated subantarctic palaeoclimate archives, there is still uncertainty about South Georgia's response to past climate change. Here, we reconstruct primary productivity changes and infer Holocene glacial evolution by analysing two marine gravity cores: one near Cumberland Bay on the inner South Georgia shelf (GC673: ca. 9.5 to 0.3 cal. kyr BP) and one offshore of Royal Bay on the mid-shelf (GC666: ca. 15.2 cal. kyr BP to present). We identify three distinct benthic foraminiferal assemblages characterised by the dominance of Miliammina earlandi, Fursenkoina fusiformis, and Cassidulinoides parkerianus that are considered alongside foraminiferal stable isotopes and the organic carbon and biogenic silica accumulation rates of the host sediment. The M. earlandi assemblage is prevalent during intervals of dissolution in GC666 and reduced productivity in GC673. The F. fusiformis assemblage coincides with enhanced productivity in both cores. Our multiproxy analysis provides evidence that the latest Pleistocene to earliest Holocene (ca. 15.2 to 10.5 cal. kyr BP) was a period of high productivity associated with increased glacial meltwater discharge. The mid–late Holocene (ca. 8 to 1 cal. kyr BP), coinciding with a fall in sedimentation rates and lower productivity, was likely a period of reduced glacial extent but with several short-lived episodes of increased productivity from minor glacial readvances. The latest Holocene (from ca. 1 cal. kyr BP) saw an increase in productivity and glacial advance associated with cooling temperatures and increased precipitation which may have been influenced by changes in the southwesterly winds over South Georgia. We interpret the elevated relative abundance of F. fusiformis as a proxy for increased primary productivity which, at proximal site GC673, was forced by terrestrial runoff associated with the spring–summer melting of glaciers in Cumberland Bay. Our study refines the glacial history of South Georgia and provides a more complete record of mid–late Holocene glacial readvances with robust chronology. Our results suggest that South Georgia glaciers were sensitive to modest climate changes within the Holocene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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40. Island ecosystem responses to the Kuwae eruption and precipitation change over the last 1600 years, Efate, Vanuatu
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Strandberg, Nichola A., primary, Sear, David A., additional, Langdon, Peter G., additional, Cronin, Shane J., additional, Langdon, Catherine T., additional, Maloney, Ashley E., additional, Bateman, Samantha L., additional, Bishop, Thomas, additional, Croudace, Ian W., additional, Leng, Melanie J., additional, Sachs, Julian P., additional, Prebble, Matiu, additional, Gosling, William D., additional, Edwards, Mary, additional, and Nogué, Sandra, additional
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- 2023
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41. Late Ordovician-early Silurian palaeo-environmental analysis in the Tywyn-Corris area of mid-Wales
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Leng, Melanie Jane
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551 ,Welsh Basin ,Sedimentary formations - Published
- 1990
42. Supplementary materials to Finale: Impact of the ORCHESTRA/ENCORE programmes on Southern Ocean heat and carbon understanding
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Meijers, Andrew J. S., Meredith, Michael P., Shuckburgh, Emily F., Kent, Elizabeth C., Munday, David R., Firing, Yvonne L., King, Brian, Smyth, Tim J., Leng, Melanie J., George Nurser, A. J., Hewitt, Helene T., Povl Abrahamsen, E., Weiss, Alexandra, Yang, Mingxi, Bell, Thomas G., Alexander Brearley, J., Boland, Emma J. D., Jones, Daniel C., Josey, Simon A., Owen, Robyn P., Grist, Jeremy P., Blaker, Adam T., Biri, Stavroula, Yelland, Margaret J., Pimm, Ciara, Zhou, Shenjie, Harle, James, and Cornes, Richard C.
- Abstract
Four supplementary figures and one table providing maps of flight paths and aircraft vs ship data comparisons, as well as cruise information
- Published
- 2023
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43. Extensive primary production promoted the recovery of the Ediacaran Shuram excursion
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Papineau, Dominic, Leng, Melanie J., and Li, Chao
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General Physics and Astronomy ,General Chemistry ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
Member IV of the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation records the recovery from the most negative carbon isotope excursion in Earth history. However, the main biogeochemical controls that ultimately drove this recovery have yet to be elucidated. Here, we report new carbon and nitrogen isotope and concentration data from the Nanhua Basin (South China), where δ13C values of carbonates (δ13Ccarb) rise from − 7‰ to −1‰ and δ15N values decrease from +5.4‰ to +2.3‰. These trends are proposed to arise from a new equilibrium in the C and N cycles where primary production overcomes secondary production as the main source of organic matter in sediments. The enhanced primary production is supported by the coexisting Raman spectral data, which reveal a systematic difference in kerogen structure between depositional environments. Our new observations point to the variable dominance of distinct microbial communities in the late Ediacaran ecosystems, and suggest that blooms of oxygenic phototrophs modulated the recovery from the most negative δ13Ccarb excursion in Earth history.
- Published
- 2022
44. Closure of the Bering Strait caused Mid-Pleistocene Transition cooling
- Author
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Kender, Sev, Ravelo, Ana Christina, Worne, Savannah, Swann, George E. A., Leng, Melanie J., Asahi, Hirofumi, Becker, Julia, Detlef, Henrieka, Aiello, Ivano W., Andreasen, Dyke, and Hall, Ian R.
- Published
- 2018
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45. The geodynamic and limnological evolution of Balkan Lake Ohrid, possibly the oldest extant lake in Europe
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Wagner, Bernd, primary, Tauber, Paul, additional, Francke, Alexander, additional, Leicher, Niklas, additional, Binnie, Steven A., additional, Cvetkoska, Aleksandra, additional, Jovanovska, Elena, additional, Just, Janna, additional, Lacey, Jack H., additional, Levkov, Zlatko, additional, Lindhorst, Katja, additional, Kouli, Katerina, additional, Krastel, Sebastian, additional, Panagiotopoulos, Konstantinos, additional, Ulfers, Arne, additional, Zaova, Dušica, additional, Donders, Timme H., additional, Grazhdani, Andon, additional, Koutsodendris, Andreas, additional, Leng, Melanie J., additional, Sadori, Laura, additional, Scheinert, Mirko, additional, Vogel, Hendrik, additional, Wonik, Thomas, additional, Zanchetta, Giovanni, additional, and Wilke, Thomas, additional
- Published
- 2022
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46. Urbanization and seasonality strengthens the CO2 capacity of the Red River Delta, Vietnam
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Salgado, Jorge, primary, Duc`, Trinh Anh, additional, Nga, Do Thu, additional, Panizzo, Virginia N, additional, Bass, Adrian M, additional, Zheng, Ying, additional, Taylor, Sarah, additional, Roberts, Lucy R, additional, Lacey, Jack H, additional, Leng, Melanie J, additional, and McGowan, Suzanne, additional
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- 2022
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47. The Freshwater System West of the Antarctic Peninsula : Spatial and Temporal Changes
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Meredith, Michael P., Venables, Hugh J., Clarke, Andrew, Ducklow, Hugh W., Erickson, Matthew, Leng, Melanie J., Lenaerts, Jan T. M., and van den Broeke, Michiel R.
- Published
- 2013
48. Micromilling vs hand drilling in stable isotope analyses of incremental carbonates: The potential for ? 13C contamination by embedding resin
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Branscombe, Tansy, Lee-Thorp, Julia, Schulting, Rick, and Leng, Melanie
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Organic Chemistry ,Spectroscopy ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
Rationale: Embedding resins are commonly used to facilitate high-resolution sampling for stable isotope analysis but anomalous δ13C values have been observed in some cases. Here we compare the results of microsampling strategies for hand-drilled versus resin-embedded micromilled samples from the same marine shells to assess whether resin contamination is implicated in δ13C spikes. The comparison allows assessment of the relative benefits for spatial resolution, seasonal range for both δ18O and δ13C, and sample failure rates. Methods: Hand-drilled samples were obtained from two bivalve shells (Spisula sachalinensis), corresponding to micromilled samples on the same shells where high δ13C spikes were observed. All carbonate powders were analysed using a dual-inlet Isoprime mass spectrometer and Multiprep device. Results from both sample sets were compared statistically. Results: No anomalous high δ13C values and no failures due to insufficient gas were observed in the hand-drilled samples in contrast to the embedded micromilled sequences. Spatial resolution was reduced (~2.5×) in the former compared with the latter, resulting in a small reduction in the total range observed in the micromilled δ13C and δ18O values. Reduced sampling resolution between the two datasets was only significant for δ18O. Conclusions: For S. sachalinensis (as with other similar bivalves), rapid growth mitigates the reduced sampling resolution of hand drilling and does not significantly impact observed isotopic range and seasonal patterning. Occurrence of anomalous δ13C values were eliminated and failure rates due to insufficient sample size greatly reduced in the hand-drilled dataset. We can find no other explanation for the occurrence of δ13C spikes than contamination by the embedding agent. We conclude that the logistical and interpretational benefits of careful hand drilling may be preferable to resin embedding for micromilling in marine shells, corals or speleothems where growth rate is rapid and the highest resolution is not required.
- Published
- 2022
49. The CISE-LOCEAN seawater isotopic database (1998–2021)
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Reverdin, Gilles, primary, Waelbroeck, Claire, additional, Pierre, Catherine, additional, Akhoudas, Camille, additional, Aloisi, Giovanni, additional, Benetti, Marion, additional, Bourlès, Bernard, additional, Danielsen, Magnus, additional, Demange, Jérôme, additional, Diverrès, Denis, additional, Gascard, Jean-Claude, additional, Houssais, Marie-Noëlle, additional, Le Goff, Hervé, additional, Lherminier, Pascale, additional, Lo Monaco, Claire, additional, Mercier, Herlé, additional, Metzl, Nicolas, additional, Morisset, Simon, additional, Naamar, Aïcha, additional, Reynaud, Thierry, additional, Sallée, Jean-Baptiste, additional, Thierry, Virginie, additional, Hartman, Susan E., additional, Mawji, Edward W., additional, Olafsdottir, Solveig, additional, Kanzow, Torsten, additional, Velo, Anton, additional, Voelker, Antje, additional, Yashayaev, Igor, additional, Haumann, F. Alexander, additional, Leng, Melanie J., additional, Arrowsmith, Carol, additional, and Meredith, Michael, additional
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- 2022
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50. Sclerochronological evidence of pronounced seasonality from the late Pliocene of the southern North Sea basin and its implications
- Author
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Johnson, Andrew L. A., primary, Valentine, Annemarie M., additional, Schöne, Bernd R., additional, Leng, Melanie J., additional, and Goolaerts, Stijn, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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