11 results on '"Rohl, U."'
Search Results
2. Glacial/interglacial changes in Subarctic North Pacific stratification
- Author
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Jaccard, S.L., Haug, G.H., Sigman, D.M., Pedersen, T.F., Thierstein, H.R., and Rohl, U.
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Observations ,Analysis ,Research ,Ice -- Research -- Analysis -- Observations ,Ice ages -- Research -- Analysis ,Stratigraphy -- Research -- Analysis ,Carbon dioxide -- Research -- Analysis -- Observations ,Geology, Stratigraphic -- Research -- Analysis ,Glacial epoch -- Research -- Analysis - Abstract
Air bubbles trapped in Antarctic ice reveal that the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide (C[O.sub.2]) has varied over ice age cycles, between 280 parts per million by volume (ppmv) during [...], Since the first evidence of low algal productivity during ice ages in the Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean was discovered, there has been debate as to whether it was associated with increased polar ocean stratification or with sea-ice cover, shortening the productive season. The sediment concentration of biogenic barium at Ocean Drilling Program site 882 indicates low algal productivity during ice ages in the Subarctic North Pacific as well. Site 882 is located southeast of the summer sea-ice extent even during glacial maxima, ruling out sea-ice-driven light limitation and supporting stratification as the explanation, with implications for the glacial cycles of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration.
- Published
- 2005
3. Millennial-scale changes of surface- and deep-water flow in the western tropical Atlantic linked to Northern Hemisphere high-latitude climate during the Holocene
- Author
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Arz, Helge W., Gerhardt, S., Patzold, J., and Rohl, U.
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Northern Hemisphere -- Natural history ,Paleoclimatology -- Research ,Paleogeography -- Holocene ,Paleontology -- Holocene ,Aragonite -- Research ,Earth sciences - Abstract
There is increasing evidence that the preceding Holocene climate was as unstable as the last glacial period, although variations occurred at much lower amplitudes. However, low-latitude climate records that confirm this variability are sparse. Here we present a radiocarbon-dated Holocene marine record from the tropical western Atlantic. Aragonite dissolution derived from the degree of preservation of the pteropod Limacina inflata records changes in the corrosiveness of the bottom water at the core site due to the changing influence of northern versus southern water masses. The [delta][sup.18]O difference between the shallow-living planktonic foraminifera Globigerinoides sacculifer and the deep-living Globorotalia tumida is used as proxy for changes in the vertical stratification of the surface water, hence the trade wind strength at this latitude. We compared our data to high-latitude records of the North Atlantic region. A good agreement is found between the aragonite dissolution and the strength in the Island-Scotland Overflow Water, which contributes significantly to the North Atlantic Deep Water. This suggests that large-scale variations in the Atlantic thermohaline circulation occurred throughout the Holocene. Concurrently, the comparison of our [DELTA][delta][sup.18]O with the GISP2 glaciochemical records points to global Holocene atmospheric reorganizations seen in both the tropics and high northern latitudes. Keywords: Holocene, tropical Atlantic, oceanography, stable oxygen isotopes, carbonate preservation, thermohaline circulation.
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- 2001
4. High-resolution records of the late Paleocene thermal maximum and circum-Caribbean volcanism: is there a causal link?
- Author
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Bralower, T.J., Thomas, D.J., Zachos, J.C., Hirschmann, M.M., Rohl, U., Sigurdsson, H., Thomas, E., and Whitney, D.L.
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Caribbean Islands -- Natural history ,Volcanism ,Global warming -- Causes of ,Paleoclimatology -- Research ,Earth sciences - Abstract
Two recently drilled Caribbean sites contain expanded sedimentary records of the late Paleocene thermal maximum, a dramatic global warming event that occurred at ca. 55 Ma. The records document significant environmental changes, including deep-water oxygen deficiency and a mass extinction of deep-sea fauna, intertwined with evidence for a major episode of explosive volcanism. We postulate that this volcanism initiated a reordering of ocean circulation that resulted in rapid global warming and dramatic changes in the Earth's environment.
- Published
- 1997
5. NORTHWESTERN PACIFIC ATOLLS AND GUYOTS - ODP LEG 143 PRELIMINARY-RESULTS
- Author
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Baudin, F, Arnaud, H, Sager, W, Winterer, E, Firth, J, Baker, P, Bralower, T, Castillo, P, Cooper, P, Flood, P, Golovchenko, X, Iryu, Y, Ivanov, M, Jenkyns, H, Kenter, J, Murdmaa, I, Mutterlose, J, Nogi, Y, Paull, C, Polgreen, E, Rohl, U, Sliter, W, Strasser, A, Swinburne, N, and Tarduno, J
- Published
- 2016
6. New chronology for the late Paleocene thermal maximum and its environmental implications
- Author
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Rohl, U, Bralower, T.J., Norris, R.D., and Wefer, G.
- Subjects
Paleoceanography -- Environmental aspects ,Global warming -- Environmental aspects ,Paleobotany -- Paleocene ,Carbon cycle (Biogeochemistry) -- Environmental aspects ,Earth sciences - Abstract
The late Paleocene thermal maximum (LPTM) is associated with a brief, but intense, interval of global warming and a massive perturbation of the global carbon cycle. We have developed a new orbital chronology for Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 690 (Weddell Sea, Southern Ocean) by using spectral analysis of high-resolution geochemical records. The LPTM interval spans 11 precessional cycles yielding a duration of 210 to 220 k.y. The [[Delta].sup.13]C anomaly associated with the LPTM has a magnitude of about -2.5% to -3%; we show that about -2% of the excursion occurs within two steps that each were less than 1000 yr in duration. The remainder developed through a series of steps over ~52 k.y. The timing of these steps is consistent with a series of nearly catastrophic releases of methane from gas hydrates, punctuated by intervals of relative equilibria between hydrate dissociation and carbon burial. Further, we are able to correlate the records between ODP Sites 690 and 1051 (western North Atlantic) on the scale of 21 k.y. cycles, which demonstrates that the details of the [[Delta].sup.13]C excursion are recognizable between distant sites. Comparison of cycle records at Sites 690 and 1051 suggests that sediment representing the interval ~30 k.y. just prior to and at the onset of the LPTM are missing in the latter location. This unconformity probably resulted from slope failure accompanying methane hydrate dissociation within 10 k.y. of the start of the LPTM. Keywords: cyclostratigraphy, paleoceanography, global warming, Paleocene, XRF scanner.
- Published
- 2000
7. Southern Hemisphere control on Australian monsoon variability during the late deglaciation and Holocene
- Author
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Kuhnt, Wolfgang, Holbourn, Ann, Xu, Jian, Opdyke, Bradley, De Deckker, Patrick, Rohl, U., Mudelsee, Manfred, Kuhnt, Wolfgang, Holbourn, Ann, Xu, Jian, Opdyke, Bradley, De Deckker, Patrick, Rohl, U., and Mudelsee, Manfred
- Abstract
The evolution of the Australian monsoon in relation to high-latitude temperature fluctuations over the last termination remains highly enigmatic. Here we integrate high-resolution riverine runoff and dust proxy data from X-ray fluorescence scanner measurements in four well-dated sediment cores, forming a NE–SW transect across the Timor Sea. Our records reveal that the development of the Australian monsoon closely followed the deglacial warming history of Antarctica. A minimum in riverine runoff documents dry conditions throughout the region during the Antarctic Cold Reversal (15–12.9 ka). Massive intensification of the monsoon coincided with Southern Hemisphere warming and intensified greenhouse forcing over Australia during the atmospheric CO2 rise at 12.9–10 ka. We relate the earlier onset of the monsoon in the Timor Strait (13.4 ka) to regional changes in landmass exposure during deglacial sea-level rise. A return to dryer conditions occurred between 8.1 and 7.3 ka following the early Holocene runoff maximum.
- Published
- 2015
8. 3D anatomy of Heinrich Layer 2
- Author
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Van Rooij, D., Zaazi, N., Fagel, N., Boone, M., Cnudde, V., Dewanckele, J., Pirlet, H., Rohl, U., Blamart, D., Henriet, J.-P., Jacobs, P., Houbrechts, H., Duyck, P., and Swennen, R.
- Subjects
Earth and Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Heinrich Layers are found in the North Atlantic Ocean as well-constrained markers of catastrophic iceberg surges from the Pan-Atlantic ice sheets during the last glacial cycle. Their physical and geochemical characteristics allow for relatively fast diagnostics using the state-of-the-art core scanners such as a Multi-Sensor Core Logger and an XRF core scanner. The nature of these characteristics are predominantly due to the source sediments of the ice-rafted debris (IRD) on the one hand (magnetic susceptibility, color, carbonate content) and the response of the palaeo-environment on the other hand (carbonate content, foraminiferal assemblage). However, changes in (gamma) bulk density of the sediment within a Heinrich Layer cannot solely be explained due to the higher content of IRD. Sediment cores in the Porcupine Seabight (West off Ireland) have shown the presence of Heinrich Events without the diagnostic changes in magnetic susceptibility (MS), suggesting a more drastic change in oceanography which could cause widespread diagenesis on the seabed during Heinrich Events. In order to better understand the physical behavior of a Heinrich Layer, 2 cores were studied taken from the northern Porcupine Seabight by R/V Marion Dufresne campaign MD123 in September 2001. More specifically HL2 was studied since it carries the most typical HL signature. The main anatomical information, with a resolution of 0.5 mm, was obtained by means of medical computed tomography of half-core sections of 50 cm length from the Ghent University Hospital. This information was used for detailed sampling for mineralogy, grainsize measurements and palaeoenvironmental analyses. On one core section, XRF core scanning was performed at a 0.5 cm interval. Higher-resolution information was obtained from five 8 cc subsamples which underwent µCT scanning and cold-cathode luminescence microscopy. The results of this unique approach show a rather surprising 3D view of a Heinrich Layer. As expected, the concentration of ice-rafted debris (commonly referred to as the fraction > 150 µm) increases towards the culmination of HL2, marked by an increase in MS, XRF Ca and the percentage of N. pachyderma s. However, the zone where the density increases is marked by a cloud of fine and highly dense particles surrounding the IRD. It seems as if the fine clayey “background” matrix throughout the core consolidates near the centre of HL2. The same feature has been observed within the µCT samples, where the cold-cathode luminescence microscopy has indicated the presence of zoned dolomites. These dolomites might be the result of a diagenetic process that might explain the elevated density. Moreover, the mineralogical analyses show for a predominant volcanic source for the magnetic susceptibility. Contrastingly, both XRF Fe and Ti show significant decreases near the HL culmination, which calls again for diagenetic alteration of the sediment during or just after the Heinrich Event. At this stage of the research, the mechanisms of these diagenetic processes remain unclear. Nevertheless, these results call for a wider view on the depositional processes of Heinrich Layers and their impact upon the seabed geochemistry.
- Published
- 2009
9. Abrupt shifts of the Sahara-Sahel boundary during Heinrich stadials
- Author
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Collins, James A., Govin, Aline, Mulitza, Stefan, Heslop, David, Zabel, Matthias, Hartmann, J., Rohl, U., Wefer, Gerold, Collins, James A., Govin, Aline, Mulitza, Stefan, Heslop, David, Zabel, Matthias, Hartmann, J., Rohl, U., and Wefer, Gerold
- Abstract
Relict dune fields that are found as far south as 14° N in the modern-day African Sahel are testament to equatorward expansions of the Sahara desert during the Late Pleistocene. However, the discontinuous nature of dune records means that abrupt millenni
- Published
- 2013
10. Corrigendum: Deglacial pulses of deep-ocean silicate into the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean
- Author
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Meckler, A.N., Sigman, D.M., Gibson, K.A., Francois, R., Martinez-Garcia, A., Jaccard, S.L., Rohl, U., Peterson, L.C., Tiedemann, R., and Haug, G.H.
- Abstract
Nature 495, 495-498 (2013); doi:10.1038/nature12006 In Figure 3c of our Letter, the time axis of the ln(Si/Al) record of ODP Site 658A (orange line) was based on a prior age [...]
- Published
- 2014
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11. Lead and zinc anomalies of Upper Muschelkalk strata in the northern and middle parts of West Germany.
- Author
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Rohl U. and Rohl U.
- Abstract
Lead and zinc show both discordant concentrations and syngenetic concordant anomalies. The discordant anomalies were probably due to ascending mineralised solutions at faults. The syngenetic concentrations were found in the whole investigation area and support chemostratigraphic correlations of columnar sections., Lead and zinc show both discordant concentrations and syngenetic concordant anomalies. The discordant anomalies were probably due to ascending mineralised solutions at faults. The syngenetic concentrations were found in the whole investigation area and support chemostratigraphic correlations of columnar sections.
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