26 results on '"Lathika N"'
Search Results
2. Deep water circulation in the Arabian Sea during the last glacial cycle: Implications for paleo-redox condition, carbon sink and atmospheric CO2 variability
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Lathika, N., Rahaman, Waliur, Tarique, Mohd, Gandhi, Naveen, Kumar, Avinash, and Thamban, Meloth
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- 2021
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3. Enhanced CO2 Degassing From the Tropical Indian Ocean During Cold Climatic Events of the Last Glacial Cycle
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Tarique, Mohd, primary, Rahaman, Waliur, additional, Lathika, N., additional, Prabhat, Priyesh, additional, Thamban, Meloth, additional, and Misra, Sambuddha, additional
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- 2023
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4. Enhanced CO2 Degassing From the Tropical Indian Ocean During Cold Climatic Events of the Last Glacial Cycle.
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Tarique, Mohd, Rahaman, Waliur, Lathika, N., Prabhat, Priyesh, Thamban, Meloth, and Misra, Sambuddha
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SEAWATER salinity ,CARBON cycle ,ATMOSPHERIC carbon dioxide ,LAST Glacial Maximum ,BORON isotopes ,ALPINE glaciers ,OCEAN ,WATER transfer - Abstract
Atmospheric CO2 variability on the glacial–interglacial (G–IG) timescale reflects a balance between oceanic and terrestrial processes involving carbon uptake and release. The Southern Ocean CO2 uptake is considered as an important modulator for the G–IG atmospheric CO2 variability, while the role of tropical ocean ventilation remains enigmatic. We present critical evidence for CO2 ventilation from the tropical Indian Ocean through the reconstruction of the Arabian Sea‐surface pCO2 for the past ∼136 ka utilizing boron isotope (δ11B) record of planktic foraminifera, Globigerinoides ruber. Our site in the Arabian Sea presently acts as a significant source of CO2. The reconstructed ΔpCO2 (ΔpCO2 = pCO2 Seawater − pCO2 Atmosphere) record shows an enhanced CO2 degassing up to ∼50 ppm during the major cooling events, such as the Last Glacial Maximum, Younger Dryas, and Heinrich‐Stadials. Our investigation based on multiproxy records of sea‐surface temperature, salinity, and productivity suggests that the northward invasion and shoaling of southern source CO2‐rich water, coupled with stronger upwelling, resulted in CO2 degassing during these cold intervals. This finding is in align with the tropical Atlantic which also demonstrated an enhanced CO2 degassing during the cold intervals; however, most of the upwelled CO2 was consumed as the water moved away from the upwelling sites. Therefore, our finding, when considered alongside tropical Atlantic records, suggests that tropical oceans played a minor role in reducing atmospheric CO2 levels during the cold intervals of the last glacial cycle, supporting the prevailing hypothesis. Key Points: Foraminifera δ11B‐based CO2 record of Arabian Sea surface for the past ∼136 kaEnhanced CO2 degassing during the cold climate events, that is, Heinrich‐Stadials, Younger Dryas, and Last Glacial MaximumThis degassing was caused by more export of southern‐sourced water and its upwelling [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Site U1474
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Hall, I.R., primary, Hemming, S.R., additional, LeVay, L.J., additional, Barker, S., additional, Berke, M.A., additional, Brentegani, L., additional, Caley, T., additional, Cartagena-Sierra, A., additional, Charles, C.D., additional, Coenen, J.J., additional, Crespin, J.G., additional, Franzese, A.M., additional, Grüetzner, J., additional, Han, X., additional, Hines, S.K.V., additional, Jimenez-Espejo, F.J., additional, Just, J., additional, Koutsodendris, A., additional, Kubota, K., additional, Lathika, N., additional, Norris, R.D., additional, Periera dos Santos, T., additional, Robinson, R., additional, Rolinson, J.M., additional, Simon, M.H., additional, Tangunan, D., additional, van der Lubbe, J.J.L., additional, Yamane, M., additional, and Zhang, H., additional
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- 2017
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6. Expedition 361 methods
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Hall, I.R., primary, Hemming, S.R., additional, LeVay, L.J., additional, Barker, S., additional, Berke, M.A., additional, Brentegani, L., additional, Caley, T., additional, Cartagena-Sierra, A., additional, Charles, C.D., additional, Coenen, J.J., additional, Crespin, J.G., additional, Franzese, A.M., additional, Gruetzner, J., additional, Han, X., additional, Hines, S.K.V., additional, Jimenez Espejo, F.J., additional, Just, J., additional, Koutsodendris, A., additional, Kubota, K., additional, Lathika, N., additional, Norris, R.D., additional, Periera dos Santos, T., additional, Robinson, R., additional, Rolinson, J.M., additional, Simon, M.H., additional, Tangunan, D., additional, van der Lubbe, J.J.L., additional, Yamane, M., additional, and Zhang, H., additional
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- 2017
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7. Expedition 361 summary
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Hall, I.R., primary, Hemming, S.R., additional, LeVay, L.J., additional, Barker, S., additional, Berke, M.A., additional, Brentegani, L., additional, Caley, T., additional, Cartagena-Sierra, A., additional, Charles, C.D., additional, Coenen, J.J., additional, Crespin, J.G., additional, Franzese, A.M., additional, Gruetzner, J., additional, Han, X., additional, Hines, S.K.V., additional, Jimenez Espejo, F.J., additional, Just, J., additional, Koutsodendris, A., additional, Kubota, K., additional, Lathika, N., additional, Norris, R.D., additional, Periera dos Santos, T., additional, Robinson, R., additional, Rolinson, J.M., additional, Simon, M.H., additional, Tangunan, D., additional, van der Lubbe, J.J.L., additional, Yamane, M., additional, and Zhang, H., additional
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- 2017
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8. Persistent influence of precession on northern ice sheet variability since the early Pleistocene
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STEPHEN BARKER, AIDAN STARR, JEROEN VAN DER LUBBE, Alice Doughty, Gregor Knorr, Stephen Conn, Sian Lordsmith, Lindsey Owen, Alexandra Nederbragt, Sidney Hemming, Ian Hall, Leah Levay, Melissa Berke, Luna Brentegani, Thibault Caley, Alejandra Cartagena-Sierra, Christopher Charles, Jason James Coenen, Julian Crespin, Allison Franzese, Jens Gruetzner, Xibin Han, Sophie Hines, Francisco Jimenez-Espejo, Janna Just, Andreas Koutsodendris, Kaoru Kubota, Lathika N., Richard Norris, Thiago Periera dos Santos, Rebecca Robinson, John Rolison, Margit Simon, Deborah Tangunan, Masako Yamane, Hucai Zhang, and Geology and Geochemistry
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Multidisciplinary - Abstract
Prior to ~1 million years ago (Ma), variations in global ice volume were dominated by changes in obliquity; however, the role of precession remains unresolved. Using a record of North Atlantic ice rafting spanning the past 1.7 million years, we find that the onset of ice rafting within a given glacial cycle (reflecting ice sheet expansion) consistently occurred during times of decreasing obliquity whereas mass ice wasting (ablation) events were consistently tied to minima in precession. Furthermore, our results suggest that the ubiquitous association between precession-driven mass wasting events and glacial termination is a distinct feature of the mid to late Pleistocene. Before then (increasing), obliquity alone was sufficient to end a glacial cycle, before losing its dominant grip on deglaciation with the southward extension of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets since ~1 Ma.
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- 2022
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9. Latitudinal Migrations of the Subtropical Front at the Agulhas Plateau Through the Mid-Pleistocene Transition
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Alejandra Cartagena-Sierra, Melissa Berke, Rebecca Robinson, Basia Marcks, Isla S. Castañeda, Aidan Starr, Ian R. Hall, Sidney R. Hemming, Leah J. LeVay, Stephen Barker, Luna Brentegani, Thibault Caley, Christopher Charles, Jason James Coenen, Julian Crespin, Allison Franzese, Jens Gruetzner, Xibin Han, Sophie Hines, Francisco Jimenez-Espejo, Janna Just, Andreas Koutsodendris, Kaoru Kubota, Lathika N., Richard Norris, Thiago Periera dos Santos, John Rolison, Margit Simon, Deborah Tangunan, Jeroen van der Lubbe, Masako Yamane, and Hucai Zhang
- Abstract
The meridional variability of the Subtropical Front (STF) in the Southern Hemisphere, linked to expansions or contractions of the Southern Ocean, may have played an important role in global ocean circulation by moderating the magnitude of water exchange at the Indian-Atlantic Ocean Gateway, so called Agulhas Leakage. Here we present new biomarker records of upper water column temperature (and) and primary productivity (chlorins and alkenones) from marine sediments at IODP Site U1475 on the Agulhas Plateau, near the STF and within the Agulhas retroflection pathway. We use these multiproxy time-series records from 1.4 to 0.3Ma to examine implied changes in the upper oceanographic conditions at the mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT, ca. 1.2–0.8Ma). Our reconstructions, combined with prior evidence of migrations of the STF over the last 350 ka, suggest that in the Southwestern Indian Ocean the STF may have been further south from the Agulhas Plateau during the mid-Pleistocene Interim State (MPIS, MIS 23–12) and reached its northernmost position during MIS 34–24 and MIS 10. Comparison to aGloborotalia menardii-derived Agulhas Leakage reconstruction from the Cape Basin suggests that only the most extreme northward migrations of the STF are associated with reduced Agulhas Leakage. During the MPIS, STF migrations do not appear to control Agulhas Leakage variability, we suggest previously modeled shifting westerly winds may be responsible for the patterns observed. A detachment between STF migrations and Agulhas Leakage, in addition to invoking shifting westerly winds may also help explain changes in CO2ventilation seen during the MPIS.
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- 2021
10. Surface pH Record (1990–2013) of the Arabian Sea From Boron Isotopes of Lakshadweep Corals—Trend, Variability, and Control
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Tarique, Mohd, primary, Rahaman, Waliur, additional, Fousiya, A. A., additional, Lathika, N., additional, Thamban, Meloth, additional, Achyuthan, Hema, additional, and Misra, Sambuddha, additional
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- 2021
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11. A plio-pleistocene (C. 0–4 ma) cyclostratigraphy for iodp site u1478 (mozambique channel, sw indian ocean): Exploring an offshore record of paleoclimate and ecosystem variability in se africa
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Koutsodendris, Andreas, Nakajima, Kai, Kaboth-Bahr, Stefanie, Berke, Melissa A., Franzese, Allison M., Hall, Ian R., Hemming, Sidney R., Just, Janna, Levay, Leah J., Pross, Jörg, Robinson, Rebecca, Barker, S., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C. D., Coenen, J. J., Crespin, J. G., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S. K.V., Espejo, F. J. Jimenez, Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R. D., Dos Santos, T. Pereira, Rolinson, J. M., Simon, M. H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J. J.L., Yamane, M., Zhang, H., Koutsodendris, Andreas, Nakajima, Kai, Kaboth-Bahr, Stefanie, Berke, Melissa A., Franzese, Allison M., Hall, Ian R., Hemming, Sidney R., Just, Janna, Levay, Leah J., Pross, Jörg, Robinson, Rebecca, Barker, S., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C. D., Coenen, J. J., Crespin, J. G., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S. K.V., Espejo, F. J. Jimenez, Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R. D., Dos Santos, T. Pereira, Rolinson, J. M., Simon, M. H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J. J.L., Yamane, M., and Zhang, H.
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The paleoclimate and ecosystem variability in Africa during the Plio/Pleistocene has received considerable attention due to its potential links to hominid evolution. However, the reconstruction of this variability hinges critically upon highly temporally resolved proxy data from continuous, well-dated sediment archives. In light of these requirements we use a new XRF core-scanning record from International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Site U1478 off the Limpopo River mouth (Mozambique Channel, SW Indian Ocean) spanning the past c. 4 Ma to identify the climate variability in SE Africa. Our results show that the elemental distribution in the Site U1478 cores is mainly controlled by the rate of terrigenous input and – to a lesser extent – by bottom-current transport and post-depositional processes such as propagation of paleoredox boundaries and diagenesis across some intervals. The log(Ti/Ca) ratio, which is used as a tracer of terrigenous sediment input, shows quasi-cyclical variability across the entire record that closely matches the periods of orbital parameters. However, the cyclical behaviour of the log(Ti/Ca) signal varies through time, with the uppermost 106 m of the sequence (0–1.07 Ma) displaying a mix of precession and obliquity signals, the intervals 106–223 m (1.07–2.80 Ma) and 240–257 m (3.68–4.05 Ma) being dominated by precession, and the interval 223–240 m (2.80–3.68 Ma) being controlled by eccentricity. To refine the available chronology for Site U1478, which is based on shipboard biostratigraphic and paleomagnetic data, we have tuned the log(Ti/Ca) record to the LR04 benthic oxygen isotope record, summer insolation at 25° S, and orbital eccentricity depending on the dominant cyclicities in the XRF dataset across individual time intervals. The resulting chronology enables us to evaluate the XRF data as well as the previously available shipboard sedimentological and geochemical datasets within a regional and global climatic context. This allows the c
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- 2021
12. The last 1 million years of the extinct genus Discoaster: Plio–Pleistocene environment and productivity at Site U1476 (Mozambique Channel)
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Sidney Hemming, Jens Gruetzner, Thiago Santos, Stephen Barker, Jeroen Van der Lubbe, Masako Yamane, Andreas Koutsodendris, Janna Just, Lathika N, Margit Simon, Thibaut Caley, Deborah Tangunan, David De Vleeschouwer, Richard Norris, Geology and Geochemistry, Institut Pierre Louis d'Epidémiologie et de Santé Publique (iPLESP), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Center for Marine Environmental Sciences [Bremen] (MARUM), and Universität Bremen
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Expedition 361 ,Water column ,Calcareous nannofossils ,Photic zone ,14. Life underwater ,Glacial period ,SDG 14 - Life Below Water ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Nannoplankton ,Extinction ,biology ,Discoaster ,Paleontology ,Plio-Pleistocene ,biology.organism_classification ,Productivity (ecology) ,Upwelling ,Western Indian Ocean ,Geology - Abstract
A detailed paleoenvironment reconstruction from the Mozambique Channel, western Indian Ocean, based on the calcareous nannoplankton assemblages was conducted for the interval between 2.85 and 1.85 Myr. This study covers the period during which the successive extinction of the last five species of discoasters occurred. New productivity data obtained from the abundances of the Discoaster species (Discoaster brouweri, D. triradiatus, D. pentaradiatus, D. surculus, and D. tamalis) and other indicative calcareous nannoplankton taxa showed abundance variations, which were at paced with the 100, 41, and 23 kyr astronomical periodicities. A shift in the productivity and water-column stratification proxies occurred at ~2.4 Ma, after the onset of the Northern Hemisphere glaciation. Here we propose that the variability recorded at International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1476 reflects the interplay between forcing associated with warm tropical Pacific and cold southern ocean influences. The former is shown by consistent occurrence of warm water taxa (Calcidiscus leptoporus, Oolithotus spp., Rhabdosphaera clavigera, Syracosphaera spp., Umbellosphaera spp.), typical of Indonesian Throughflow surface waters. On the other hand, the occurrence of Coccolithus pelagicus indicates the influence of cold, nutrient-rich sub-Antarctic surface waters. A more mixed water column initiated at ~2.4 Ma, and a consequent productivity increase led to the gradual reduction of the Discoaster species, until their extinction at 1.91 Ma. This period was characterized by the low values of the Florisphaera profunda index and high abundances of upper photic zone flora, indicative of nutrient-rich surface water conditions. High productivity at the location during this period could have also been amplified by localized upwelling events driven by the Mozambique Channel eddies.
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- 2018
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13. A new seismic stratigraphy for the Agulhas Plateau resembles major paleo-oceanographic changes in the Indian-Atlantic Ocean gateway since the late Miocene
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Gruetzner, Jens, Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Lathika, N., and Uenzelmann-Neben, Gabriele
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The exchange of shallow and deep water masses between the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic constitutes an integral inter-ocean link in the global thermohaline circulation. In the gateway south of South Africa long-term changes in deep water flow during the Cenozoic have been initially studied using seismic reflection profiles. But the seismic stratigraphy was poorly constrained and not further resolved within the time period from the late Miocene to present. In particular, there were limited Pliocene records that could be used to investigate the influence of climatic (e.g. Antarctic ice volume) and tectonic (e.g. closure of the Central American seaway) on the deep-water variability. In 2016 the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 361 (“SAFARI”) recovered complete high-resolution Plio-/Pleistocene sediment sections at six drilling locations on the southeast African margin and in the Indian-Atlantic ocean gateway. Here, we present results from Site U1475 (Agulhas Plateau), a location proximal to the entrance of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) to the Southern Ocean and South Indian Ocean. The site is located over a sediment drift in 2669 m water depth and comprises a complete carbonate rich (74 – 85%) stratigraphic section of the last ~7 Ma. We edited high-resolution data sets of density, velocity and natural gamma radiation measured at Site U1475 and corrected them to in-situ conditions. Cross correlations show that acoustic impedance contrasts and thus the formation of seismic reflectors are mainly due to density changes that are caused by climate-induced variations in biogenic vs. terrigenous sediment input. The calculated synthetic seismograms show an excellent correlation of drilling results with the site survey seismic field record, provide an accurate traveltime to depth conversion, and allow preliminary age assignments (± 0.3 Ma) based on the shipboard bio- and magnetostratigraphy. The most prominent reflectors are associated with compositional changes related to late Pleistocene glacial/interglacial variability, the middle Pleistocene transition, and the onset of the northern hemisphere glaciation. Furthermore, a peculiar early Pliocene interval (~ 5.3 – 4.0 Ma) bounded by two reflectors is characterized by 3-fold elevated sedimentation rates (> 10 cm/ka) and the occurrence of sediment waves. We argue that this enhanced sediment transport to the Agulhas Plateau was caused by a reorganization of the bottom current circulation pattern due to maximized inflow of NADW. Rhythmic bedding within the Pliocene sediment wave sequence likely reflects the 100-kyr orbital cycle. On the other hand, colour reflectance and natural gamma radiation show highest variability in the precession band. The very regular response of the core logging data to orbital forcing suggests that the shipboard age model can be significantly improved by cyclostratigraphy.
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- 2018
14. Trace Elements and Sr, Nd Isotope Compositions of Surface Sediments in the Indian Ocean: An Evaluation of Sources and Processes for Sediment Transport and Dispersal
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Subha Anand, S., primary, Rahaman, Waliur, additional, Lathika, N., additional, Thamban, M., additional, Patil, S., additional, and Mohan, Rahul, additional
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- 2019
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15. Site U1478
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Hall, I.R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, t, Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., Zhang, H., Hall, I.R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, t, Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., and Zhang, H.
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- 2017
16. Site U1475
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Hall, I. R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, the, Hall, I.R., Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., Zhang, H., Hall, I. R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, the, Hall, I.R., Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., and Zhang, H.
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- 2017
17. Expedition 361 summary
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Hall, I.R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, the, Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., Zhang, H., Hall, I.R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, the, Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., and Zhang, H.
- Abstract
International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 361 drilled six sites on the southeast African margin (southwest Indian Ocean) and in the Indian-Atlantic Ocean gateway, from 30 January to 31 March 2016. In total, 5175 m of core was recovered, with an average recovery of 102%, during 29.7 days of on-site operations. The sites, situated in the Mozambique Channel at locations directly influenced by discharge from the Zambezi and Limpopo River catchments, the Natal Valley, the Agulhas Plateau, and Cape Basin, were targeted to reconstruct the history of the greater Agulhas Current system over the past ~5 My. The Agulhas Current is the strongest western boundary current in the Southern Hemisphere, transporting some 70 Sv of warm, saline surface water from the tropical Indian Ocean along the East African margin to the tip of Africa. Exchanges of heat and moisture with the atmosphere influence southern African climates, including individual weather systems such as extratropical cyclone formation in the region and rainfall patterns. Recent ocean model and paleoceanographic data further point at a potential role of the Agulhas Current in controlling the strength and mode of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) during the Late Pleistocene. Spillage of saline Agulhas water into the South Atlantic stimulates buoyancy anomalies that may influence basin-wide AMOC, with implications for convective activity in the North Atlantic and global climate change. The main objectives of the expedition were to establish the role of the Agulhas Current in climatic changes during the Pliocene–Pleistocene, specifically to document the dynamics of the Indian-Atlantic Ocean gateway circulation during this time, to examine the connection of the Agulhas leakage and AMOC, and to address the influence of the Agulhas Current on African terrestrial climates and coincidences with human evolution. Additionally, the expedition set out to fulfill the needs of Ancillary Project Letter numb
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- 2017
18. Expedition 361 methods
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Hall, I. R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, the, Hall, I.R., Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., Zhang, H., Hall, I. R., Hemming, S.R., LeVay, L.J., Expedition 361 Scientists, the, Hall, I.R., Barker, S., Berke, M.A., Brentegani, L., Caley, T., Cartagena-Sierra, A., Charles, C.D., Coenen, J.J., Crespin, J.G., Franzese, A.M., Gruetzner, J., Han, X., Hines, S.K.V., Jimenez Espejo, F.J., Just, J., Koutsodendris, A., Kubota, K., Lathika, N., Norris, R.D., Periera dos Santos, T., Robinson, R., Rolinson, J.M., Simon, M.H., Tangunan, D., van der Lubbe, J.J.L., Yamane, M., and Zhang, H.
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- 2017
19. Enhanced CO2Degassing From the Tropical Indian Ocean During Cold Climatic Events of the Last Glacial Cycle
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Tarique, Mohd, Rahaman, Waliur, Lathika, N., Prabhat, Priyesh, Thamban, Meloth, and Misra, Sambuddha
- Abstract
Atmospheric CO2variability on the glacial–interglacial (G–IG) timescale reflects a balance between oceanic and terrestrial processes involving carbon uptake and release. The Southern Ocean CO2uptake is considered as an important modulator for the G–IG atmospheric CO2variability, while the role of tropical ocean ventilation remains enigmatic. We present critical evidence for CO2ventilation from the tropical Indian Ocean through the reconstruction of the Arabian Sea‐surface pCO2for the past ∼136 ka utilizing boron isotope (δ11B) record of planktic foraminifera, Globigerinoides ruber. Our site in the Arabian Sea presently acts as a significant source of CO2. The reconstructed ΔpCO2(ΔpCO2= pCO2 Seawater− pCO2 Atmosphere) record shows an enhanced CO2degassing up to ∼50 ppm during the major cooling events, such as the Last Glacial Maximum, Younger Dryas, and Heinrich‐Stadials. Our investigation based on multiproxy records of sea‐surface temperature, salinity, and productivity suggests that the northward invasion and shoaling of southern source CO2‐rich water, coupled with stronger upwelling, resulted in CO2degassing during these cold intervals. This finding is in align with the tropical Atlantic which also demonstrated an enhanced CO2degassing during the cold intervals; however, most of the upwelled CO2was consumed as the water moved away from the upwelling sites. Therefore, our finding, when considered alongside tropical Atlantic records, suggests that tropical oceans played a minor role in reducing atmospheric CO2levels during the cold intervals of the last glacial cycle, supporting the prevailing hypothesis. Foraminifera δ11B‐based CO2record of Arabian Sea surface for the past ∼136 kaEnhanced CO2degassing during the cold climate events, that is, Heinrich‐Stadials, Younger Dryas, and Last Glacial MaximumThis degassing was caused by more export of southern‐sourced water and its upwelling Foraminifera δ11B‐based CO2record of Arabian Sea surface for the past ∼136 ka Enhanced CO2degassing during the cold climate events, that is, Heinrich‐Stadials, Younger Dryas, and Last Glacial Maximum This degassing was caused by more export of southern‐sourced water and its upwelling
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- 2023
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20. Fate of copper complexes in hydrothermally altered deep-sea sediments from the Central Indian Ocean Basin
- Author
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Chakraborty, Parthasarathi, primary, Sander, Sylvia G., additional, Jayachandran, Saranya, additional, Nath, B. Nagender, additional, Nagaraju, G., additional, Chennuri, Kartheek, additional, Vudamala, Krushna, additional, Lathika, N., additional, and Mascarenhas-Pereira, Maria Brenda L., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Genome comparison of progressively drug resistant Plasmodium falciparum lines derived from drug sensitive clone
- Author
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Ravi Toteja, Lathika Nair, and VK Bhasin
- Subjects
Plasmodium falciparum ,malaria ,drug resistance ,sequencing-RFLP ,dihydrofolate reductase ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Chloroquine has been the mainstay of malaria chemotherapy for the past five decades, but resistance is now widespread. Pyrimethamine or proguanil form an important component of some alternate drug combinations being used for treatment of uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum infections in areas of chloroquine resistance. Both pyrimethamine and proguanil are dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) inhibitors, the proguanil acting primarily through its major metabolite cycloguanil. Resistance to these drugs arises due to specific point mutations in the dhfr gene. Cross resistance between cycloguanil and pyrimethamine is not absolute. It is, therefore, important to investigate mutation rates in P. falciparum for pyrimethamine and proguanil so that DHFR inhibitor with less mutation rate is favored in drug combinations. Hence, we have compared mutation rates in P. falciparum genome for pyrimethamine and cycloguanil. Using erythrocytic stages of P. falciparum cultures, progressively drug resistant lines were selected in vitro and comparing their RFLP profile with a repeat sequence. Our finding suggests that pyrimethamine has higher mutation rate compared to cycloguanil. It enhances the degree of genomic polymorphism leading to diversity of natural parasite population which in turn is predisposes the parasites for faster selection of resistance to some other antimalarial drugs.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Revisiting the mid-Pleistocene transition ocean circulation crisis.
- Author
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Hines SKV, Charles CD, Starr A, Goldstein SL, Hemming SR, Hall IR, Lathika N, Passacantando M, and Bolge L
- Abstract
The mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT) [~1.25 to 0.85 million years ago (Ma)] marks a shift in the character of glacial-interglacial climate ( 1 , 2 ). One prevailing hypothesis for the origin of the MPT is that glacial deep ocean circulation fundamentally changed, marked by a circulation "crisis" at ~0.90 Ma (marine isotope stages 24 to 22) ( 3 ). Using high-resolution paired neodymium, carbon, and oxygen isotope data from the South Atlantic Ocean (Cape Basin) across the MPT, we find no evidence of a substantial change in deep ocean circulation. Before and during the early MPT (~1.30 to 1.12 Ma), the glacial deep ocean variability closely resembled that of the most recent glacial cycle. The carbon storage facilitated by developing deep ocean stratification across the MPT required only modest circulation adjustments.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Modern-like deep water circulation in Indian Ocean caused by Central American Seaway closure.
- Author
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Prabhat P, Rahaman W, Lathika N, Tarique M, Mishra R, and Thamban M
- Subjects
- Humans, Indian Ocean, Antarctic Regions, Water, Central American People
- Abstract
Global overturning circulation underwent significant changes in the late Miocene, driven by tectonic forcing, and impacted the global climate. Prevailing hypotheses related to the late Miocene deep water circulation (DWC) changes driven by the closure of the Central American Seaways (CAS) and its widespread impact remains untested due to the paucity of suitable records away from the CAS region. Here, we test the hypothesis of the large-scale circulation changes by providing a high-resolution record of DWC since the late Miocene (11.3 to ~2 Ma) from the north-western Indian Ocean. Our investigation reveals a progressive shift from Pacific-dominated DWC before ~9.0 Ma to the onset of a modern-like DWC system in the Indian Ocean comprising of Antarctic bottom water and northern component water during the Miocene-Pliocene transition (~6 Ma) caused by progressive shoaling of the CAS and suggests its widespread impact., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Persistent influence of precession on northern ice sheet variability since the early Pleistocene.
- Author
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Barker S, Starr A, van der Lubbe J, Doughty A, Knorr G, Conn S, Lordsmith S, Owen L, Nederbragt A, Hemming S, Hall I, Levay L, Berke MA, Brentegani L, Caley T, Cartagena-Sierra A, Charles CD, Coenen JJ, Crespin JG, Franzese AM, Gruetzner J, Han X, Hines SKV, Jimenez Espejo FJ, Just J, Koutsodendris A, Kubota K, Lathika N, Norris RD, Periera Dos Santos T, Robinson R, Rolison JM, Simon MH, Tangunan D, Yamane M, and Zhang H
- Abstract
Prior to ~1 million years ago (Ma), variations in global ice volume were dominated by changes in obliquity; however, the role of precession remains unresolved. Using a record of North Atlantic ice rafting spanning the past 1.7 million years, we find that the onset of ice rafting within a given glacial cycle (reflecting ice sheet expansion) consistently occurred during times of decreasing obliquity whereas mass ice wasting (ablation) events were consistently tied to minima in precession. Furthermore, our results suggest that the ubiquitous association between precession-driven mass wasting events and glacial termination is a distinct feature of the mid to late Pleistocene. Before then (increasing), obliquity alone was sufficient to end a glacial cycle, before losing its dominant grip on deglaciation with the southward extension of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets since ~1 Ma.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Antarctic icebergs reorganize ocean circulation during Pleistocene glacials.
- Author
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Starr A, Hall IR, Barker S, Rackow T, Zhang X, Hemming SR, van der Lubbe HJL, Knorr G, Berke MA, Bigg GR, Cartagena-Sierra A, Jiménez-Espejo FJ, Gong X, Gruetzner J, Lathika N, LeVay LJ, Robinson RS, and Ziegler M
- Abstract
The dominant feature of large-scale mass transfer in the modern ocean is the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). The geometry and vigour of this circulation influences global climate on various timescales. Palaeoceanographic evidence suggests that during glacial periods of the past 1.5 million years the AMOC had markedly different features from today
1 ; in the Atlantic basin, deep waters of Southern Ocean origin increased in volume while above them the core of the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) shoaled2 . An absence of evidence on the origin of this phenomenon means that the sequence of events leading to global glacial conditions remains unclear. Here we present multi-proxy evidence showing that northward shifts in Antarctic iceberg melt in the Indian-Atlantic Southern Ocean (0-50° E) systematically preceded deep-water mass reorganizations by one to two thousand years during Pleistocene-era glaciations. With the aid of iceberg-trajectory model experiments, we demonstrate that such a shift in iceberg trajectories during glacial periods can result in a considerable redistribution of freshwater in the Southern Ocean. We suggest that this, in concert with increased sea-ice cover, enabled positive buoyancy anomalies to 'escape' into the upper limb of the AMOC, providing a teleconnection between surface Southern Ocean conditions and the formation of NADW. The magnitude and pacing of this mechanism evolved substantially across the mid-Pleistocene transition, and the coeval increase in magnitude of the 'southern escape' and deep circulation perturbations implicate this mechanism as a key feedback in the transition to the '100-kyr world', in which glacial-interglacial cycles occur at roughly 100,000-year periods.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Polio vaccines.
- Author
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Bhasin VK and Lathika N
- Subjects
- Child, Crime, Humans, Immunization Programs, India, Poisoning, Poliomyelitis prevention & control, Poliovirus Vaccine, Inactivated standards, Vaccination adverse effects
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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