202 resultados para ISO 12647-2


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The GH72-2 shipborne survey was carried out in the northwest Pacific during 31 days under the 'Basic investigations for exploration of deep sea mineral resources' program. The sediments encountered could be classified as follows: 1) Most of the brown clays occur on the abyssal plain of the basins at depth over 4500m. 2) Calcareous oozes are predominant at the top, slope and foot of seamounts and guyots. 3) Terrigeneous sediments are distributed near islands. The concentrated zone of ferromanganese nodules was located in the Magellan seamounts area. However, the metal contents in Mn, Cu, Ni and Co for these nodules are relatively poor, and these ferromanganese deposits occur at a depth over 5000m. It is interesting to note that the shape of the nodules is sometimes nearly spherical, and that the chemical composition of the nodules is characterized by the low ratio Mn/Fe and Co/Ni.

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It has been proposed that North Pacific sea surface temperature (SST) evolution was intimately linked to North Atlantic climate oscillations during the last glacial-interglacial transition. However, during the early deglaciation and the Last Glacial Maximum, the SST development in the subarctic northwest Pacific and the Bering Sea is poorly constrained as most existing deglacial SST records are based on alkenone paleothermometry, which is limited prior to 15 ka B.P. in the subarctic North Pacific realm. By applying the TEXL86 temperature proxy we obtain glacial-Holocene-SST records for the marginal northwest Pacific and the Western Bering Sea. Our TEXL86-based records and existing alkenone data suggest that during the past 15.5 ka, SSTs in the northwest Pacific and the Western Bering Sea closely followed millennial-scale climate fluctuations known from Greenland ice cores, indicating rapid atmospheric teleconnections with abrupt climate changes in the North Atlantic. Our SST reconstructions indicate that in the Western Bering Sea SSTs drop significantly during Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1), similar to the known North Atlantic climate history. In contrast, progressively rising SST in the northwest Pacific is different to the North Atlantic climate development during HS1. Similarities between the northwest Pacific SST and climate records from the Gulf of Alaska point to a stronger influence of Alaskan Stream waters connecting the eastern and western basin of the North Pacific during this time. During the Holocene, dissimilar climate trends point to reduced influence of the Alaskan Stream in the northwest Pacific.