32 resultados para Triple Bottom Line Approach
Resumo:
Polygonal tundra, thermokarst basins and pingos are common and characteristic periglacial features of arctic lowlands underlain by permafrost in Northeast Siberia. Modern polygonal mires are in the focus of biogeochemical, biological, pedological, and cryolithological research with special attention to their carbon stocks and greenhouse-gas fluxes, their biodiversity and their dynamics and functioning under past, present and future climate scenarios. Within the frame of the joint German-Russian DFG-RFBR project Polygons in tundra wetlands: state and dynamics under climate variability in Polar Regions (POLYGON) field studies of recent and of late Quaternary environmental dynamics were carried out in the Indigirka lowland and in the Kolyma River Delta in summer 2012 and summer 2013. Using a multidisciplinary approach, several types of polygons and thermokarst lakes were studied in different landscapes units in the Kolyma Delta in 2012 around the small fishing settlement Pokhodsk. The floral and faunal associations of polygonal tundra were described during the fieldwork. Ecological, hydrological, meteorological, limnological, pedological and cryological features were studied in order to evaluate modern and past environmental conditions and their essential controlling parameters. The ecological monitoring and collection program of polygonal ponds were undertaken as in 2011 in the Indigirka lowland by a former POLYGON expedition (Schirrmeister et al. [eds.] 2012). Exposures, pits and drill cores in the Kolyma Delta were studied to understand the cryolithological structures of frozen ground and to collect samples for detailed paleoenvironmental research of the late Quaternary past. Dendrochronological and ecological studies were carried out in the tree line zone south of the Kolyma Delta. Based on previous work in the Indigirka lowland in 2011 (Schirrmeister et al. [eds.] 2012), the environmental monitoring around the Kytalyk research station was continued until the end of August 2012. In addition, a classical exposure of the late Pleistocene permafrost at the Achchaygy Allaikha River near Chokurdakh was studied. The ecological studies near Pokhodsk were continued in 2013 (chapter 13). Other fieldwork took place at the Pokhodsk-Yedoma-Island in the northwestern part of the Kolyma Delta.
Resumo:
Petrographic and geochemical analyses of basaltic rocks dredged from the first segment of the Southwest Indian Ridge near the Rodriguez Triple Junction have been completed in order to investigate water-rock interaction processes during mid-ocean ridge (MOR) hydrothermal alteration in the Indian Ocean. In the study area, we have successfully recovered a serial section of upper oceanic crust exposed along a steep rift valley wall which was uplifted and emplaced along a low angle normal fault. On the basis of microscopic observation, dredged samples are classified into three types: fresh lavas, low-temperature altered rocks, and high-temperature altered rocks. The fresh lavas have essentially the same chemical composition as typical N-MORB, although LILE and Nb are slightly enriched and depleted, respectively. Low temperature alteration brought about the enrichment of K2O, Rb, and U due to the presence of K-rich celadonite and U-adsorption onto Fe-oxyhydroxide and clay minerals. On the other hand, chloritization, albitization, and addition of base metals by high temperature hydrothermal alteration result in enrichments of MnO, MgO, Na2O, Cu, and Zn and depletions of CaO, K2O, Cr, Co, Ni, Rb, Sr, and Ba. In addition, U-enrichment is also observable in the high temperature altered rocks probably due to the decrease of uranite solubility in the reducing high-temperature hydrothermal solution. These petrological and geochemical features are comparable to those of the volcanic zone to transition zone rocks in the DSDP/ODP Hole 504B, indicating that our samples were recovered from the upper ~1000 m section of the oceanic crust. Only the alteration minerals related to off-axis alteration are absent in our samples dredged from near the spreading axis. The similarity of alteration between our samples from the Indian Ocean and the Hole 504B rocks from the Pacific Ocean suggests that MOR hydrothermal systems are probably similar across all world oceans.