968 resultados para late modern Sweden
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随着全球环境的变化,人们迫切的希望了解整个地球环境的变化过程、规律和未来发展的趋势。对地质历史时期发生过的环境事件的了解,能为我们研究现在的和预测未来的环境变化提供有价值的资料。 孢粉分析作为一种古环境的代用指标,在恢复古植被与古气候方面起着不可替代的作用。而精确的孢粉分析建立在对现代花粉与当地植被的关系正确的认识基础上,由此才可以更准确地提取地层中的花粉所蕴含的植被和环境信息。 云南省地理位置较特殊,地貌复杂,气候类型多样,与之对应的植物种类多样性丰富,植被类型多样。本项研究选择云南省南部和西部地区作为研究地点,采集表土、地表苔藓、蜘蛛网、树皮和树上地衣苔藓五种天然孢粉捕捉器来研究现代花粉与当地植被的关系,为认识现代花粉雨提供新的研究思路。同时,我们在滇西北选择拉市海、文海、哈里谷和属都湖这四个高原湖泊来研究晚更新世以来滇西北地区植被演替和气候变化,为云南历史时期气候变化提供新的研究资料,同时也为全面认识晚更新世以来的气候变化提供新的证据。研究结果如下: 1. 现代花粉雨与当地植被关系的研究 对云南省西北部、中部和南部采集的19个蜘蛛网样品分析得出:云南省西北部样品中共鉴定20个孢粉类型,分属于16个科;云南省中部样品中共鉴定28个类型,分属于23个科;在云南省南部勐腊县采集的样品中共鉴定28个类型,分属于25个科;在望天树北京植物园中采集的样品共鉴定38个类型,分属于34个科;在西双版纳北京植物园中采集的样品中共有11个类型,分属于10个科。结果表明:蜘蛛网样品中分析出的孢粉类型反映了云南省从南到北不同的植被类型,说明蜘蛛网可以作为一种天然孢粉捕捉器来进行现代花粉雨的研究。 同时,在云南西北部文笔水库采集的五种天然孢粉捕捉器(表土、地表苔藓、树皮、蜘蛛网、树上地衣和苔藓)进行了对比研究。结果表明:表土所得的孢粉中木本植物花粉的百分含量为90.5-96%,远大于地表苔藓(53.1-81.7%)、蜘蛛网(61.7%)、树皮(53.8%)和树上地衣、苔藓(50-53.6%)所获得的木本植物花粉的百分含量。与当地植被进行对比结果表明:这五种天然孢粉捕捉器中,表土、地表苔藓和蜘蛛网比树皮和树上地衣、苔藓能更好的反映当地的植被。 2. 滇西北地区晚更新世以来植被演替与气候变化 在过去2, 5000年左右的地质历史时期,滇西北地区植被和气候变化大致经历了以下三个发展阶段。 (1) 2, 5381 B.P—1, 9335 B.P.:属都湖地区(海拔:3620m)主要是以蓼科植物为主的草甸植被,气候寒冷湿润。 (2) 1, 9335 B.P.—1, 2426 B.P.:属都湖地区是以藜科或蒿属为主的草甸植被,气候从湿润过渡到干旱;而在海拔稍低的文海地区(海拔3080m),主要是阔叶栎林或针阔混交林,气候温凉略湿到寒冷干旱。 (3) 1, 2426 B.P.—至今:属都湖地区是以蓼科为主的草甸植被,气候仍寒冷湿润;海拔稍低的哈里谷(海拔3277m)是以松和冷杉为主的针叶林,气候冷干;文海地区的植被逐渐演替为以松和冷杉为主的针阔叶混交林,但栎属花粉的含量远高于哈里谷地区,说明当时文海的气温虽然低,却比哈里谷稍高;而海拔更低的拉市海(海拔2440m)则是以松为主的针叶林,气候比其他几个地区温暖。 在全新世气候最适宜期(约8000 B.P.以来),哈里谷是以栎和松为主的针阔混交林;文海是以松为主的针阔混交林;而拉市海是以松和蕨类植物为主。说明随着海拔的升高(从拉市海到属都湖),温度逐渐下降,植被类型也由暖性针叶林过渡到针阔混交林再到草甸。 从6000 B.P.至今,文海和哈里谷植被在这一阶段都是以松和冷杉为主的暗针叶林,少量混生一些阔叶类植物,气候变得冷湿;属都湖则仍是以蓼科为主的草甸,气候变得更加寒冷。 研究证明:滇西北地区总的气候变化趋势与全球变化规律基本一致,在1,1805—9990 B.P.期间发生新仙女木事件,在8000B.P.以来,气候变得温暖湿润,为全新世气候最适宜期。此后,气候逐渐变得接近现代。
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In western civilization, the knowledge of the elasmobranch or selachian fishes (sharks and rays) begins with Aristotle (384–322 B.C.). Two of his extant works, the “Historia Animalium” and the “Generation of Animals,” both written about 330 B.C., demonstrate knowledge of elasmobranch fishes acquired by observation. Roman writers of works on natural history, such as Aelian and Pliny, who followed Aristotle, were compilers of available information. Their contribution was that they prevented the Greek knowledge from being lost, but they added few original observations. The fall of Rome, around 476 A.D., brought a period of economic regression and political chaos. These in turn brought intellectual thought to a standstill for nearly one thousand years, the period known as the Dark Ages. It would not be until the middle of the sixteenth century, well into the Renaissance, that knowledge of elasmobranchs would advance again. The works of Belon, Salviani, Rondelet, and Steno mark the beginnings of ichthyology, including the study of sharks and rays. The knowledge of sharks and rays increased slowly during and after the Renaissance, and the introduction of the Linnaean System of Nomenclature in 1735 marks the beginning of modern ichthyology. However, the first major work on sharks would not appear until the early nineteenth century. Knowledge acquired about sea animals usually follows their economic importance and exploitation, and this was also true with sharks. The first to learn about sharks in North America were the native fishermen who learned how, when, and where to catch them for food or for their oils. The early naturalists in America studied the land animals and plants; they had little interest in sharks. When faunistic works on fishes started to appear, naturalists just enumerated the species of sharks that they could discern. Throughout the U.S. colonial period, sharks were seldom utilized for food, although their liver oil or skins were often utilized. Throughout the nineteenth century, the Spiny Dogfish, Squalus acanthias, was the only shark species utilized in a large scale on both coasts. It was fished for its liver oil, which was used as a lubricant, and for lighting and tanning, and for its skin which was used as an abrasive. During the early part of the twentieth century, the Ocean Leather Company was started to process sea animals (primarily sharks) into leather, oil, fertilizer, fins, etc. The Ocean Leather Company enjoyed a monopoly on the shark leather industry for several decades. In 1937, the liver of the Soupfin Shark, Galeorhinus galeus, was found to be a rich source of vitamin A, and because the outbreak of World War II in 1938 interrupted the shipping of vitamin A from European sources, an intensive shark fishery soon developed along the U.S. West Coast. By 1939 the American shark leather fishery had transformed into the shark liver oil fishery of the early 1940’s, encompassing both coasts. By the late 1940’s, these fisheries were depleted because of overfishing and fishing in the nursery areas. Synthetic vitamin A appeared on the market in 1950, causing the fishery to be discontinued. During World War II, shark attacks on the survivors of sunken ships and downed aviators engendered the search for a shark repellent. This led to research aimed at understanding shark behavior and the sensory biology of sharks. From the late 1950’s to the 1980’s, funding from the Office of Naval Research was responsible for most of what was learned about the sensory biology of sharks.
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As one facet of an effort to tie the pollen record of central Gulf of California deep cores to modern analogs, pollen was analyzed in the uppermost 150-200 years of varved core 7807-1410 taken nearby. Sampling at 2- to 8-year resolution yielded a noncomplacent record, suggesting pollen in these sediments may be a potential high resolution proxy record of short-term climatic events. The pollen spectrum as a whole matches that of upper-most DSDP Site 480 (means of all samples). Lack of a ratio or influx shift following damming of local rivers and a surplus of low-spine Compositae pollen relative to mainland sites support Baumgartner's theory that terrigenous influx to the site is largely aeolian and also suggest that a significant fraction of the pollen influx may come from Baja California.
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Upper Pleistocene sediments on the continental slope off Northern California contain alternations of varves and bioturbation produced by fluctuations in intensity of the coastal upwelling system. Stable isotopic analyses of benthic Foraminifera across a particularly well developed varve/bioturbation sequence deposited ~26,000 years ago reveal rapid shifts of ~0.25‰ in δ18O and ~0.4‰ in δ13C. The δ18O shift occurs within a varved section. Based on varve counts, the isotopic change occurred in less than 100 years. Timing and magnitude of the shift coincide with similar shifts observed in almost all other high-resolution δ18O records that have been interpreted as primarily representing global in-volume fluctuations.
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Historical flood events produced lakes in the Mojave River watershed in southeastern California and represent climatic conditions similar to those in the late Quaternary when perennial lakes formed in the Mojave Desert. Historical lakes are related to tropical and subtropical sources of moisture and an extreme southward shift of storm tracks. It is suggested that this atmospheric pattern occurred frequently during earlier periods with perennial lakes in the Mojave River drainage basin.
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EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): Laminated sediments are preserved in upper Pleistocene sections of cores collected on the continental slope at water depths within the present oxygen-minimum zone from at least as far north as the Klamath River and as far south as Point Sur. Comparison of sediment components in the laminae with those delivered to sediment traps as pelagic marine "snow" show the dark/light lamination couplets are indeed annual (varves). ... The presence of carbon-, sulfur-, and metal-rich sediments, as well as lack of bioturbation, all support the theory that the oxygen-minimum zone in the northeastern Pacific Ocean was more intense - in fact, anoxic - during the late Pleistocene in response to greater coastal upwelling and higher organic productivity.
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EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): Tidal marsh sediments collected from Browns Island in the lower Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta, California, are used to reconstruct environmental variability over the past 6.8 ka. Calibrated radiocarbon dates provide chronostratigraphic control. Trace metal analyses, grain-size variability, organic content, and macrofossils are used to define short- and long-term variations in relative salinity and inundation frequency. Aggradation began in subtidal fresh water conditions about 6.8 ka. Subtidal aggradation of clayey silts continued until about 6.3 ka, when conditions shifted toward a lower intertidal brackish marsh environment. By 5.1 ka, a brackish marsh plain had evolved, with surface water freshening after 4.1 ka. Conditions returned to brackish similar to the present after 2.3 ka.
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EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): A 323-meter (about 800,000 year) core of lake deposits beneath Owens Lake playa, Inyo County, California, contains a nearly continuous paleolimnological record based on diatom assemblages. ... Throughout most of its history, Owens Lake was characterized by freshwater diatoms, indicating a positive hydrologic input from the Owens River and overflow to lake systems downstream.
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EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): Preliminary analysis of 128 pollen samples and 7 radiocarbon dates from a 5-meter-long, 10-centimeter-diameter sediment core retrieved from Lower Pahranagat Lake (elevation 975 meters), Lincoln County, Nevada, gives us a rare, continuous record of vegetation change at 14-year intervals over the past 2,000 years.