989 resultados para Lakes.


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The limnic ferromanganese ore concretions in some Finnish lakes are described. Their chemical and mineral compositions have been measured as have their natural surroundings - the latter by means of physico-chemical in-situ analysis. The sources of the nodules' contents are discussed, and a theory based on the calculated precipitation fields of the important ore minerals is presented for the ore formation.

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This paper discusses the occurrence of manganese-rich concretions in the lakes of Northern Savolax in Eastern Finland. The samples were collected in the summer of 1905 and left to dry for 2 months at room temperature. The quantity of H2O mentionned in the analysis was obtained by dessication at 155°C. The amount of Mn is calulated as MnO2 although other valences might be present in the samples. The contents in CO2 and organic substances was not determined. J. Aschan determined that as a general rule, in Finland the manganese rich lake deposits are rather associated with soft bottom sediments while the iron rich deposits are more assocaited with hard or sandy bottoms.

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Precise relative sea level (RSL) data are important for inferring regional ice sheet histories, as well as helping to validate numerical models of ice sheet evolution and glacial isostatic adjustment. Here we develop a new RSL curve for Fildes Peninsula, South Shetland Islands (SSIs), a sub-Antarctic archipelago peripheral to the northern Antarctic Peninsula ice sheet, by integrating sedimentary evidence from isolation basins with geomorphological evidence from raised beaches. This combined approach yields not only a Holocene RSL curve, but also the spatial pattern of how RSL change varied across the archipelago. The curve shows a mid-Holocene RSL highstand on Fildes Peninsula at 15.5 m above mean sea level between 8000 and 7000 cal a BP. Subsequently RSL gradually fell as a consequence of isostatic uplift in response to regional deglaciation. We propose that isostatic uplift occurred at a non-steady rate, with a temporary pause in ice retreat ca. 7200 cal a BP, leading to a short-lived RSL rise of ~1 m and forming a second peak to the mid-Holocene highstand. Two independent approaches were taken to constrain the long-term tectonic uplift rate of the SSIs at 0.22-0.48 m/ka, placing the tectonic contribution to the reconstructed RSL highstand between 1.4 and 2.9 m. Finally, we make comparisons to predictions from three global sea level models.

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List of non-indigenous species (NIS) established in the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River region and the North and Baltic Seas region, their geographic origin, and taxonomic assignment. Asterisks mark the NIS that occur in both the North and Baltic Seas and the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River regions. GL, SL, NW, NE, SW and SE denote the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence River, north-west, north-east, south-west, and south-east, respectively. Eurasia represents inland freshwaters except Yangtze River, Indo-Pacific represents Indian Ocean and the archipelago of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Pilipinas, North America (N America) represents inland freshwaters except the Laurentian Great Lakes, St. Lawrence and Mississippi Rivers, while Australia, New Zealand, Africa and South America (S America) cover all inland freshwaters in these areas.

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Acknowledgements BP Exploration Co. is thanked for funding, and particularly the Carbonate Team (Anna Matthews, Teresa Sabato Ceraldi, and Darryl G. Green) for supporting this research and for fruitful discussions. Mark Anderson, Kim Rosewell, and Tony Sinclair (University of Hull) are thanked for laboratory assistance, and for SEM sample preparation and set-up respectively. The technical and human support from Prof. Jörg Hardege and Maggy A. Harley (University of Hull) was key to perform these experiments. We would like to acknowledge an anonymous reviewer for the detailed and constructive comments, and Brian Jones's editorial handling of the manuscript which is greatly appreciated.

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The GloboLakes project, a global observatory of lake responses to environmental change, aims to exploit current satellite missions and long remote-sensing archives to synoptically study multiple lake ecosystems, assess their current condition, reconstruct past trends to system trajectories, and assess lake sensitivity to multiple drivers of change. Here we describe the selection protocol for including lakes in the global observatory based upon remote-sensing techniques and an initial pool of the largest 3721 lakes and reservoirs in the world, as listed in the Global Lakes and Wetlands Database. An 18-year-long archive of satellite data was used to create spatial and temporal filters for the identification of waterbodies that are appropriate for remote-sensing methods. Further criteria were applied and tested to ensure the candidate sites span a wide range of ecological settings and characteristics; a total 960 lakes, lagoons, and reservoirs were selected. The methodology proposed here is applicable to new generation satellites, such as the European Space Agency Sentinel-series.

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Mercury concentrations ([Hg]) in Arctic food fish often exceed guidelines for human subsistence consumption. Previous research on two food fish species, Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) and lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), indicates that anadromous fish have lower [Hg] than nonanadromous fish, but there have been no intraregional comparisons. Also, no comparisons of [Hg] among anadromous (sea-run), resident (marine access but do not migrate), and landlocked (no marine access) life history types of Arctic char and lake trout have been published. Using intraregional data from 10 lakes in the West Kitikmeot area of Nunavut, Canada, we found that [Hg] varied significantly among species and life history types. Differences among species-life history types were best explained by age-at-size and C:N ratios (indicator of lipid); [Hg] was significantly and negatively related to both. At a standardized fork length of 500 mm, lake trout had significantly higher [Hg] (mean 0.17 µg/g wet wt) than Arctic char (0.09 µg/g). Anadromous and resident Arctic char had significantly lower [Hg] (each 0.04 µg/g) than landlocked Arctic char (0.19 µg/g). Anadromous lake trout had significantly lower [Hg] (0.12 µg/g) than resident lake trout (0.18 µg/g), but no significant difference in [Hg] was seen between landlocked lake trout (0.21 µg/g) and other life history types. Our results are relevant to human health assessments and consumption guidance and will inform models of Hg accumulation in Arctic fish.

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During the "Challenger" Deep-Sea Exploring Expedition a great many peculiar-looking manganese nodules or concretions were dredged from the floor of the ocean at great depths, chiefly in the Red Clay areas of the Pacific. In the present paper we propose to point out the distribution of the oxides of manganese in the geological series of rocks, in fresh and sea water, and in marine deposits, with special reference to our explorations in the lochs of the west of Scotland; to give an account of investigations undertaken to ascertain the source of the manganese present in marine deposits in the form of the higher oxides, and thereafter to discuss the various views that have been advanced to explain the formation and distribution of manganese concretions in marine deposits in general.

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Dieser Datensatz beinhaltet 70 Pollenprofile und begleitende sedimentologische Daten aus 30 Seen in Deutschland, die im Verlauf der 70er und 80er Jahre vom NlfB gekernt und analysiert wurden. Der Datenatz wurde im Rahmen des im folgenden beschriebenen Teilprojektes des DFG-Schwerpunktprogrammes "Wandel der Geo-Biosphäre" von Prof. Dr. Josef Merkt der wissenschaftlichen Gemeinschaft zur Verfügung gestellt. Im Projekt "Laminierte Seesedimente als Archive für Untersuchungen der Änderungen von Umweltbedingungen während Spätglazial und Holozän" wurden die laminierten Abschnitte von Sedimentprofilen aus oberschwäbischen, nordschweizerischen und norddeutschen Seen, die die letzten 15 000 Jahre umfassten, mikroskopisch ausgewertet. Ziel war es für Deutschland eine jahrgenaue Chronologie nach Kalenderjahren aufzustellen. Poster: Kleinmann, A, Merkt, J, Müller, H, Küster, H (1998) Holocene lake-level changes in Germany. Institute of Geobotany, University Hannover & Geological Survey of Lower Saxony, Hannover. (pdf hdl:10013/epic.31687.d001 280kB) Einführung: Die meisten Seen in Deutschland bestehen seit mehr als 15 000 Jahren und sind seit Jahrtausenden attraktiv für menschliche Besiedlung. In den Seeablagerungen ist die Geschichte der Umwelt nahezu ungestört und hoch aufgelöst konserviert. Pflanzliche und tierische Reste, wie z. B. Blütenstaub, Birkenfrüchte, Bucheckern, Algen, Wasserflöhe, Käfer, Muschelkrebse und Rädertierchen können Auskunft über die Entwicklung der Flora und Fauna, über Wärme- und Kälteperioden seit der letzten Eiszeit bis heute geben. Weitere Zeugen sind z.B. klastischer Eintrag (wie Sand), vulkanische Aschen, chemische Ausfällungen und eine jahreszeitliche Schichtung, die nur unter Sauerstoffausschluß entsteht. Ist der Seegrund belüftet, leben dort Tiere, die die oberen Zentimeter des Seebodens zur Nahrungssuche durchwühlen und dabei diese Schichtung zerstören. Ist der Seegrund ganzjährig unbelüftet, bleiben die klastischen Partikel, die organischen Reste, die chemischen Fällungen wie Siderit und Kalzit in der Reihenfolge liegen wie sie abgesunken sind. Die Reihenfolge spiegelt den Ablauf der Jahreszeiten wider: Goldalgen fallen im Frühjahr und die Mehrheit der Kieselalgen im Frühsommer und Sommer auf den Seeboden. Eisenkarbonat und Kalk werden im Sommer ausgeschieden, die klastischen und organischen Partikel sedimentieren im Winter. Die Jahresschichten liefern das zeitliche Gerüst in dem sich Klimaumschwünge, Seespiegeltiefstände und andere Ereignisse der Paläoumwelt jahrgenau fassen lassen. Auch die Landnutzung durch den Menschen ist aus Seeablagerungen abzulesen, wie z. B. erster Ackerbau, Rodungshochphasen in der Römerzeit und im Mittelalter, Aufforstung Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts, bronzezeitliche und jüngere Erzverhüttungen, Industrialisierung, sogar Atombombentests und das Reaktorunglück von Tschernobyl 1986. Diese deuten das umwelt-wissenschaftliche Potential der Seesedimente an. Wesentliche Antworten, die in Seesedimenten stecken und entschlüsselt werden, sind die auf Fragen nach Klimaänderungen und ihren Folgen. Neben den bekannten vulkanischen Aschenlagen Laacher Tuff aus der Eifel, Saksunarvatn Tuff aus Island und Kilian/Vasset Tuff aus dem Massif Central werden weitere gesucht, da sie trennscharfe Leithorizonte sind und zur absoluten zeitlichen Korrelation von See zu See dienen. Daneben können regional unterschiedliche Vegetationsentwicklungen über isochrone Tephralagen einander zugeordnet werden. Mit der Erfassung möglichst vieler Sedimentparameter können Kriterien gefunden werden, mit denen die natürlichen von den anthropogenen Umweltveränderungen zu unterscheiden sind. Klimatisch unruhige Zeitabschnitte wie der Übergang Alleröd/Jüngere Tundrenzeit vor 12700 Kalenderjahren, der Übergang Spätglazial/Holozän vor 11560 Kalenderjahren und die 120 Jahre später einsetzende vorübergehende Abkühlung, die Rammelbeekphase, wurden analysiert, um Dauer, Verlauf und Folgeerscheinungen kennenzulernen. Als Methoden wurden eingesetzt: Mikrofaziesanalyse mit Dünnschliffen, Pollenanalyse, Mikrofaunauntersuchungen, anorganisch und organisch geochemische Analysen, Isotopenanalyse (delta13C, delta18O, AMS an terrestrischen Makroresten).