969 resultados para WHITE-MATTER CHANGES
Resumo:
Distribution patterns of water temperature, salinity, current velocities, suspended matter concentration, bottom contour, and zooplankton abundance were studied in relation to marine-riverine interactions and tide/ebb phases for coast lines of different configurations in the White Sea during cruises of R/V Ekolog (August of 2006 and 2007). Significant difference in manifestation of combined effect of marine and riverine impacts (estuarine concave relief) and only marine impact (open-sea straight line portion) was observed. This results in both variations in sea water level and distribut patterns of suspended matter and zooplankton.
Resumo:
With a view to more complete understanding of the role of phyto- and zooplankton in biogeochemical cycles, spatial distributions of Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Cr, Cu, Cd, Pb, Zn, As, Hg, and Corg in the White Sea seston (21 samples) collected in August 2004 during Cruise 64 of R/V ''Professor Shtokman'' were studied. It was shown that the elements in study are accumulated in plankton with enrichment factors from 10**2 for Hg to 10**5 for Fe, as compared to seawater. Spatial distribution of trace elements is determined by sources of their supply and correlates with distribution of primary production and biomass of zooplankton. Increased values of trace element contents (excluding As) are characteristic of the Dvina Bay, whereas the highest As concentrations were found in the Kandalaksha Bay.
Resumo:
The present study uses a multiproxy approach in order to further understand the evolution of climate responses in the western Mediterranean as of the Last Glacial Maximum. Sediments from ODP Site 975 in the Algero-Balearic basin have been analysed at high resolution, both geochemically andmineralogicallly. The resulting data have been used as proxies to establish a sedimentary regime, primary marine productivity, the preservation of the proxies and oxygen conditions. Fluctuations in detrital element concentrations were mainly the consequence of wet/arid oscillations. Productivity has been established using Ba excess, according to which marine productivity appears to have been greatest during cold events Heinrich 1 and Younger Dryas. The S1 time interval was not as marked by increases in productivity as was the eastern Mediterranean. In contrast, the S1 interval was first characterized by a decreasing trend and then by a fall in productivity after the 8.2 ky BP dry-cold event. Since then productivity has remained low. Here we report that there was an important redox event in this basin, probably a consequence of the major oceanographic circulation change occurring in the western Mediterranean at 7.7 ky BP. This circulation change led to reventilation as well as to diagenetic remobilization of redox-sensitive elements and organic matter oxidation. Comparisons between our paleoceanographic reconstruction for this basin and those regarding other Mediterranean basins support the hypothesis that across the Mediterranean there were different types of responses to climate forcing mechanism. The Algero-Balearic basin is likely to be a key area for further understanding of the relationships between the North Atlantic and the eastern Mediterranean basins.
Resumo:
As part of our continuing organic geochemical studies of sediments recovered by the Deep Sea Drilling Project, we have analyzed the types, amounts, and thermal alteration indices of organic matter in samples collected from the California continental margin on Leg 63. Some of the samples were frozen core; others were canned on site. Canned samples were analyzed for gas content using methods described by Mclver (1972). Our main objective was to see if the changes in surface circulation that had occurred through time off the California coast were reflected in changes in the type and amount of organic matter accumulating on the sea floor.
Resumo:
The distribution of temperature and salinity, current velocities, suspended particulate matter, bottom sediments, bottom morphology, and planktonic and benthic organisms during the summer period are studied in the estuary of the large Onega River and coastal areas of the Onega Bay (White Sea) influenced by interacting marine and riverine factors.