957 resultados para Contamination of surface and groundwater
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The areas of marine pollen deposition are related to the pollen source areas by aeolian and fluvial transport regimes, whereas wind transport is much more important than river transport. Pollen distribution patterns of Pinus, Artemisia, Chenopodiaceae-Amaranthaceae, and Asteraceae Tubuliflorae trace atmospheric transport by the northeast trades. Pollen transport by the African Easterly Jet is reflected in the pollen distribution patterns of Chenopodiaceae-Amaranthaceae, Asteraceae Tubuliflorae, and Mitracarpus. Grass pollen distribution registers the latitudinal extension of Sahel, savannas and dry open forests. Marine pollen distribution patterns of Combretaceae-Melastomataceae, Alchornea, and Elaeis reflect the extension of wooded grasslands and transitional forests. Pollen from the Guinean-Congolian/Zambezian forest and from the Sudanian/Guinean vegetation zones mark the northernmost extension of the tropical rain forest. Rhizophora pollen in marine sediments traces the distribution of mangrove swamps. Only near the continent, pollen of Rhizophora, Mitracarpus, Chenopodiaceae-Amaranthaceae, and pollen from the Sudanian and Guinean vegetation zones are transported by the Upwelling Under Current and the Equatorial Under Current, where those currents act as bottom currents. The distribution of pollen in marine sediments, reflecting the position of major climatic zones (desert, dry tropics, humid tropics), can be used in tracing climatic changes in the past.
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We have developed a statistical gap-filling method adapted to the specific coverage and properties of observed fugacity of surface ocean CO2 (fCO2). We have used this method to interpolate the Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas (SOCAT) v2 database on a 2.5°×2.5° global grid (south of 70°N) for 1985-2011 at monthly resolution. The method combines a spatial interpolation based on a 'radius of influence' to determine nearby similar fCO2 values with temporal harmonic and cubic spline curve-fitting, and also fits long term trends and seasonal cycles. Interannual variability is established using deviations of observations from the fitted trends and seasonal cycles. An uncertainty is computed for all interpolated values based on the spatial and temporal range of the interpolation. Tests of the method using model data show that it performs as well as or better than previous regional interpolation methods, but in addition it provides a near-global and interannual coverage.
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We have analysed alkenones in 149 surface sediments from the eastern South Atlantic in order to establish a sediment-based calibration of the U37K' paleotemperature index. Our study covers the major tropical to subpolar production systems and sea-surface temperatures (SST's) between 0° and 27°C. In order to define the most suitable calibration for this region, the U37K' values were correlated to seasonal, annual, and production-weighted annual mean atlas temperatures and compared to previously published culture and core-top calibrations. The best linear correlation between U37K' and SST was obtained using annual mean SST from 0 to 10 m water depth (U37K' = 0.033 T + 0.069, r**2 = 0.981). Data scattering increased significantly using temperatures of waters deeper than 20 m, suggesting that U37K' reflects mixed-layer SST and that alkenone production at thermocline depths was not high enough to significantly bias the mixed-layer signal. Regressions based on both production-weighted and on actual annual mean atlas SST were virtually identical, indicating that regional variations in the seasonality of primary production have no discernible effect on the U37K' vs. SST relationship. Comparison with published core-top calibrations from other oceanic regions revealed a high degree of accordance. We, therefore, established a global core-top calibration using U37K' data from 370 sites between 60°S and 60°N in the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans and annual mean atlas SST (0-29°C) from 0 m water depth. The resulting relationship (U37K' = 0.033 T + 0.044, r**2 = 958) is identical within error limits to the widely used E. huxleyi calibrations of and attesting their general applicability. The observation that core-top calibrations extending over various biogeographical coccolithophorid zones are strongly linear and in better accordance than culture calibrations suggests that U37K' is less species-dependent than is indicated by culture experiments. The results also suggest that variations in growth rate of algae and nutrient availability do not significantly affect the sedimentary record of U37K' in open ocean environments.
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We present the first high-resolution organic carbon mass accumulation rate (MAR) data set for the Eocene equatorial Pacific upwelling region, from Sites 1218 and 1219 of the Ocean Drilling Program. A maximum Corg MAR anomaly appears at 41 Ma and corresponds to a high carbonate accumulation event (CAE). Independent evidence suggests that this event (CAE-3) was a time of rapid cooling. Throughout the Eocene, organic carbon burial fluxes were an order of magnitude lower than fluxes recorded for the Holocene. In contrast, the expected organic carbon flux, calculated from the biogenic barium concentrations for these sites, is roughly equal to modern. A sedimentation anomaly appears at 41 Ma, when both the measured and the expected organic carbon MAR increases by a factor of two-three relative to the background Eocene fluxes. The rain of estimated Corg and barium from the euphotic zone to the sediments increased by factors of three and six, respectively. We suggest that the discrepancy between the expected and measured Corg in the sediments is a direct consequence of the increased metabolic rates of all organisms throughout the Eocene oceans and sediments. This hypothesis is supported by recent work in ecology and biochemical kinetics that recognizes the fundamental basis of ecology as following from the laws of thermodynamics. This dependence is now elucidated as the Universal Temperature Dependence (UTD) "law" of metabolism and can be applied to all organisms over their biologically relevant temperature range. The general pattern of organic carbon and barium deposition throughout the Eocene is consistent with the UTD theory. In particular, the anomaly at 41 Ma (CAE-3) is associated with rapid cooling, an event that triggered slower metabolic rates for all organisms, slower recycling of organic carbon in the water and sediment column, and, consequently, higher deposition of organic carbon in the sediments. This "metabolism-based" scenario is consistent with the sedimentation patterns we observe for both Sites 1218 and 1219.
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Samples from sutface sediments of the shell, continental slope, and adjacent deep sea regions off West Africa between 27° N and 15° N were investigated with respect to grain size distribution of the total samples, sand contents of the acid insoluble residues, carbonate content of the total samples, and the separate grain size fractions, specific surfaces, colours and mineralogical composition of the clay fractions. The grain size distributions of the total samples of the sediments of the shelf and the continental slope off Spanish-Sahara are controlled mainly by biogenic components. The supply of terrigeneous material in this area is very low. At deeper parts of the continental slope and in the deep sea areas, the relative amounts of carbonate minerals in the sediments are considerably reduced. The prevailing sand contents of the upper slope changes into clay dominance. On the shelf of Mauritania - represented by profiles extending down to 200 m water depth - the grain size is also controlled mainly by biogenic carbonates. Nevertheless, the admixture of fossil silicate components is important, too. The southern parts of the area is investigated are located in a region influenced by sediments of the Senegal River, which especially control the contents of silt and clay. The silicate sands, predominately of quartz, are fossil and form a mixed sediment with younger deposits. The carbonate contents of the different grain size fractions are formed either by sedimentation of carbonate and silicate particles of the respective grain size or by autochtonous disintegration of coarser sediment particles, as shown by the occurence of Mg-rich calcite and especially aragonite in the clay sized fraction. In the northern parts of the area investigated, which have very minute terrigeneous supply, the latter mechanism is the dominant factor, controlling the carbonate contents of the fine grain sized fractions. In the vicinity of the mouth of the Senegal the carbonate contents are influenced by extremely high dilution with terrigencous silicates. Mg-rich calcite and aragonite are produced preferentially in shallow slope and shelf areas up to 500 m of water depth. The specific surfaces of the carbonate-free clay fractions indicate that the clay fractions of the shelfareas with little terrigenous supply consits of relatively coarser particles. Very fine particles are removed and transported towards the deep sea. Lateral differentiation of this kind was not observed in the area off Senegal. The high surface areas, characterizing the clay fractions of this region, are thought to be due to high montmorillonite contents as was found for deep seas sediments. The mineralogical composition of the clay fraction from the southern parts of the area is characterized by high kaolinite and montmorillonite contents, while in the northern illite is predominating. At least two types of montmorillionites are present: in areas influenced by the Senegal mostly one type was found, which could swell to 17; on the shelves and slopes of the other regions the montmorillonite-group is represented by a montmorillonite-mica-type mixed-layer mineral. A "glauconite", found in the sand fraction, which had very similar properties to those of the montmorillonite-mica mixed-layer, is believed to be the source of this mixed-layer-type mineral. Palygorskite is present in all samples out of range of the Senegal supply. It may be an indicator of eolian transported material. The occurence of rich palygorskit deposits in the arid hinterlands emphasizes the terrestrial origin.
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Als Alfred Merz mich aufforderte, die sedimentpetrographische Bearbeitung der "Meteor"-Expedition zu übernehmen, schwebte mir von vornherein als Ziel vor, die Sedimente nicht nur in größerer Zahl als bisher und im Zusammenhang mit den übrigen Wissenschaften vom Meer nach den bisherigen Untersuchungsmethoden zu beschreiben. Es war mir klar, daß neue Ergebnisse nur zu erwarten waren, wenn die Untersuchung der Sedimente und damit ihre Beschreibung auf Grund vertiefter und neuer Methoden unternommen wurde. Ich erhoffte von einer solchen verfeinerten Beschreibung auch ein klareres Bild der Abhängigkeit der Sedimente von ihrer Umwelt. Wir werden diese Abhängigkeit nur verstehen, wenn wir die allgemeinen Gesetzmäßigkeiten herausarbeiten können. Diese werden dann auch eine Anwendung auf andere Sedimente ermöglichen. Für solche Untersuchungen sind Tiefseesedimente günstig, weil wir bei ihnen relativ einfache Bildungsumstände haben, einfacher jedenfalls, als es in der Flachsee im allgemeinen der Fall ist, ungünstig aber, weil diese Umwelteinflüsse weniger bekannt und schwerer zu erforschen sind und die Auswahl der Untersuchungspunkte nicht nach sedimentpetrographischen Gesichtspunkten erfolgen konnte. Die ersten Jahre nach der Rückkehr von der Expedition wurden deshalb auf methodische Untersuchungen verwandt. Insbesondere kam es mir darauf an herauszubekommen, wie die feinsten Bestandteile der Sedimente zusammengesetzt sind. Diese "tonigen" Bestandteile bilden nicht nur den wesentlichen Anteil der Roten Tone und der Blauschlicke, wir finden sie auch, durch Kalk verdünnt, in den Globigerinenschlämmen wieder. Sie sind von der Wissenschaft bisher recht stiefmütterlich behandelt worden. Die Ausarbeitung der Methoden, die gerade auf diesem Gebiet Neuland betreten mußte, ließ sich nicht rasch erzwingen. Es kam hinzu, daß ich mir in Rostock erst meine Arbeitsmöglichkeiten schaffen mußte. Ich habe hier der Notgemeinschaft der Deutschen Wissenschaft und der Mecklenburgischen Regierung für ihre Unterstützung mit Apparaten und Personal wärmstens zu danken. Ferner mußte als Vorbedingung für die Deutung der Sedimente zunächst festgestellt werden, zu welchen geologischen Zeiten sie gebildet worden sind und wie groß ihre Bildungsgeschwindigkeit überhaupt ist. Diese Untersuchungen hat W. Schott mit Hilfe der Foraminiferenfaunen als Notgemeinschaftsstipendiat durchgeführt. Diese Vorarbeiten, insbesondere der Ausbau der Methoden, hatten den Nachteil, daß die Veröffentlichung der Ergebnisse nicht so rasch erfolgen konnte, wie ich es selbst gewünscht hätte. Bald nachdem die Darstellung der Methoden und die Foraminiferenuntersuchungen als erste Lieferung erschienen waren, stellte es sich als notwendig heraus, eine beträchtliche Kürzung des restlichen Teiles vorzunehmen. Das hat zur Folge, daß die erste Lieferung breiter dargestellt ist als die Ergebnisse. Als die Nachricht von der Kürzung und dem notwendigen raschen Abschluß des Werkes mir bekannt wurde (Januar 1935), mußte eine Reihe von Untersuchungen eingestellt werden, insbesondere mikroskopische Untersuchungen, die besonders viel Zeit und in der Darstellung viel Raum beanspruchen. Deshalb ist systematisch nur das Guinea-Becken durch V. Leinz und das Kapverden-Becken durch O. E. Radczewski untersucht worden.
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"Grant no. R804868020."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Shipping list no.: 93-0522-P.
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Cover title: The Finger Lakes drainage basin: official classifications.