Search results for "Clima"

showing 10 items of 6069 documents

Comparative sclerochronology of modern and mid-Pliocene (c. 3.5Ma) Aequipecten opercularis (Mollusca, Bivalvia): an insight into past and future clim…

2009

Records of environment contained within the accretionarily deposited tissues of fossil organisms afford a means of detailed reconstruction of past climates and hence of rigorous testing of numerical climate models. We identify the environmental factors controlling oxygen and carbon stable-isotopic composition, and microgrowth-increment size, in the shell of modern examples of the Queen Scallop, Aequipecten opercularis. This understanding is then applied in interpretation of data from mid-Pliocene A. opercularis from eastern England. On the basis of oxygen-isotope evidence we conclude that winter minimum seafloor temperature was similar to present values (typically 6–7 °C) in the adjacent so…

biologyGlobal warmingPaleontologyClimate changeOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSeafloor spreadingAequipectenGulf StreamOceanographySclerochronologyPaleoclimatologyClimate modelEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Climate change at the 4.2 ka BP termination of the Indus valley civilization and Holocene south Asian monsoon variability

2003

[1] Planktonic oxygen isotope ratios off the Indus delta reveal climate changes with a multi-centennial pacing during the last 6 ka, with the most prominent change recorded at 4.2 ka BP. Opposing isotopic trends across the northern Arabian Sea surface at that time indicate a reduction in Indus river discharge and suggest that later cycles also reflect variations in total annual rainfall over south Asia. The 4.2 ka event is coherent with the termination of urban Harappan civilization in the Indus valley. Thus, drought may have initiated southeastward habitat tracking within the Harappan cultural domain. The late Holocene drought cycles following the 4.2 ka BP event vary between 200 and 800 y…

biologyIndusClimate changebiology.organism_classificationMonsoonGeophysicsOceanographyPaleoclimatologyGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesQuaternaryCenozoicGlobigerinoidesHoloceneGeologyGeophysical Research Letters
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Coralline algal growth-increment widths archive North Atlantic climate variability

2011

Over the past decade coralline algae have increasingly been used as archives of paleoclimate information. Encrusting coralline algae, which deposit annual growth increments in a high Mg-calcite skeleton, are amongst the longest-lived shallow marine organisms. In fact, a live-collected plant has recently been shown to have lived for at least 850 years based on radiometric dating. While a number of investigations have successfully used geochemical information of coralline algal skeletons to reconstruct sea surface temperatures, less attention has been paid to employ growth increment widths as a temperature proxy. Here we explore the relationship between growth and environmental parameters in …

biologyPaleontologyCoralline algaeOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSubarctic climateOceanographyAtlantic Equatorial modeSclerochronologyPaleoclimatologyAtlantic multidecadal oscillationDendrochronologyRegime shiftEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Eurhomalea exalbida (Bivalvia): A reliable recorder of climate in southern South America?

2012

Abstract Due to the lack of suitable high-resolution archives, regional and continental-scale climate dynamics of southern South America are not well understood. Shells of the long-lived, shallow-marine bivalve mollusk, Eurhomalea exalbida (Dillwyn), are likely to contain information on the past water temperatures. As yet, however, no rigorous calibration study has been presented so that growth history traits and the reliability of shell oxygen isotope-based temperature estimates remain unknown. Shell growth patterns and oxygen isotope ratios of four young specimens of E. exalbida from the Falkland Islands (Southwest Atlantic) were analyzed and cross-calibrated with environmental parameters…

biologyPaleontologyOceanographyBivalviabiology.organism_classificationAnnual growth %Isotopes of oxygenLatitudechemistry.chemical_compoundOceanographychemistryPaleoclimatologyCarbonateDominance (ecology)Eurhomalea exalbidaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Accurate increment identification and the spatial extent of the common signal in fiveArctica islandicachronologies from the Fladen Ground, northern N…

2009

[1] The creation of networks of shell-based chronologies which can provide regionally extensive high-resolution proxies for the marine environment depends on the spatial extent of the common environmental signal preserved in the shell banding and on the reliability of the dating model. Here Arctica islandica chronologies from five neighboring sites in the North Sea are compared, and the strength of the common environmental signal across distances up to 80 km is analyzed using statistical techniques derived from dendrochronology. The signal is found to be coherent across these distances. In a linked study, chronologies based on one of the same sites but constructed by two different research …

biologyPaleontologyOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSignalClimatologySclerochronologyDendrochronologyPeriod (geology)Regionally ExtensiveNorth seaSpatial extentArctica islandicaGeologyPaleoceanography
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Tarbellastraea (Scleractinia): A new stable isotope archive for Late Miocene paleoenvironments in the Mediterranean

2008

Abstract Geochemical proxy records of sea surface temperature (SST) or sea surface salinity (SSS) variability on intra- and interannual time-scales in corals from geological periods older than Pleistocene are extremely rare due to pervasive diagenetic alteration of coralline aragonite. Very recently, however, stable isotope data (δ18O, δ13C) from specimens of Porites of Late Miocene age (10 Ma) have been shown to preserve original environmental signatures. In this paper we describe new finds of the zooxanthellate corals Porites and Tarbellastraea in exceptional aragonite preservation from the island of Crete in sediments of Tortonian (∼ 9 Ma) and Early Messinian (∼ 7 Ma) age. Systematic, co…

biologyδ18OAragonitePoritesPaleontologyScleractiniaengineering.materialLate MioceneOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSea surface temperaturePaleontologyOceanographySclerochronologyPaleoclimatologyengineeringEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Potentiation of the cytotoxic activity of copper by polyphosphate on biofilm-producing bacteria: A bioinspired approach

2012

Adhesion and accumulation of organic molecules represent an ecologically and economically massive problem. Adhesion of organic molecules is followed by microorganisms, unicellular organisms and plants together with their secreted soluble and structure-associated byproducts, which damage unprotected surfaces of submerged marine structures, including ship hulls and heat exchangers of power plants. This is termed biofouling. The search for less toxic anti-biofilm strategies has intensified since the ban of efficient and cost-effective anti-fouling paints, enriched with the organotin compound tributyltin, not least because of our finding of the ubiquitous toxic/pro-apoptotic effects displayed b…

bisphosphonateCopper SulfateBiofoulingPharmaceutical ScienceArticlebiofilmmarine coatingsStreptococcus mutansBiofouling03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPolyphosphatessynergismDrug DiscoveryAnimalslcsh:QH301-705.5Pharmacology Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous)030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbioinspired approachbiology030306 microbiologyHydrolysisPolyphosphateantifouling strategiesBiofilmpolyphosphateHelminth Proteinsbiology.organism_classificationSuberites domunculalcsh:Biology (General)chemistryBiochemistry13. Climate actionBiofilmscopperTributyltinClodronic AcidSuberitesMarine toxinBacteriaSuberitesMar. Drugs
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A Survey on Technologies Which Make Bitcoin Greener or More Justified

2022

According to recent estimates, one bitcoin transaction consumes as much energy as 1.5 million Visa transactions. Why is bitcoin using so much energy? Most of the energy is used during the bitcoin mining process, which serves at least two significant purposes: a) distributing new cryptocurrency coins to the cryptoeconomy and b) securing the Bitcoin blockchain ledger. In reality, the comparison of bitcoin transactions to Visa transactions is not that simple. The amount of transactions in the Bitcoin network is not directly connected to the amount of bitcoin mining power nor the energy consumption of those mining devices; for example, it is possible to multiply the number of bitcoin transactio…

blockchainhajautetut järjestelmätenergiankulutus (energiateknologia)General Computer ScienceDLTbitcoinGeneral Engineeringlohkoketjutsustainabilitycryptocurrencyvirtuaalivaluuttagreen technologyunconventional computingclimate changeekologinen kestävyysGeneral Materials ScienceElectrical and Electronic EngineeringIEEE Access
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Variabilité de la température entre 1951 et 2014 en Allemagne associée à l’évolution de la floraison des pommiers.

2018

Apple tree bloom onset in Germany has advanced by 2 days/decade in 1951-2014 and by 3 days/decade in 1988-2014, behaving similarly in respect to its evolution since 1951 and its sensitivity to temperature to other species’ phenological spring phases. The evolution however was not linear; by conducting a split moving-window dissimilarity analysis (SMWDA) we were able to detect the “break-period” 1987-1989 which coincides with a breakpoint that has been identified in the phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). We observed distinct spatial patterns with apple bloom advancing from southwest to northeast and, most interestingly, a longitudinal gradient in the trend of apple bloom onset r…

breakpoint[SDV.SA.AGRO] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Agronomy0106 biological scienceschangement climatiqueapple bloom010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPhenologyAllemagneApple treeGeneral MedicineBiologyphenology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesphénologieHorticultureclimate change[SDU.STU.CL] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/ClimatologyNorth Atlantic oscillationGermanyfloraison des pommierspoint de ruptureBloom0105 earth and related environmental sciencesClimatologie
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A review of sustainable and intensified techniques for extraction of food and natural products

2020

International audience; This review presents innovative extraction techniques and their role in promoting sustainable ingredients forthe food, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries. These techniques (such as microwave, ultrasound, pulseelectricfield, instant controlled pressure drop, sub- and super-criticalfluid processing, extrusion, mechano-chemistry, high pressure, and ohmic, UV and IR heating) use or produce less solvent, energy, and hazards.This review will provide the necessary theoretical background and some details about green extractiontechniques, their mechanisms, some applications, and environmental impacts. We will pay special attentionto the strategies and present them as succ…

business.industry010401 analytical chemistryIndustrial scale04 agricultural and veterinary sciences7. Clean energy040401 food science01 natural sciencesPollution12. Responsible consumption0104 chemical sciencesGreen extraction ; Sustainable ; Innovative techniques0404 agricultural biotechnology13. Climate actionHigh pressure[SDV.IDA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceExtraction (military)[SPI.GPROC]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process EngineeringProcess engineeringbusinessPulse electric field
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