Search results for "SL"

showing 10 items of 12921 documents

New research on the development of high-resolution palaeoenvironmental proxies from geochemical properties of biogenic carbonates

2017

Abstract Geochemical signatures from biogenic carbonates are being increasingly employed as palaeoenvironmental proxies. In turn, many of these proxy archives including mollusc shells, corals, and otoliths have periodic growth structures, which allow the reconstruction of chronologically constrained records of palaeoenvironmental variability at unparalleled high temporal resolution. Studying the growth and chemistry of these periodic growth structures is known as sclerochronology. Biogenic hard parts accumulate in geological or archaeological deposits, and can be directly dated using radiometric and racemisation methods. They therefore offer the opportunity for high-resolution palaeoenviron…

010506 paleontologyEnvironmental changebiologyPaleontologyClimate change010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanographybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesProxy (climate)OceanographyMediterranean seaSclerochronologyClimate modelRadiometric datingArctica islandicaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Seasonal and habitat effects on the nutritional properties of savanna vegetation: Potential implications for early hominin dietary ecology.

2019

The African savannas that many early hominins occupied likely experienced stark seasonality and contained mosaic habitats (i.e., combinations of woodlands, wetlands, grasslands, etc.). Most would agree that the bulk of dietary calories obtained by taxa such as Australopithecus and Paranthropus came from the consumption of vegetation growing across these landscapes. It is also likely that many early hominins were selective feeders that consumed particular plants/plant parts (e.g., leaves, fruit, storage organs) depending on the habitat and season within which they were foraging. Thus, improving our understanding of how the nutritional properties of potential hominin plant foods growing in mo…

010506 paleontologyForagingWetlandWoodlandBiologyForests01 natural sciencesGrasslandSoilSouth AfricaSavannaDry seasonAnimals0601 history and archaeologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciences2. Zero hungergeography060101 anthropologygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyProteinfungifood and beveragesHominidae06 humanities and the artsVegetation15. Life on landPlantsbiology.organism_classificationDietary fiberGrasslandKenyaHominin dietHabitatAnthropologyWetlandsParanthropusSeasonsNutritive ValueJournal of human evolution
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Using growth and geochemical composition of Clathromorphum compactum to track multiscale North Atlantic hydro-climate variability

2020

International audience; Records of ocean/atmosphere dynamics over the past centuries are essential to understand processes driving climate variability. This is particularly true for the Northwest Atlantic which is a key region with an essential role in global climate regulation. Over the past two decades, coralline red algae have been increasingly used as environmental and climatic archives for the marine realm and hold the potential to extend long-term instrumental measurements. Here, we investigate the possibility to extract climate and environmental information from annual growth patterns and geochemical composition of the coralline red algae, Clathromorphum compactum, from Saint-Pierre …

010506 paleontologyPopulationClimate change010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanography01 natural sciencesCoralline algaeAtmosphereSclerochronologyEnvironmental reconstructionSclerochronologyClathromorphum compactumClimate change14. Life underwatereducationArctica islandicaEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processeseducation.field_of_studygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyACLEnvironmental proxyPaleontologyCoralline algaebiology.organism_classification13. Climate actionArchipelagoPhysical geography[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyGeology
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Reconstructing early Holocene seasonal bottom-water temperatures in the northern North Sea using stable oxygen isotope records of Arctica islandica s…

2021

The knowledge of seasonal temperature variability in the ocean is essential for understanding climate and its response to forcing factors. Time intervals with highly dynamic climate and increased seasonal forcing such as the early Holocene are of particular interest. Yet, the temporal resolution of most existing climate records is not sufficient to reconstruct temperature seasonality. Here, we present the first seasonally resolved, early Holocene, bottom-water temperature record from the Viking Bank in the northern North Sea. The reconstruction is based on the stable oxygen isotope data (δ18Oshell) of two crossdated, radiocarbon-dated subfossil shells of Arctica islandica (Bivalvia). Oxygen…

010506 paleontologySubfossilbiologyPaleontologyForcing (mathematics)Seasonality010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanographymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesBottom waterOceanographymedicineArctica islandicaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologySea levelHolocene0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesTemperature recordPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Quartz OSL dating of late quaternary Chinese and Serbian loess: A cross Eurasian comparison of dust mass accumulation rates

2019

© 2018 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. Reconstructing dust Mass Accumulation Rate (MAR) from loess deposits is critical to understanding past atmospheric mineral dust activity and requires accurate independent age models from loess deposits across Europe and Asia. Previous correlations of loess in Europe and China have tended to focus on multi-millennial timescales, with no detailed examination of dust MAR at the two ends of the Eurasian loess belt on shorter, sub-orbital scales. Here we present a detailed quartz optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) chronology from the Serbian Titel Loess Plateau (Veliki Surduk loess core) and the Chinese Loess Plateau (Lingtai section). The luminescence ages pa…

010506 paleontologyTitel loess plateau010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesOptically stimulated luminescenceOSL datingGeochemistryLoessDustMars Exploration ProgramMineral dust01 natural sciencesMARLoessChinese Loess PlateauGlacial periodQuaternary[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]QuartzGeologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesChronology
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Conodonts from Late Devonian island arc settings (Baruunhuurai Terrane, western Mongolia)

2020

Abstract Upper Devonian marine deposits of the Baruunhuurai Terrane in western Mongolia represent island arc settings, which yielded a diverse conodont assemblage of 30 taxa, including species of Ancyrognathus (as well as one new species), Icriodus, Mehlina, Polygnathus and Palmatolepis. Biodiversity analysis of Ancyrognathus, Pelekysgnathus, Mehlina and Icriodus shows that the Mongolian conodont assemblage consists of two endemic and few cosmopolitan taxa. Representatives of the otherwise globally distributed genus Pelekysgnathus are absent. An important factor influencing the regional distribution of conodont taxa seems to be the siliciclastic-dominated sedimentation of the Baruunhuurai T…

010506 paleontologybiologyBiodiversityPaleontology010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanographybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesDevonianPaleontologyGenusAssemblage (archaeology)Island arcLate Devonian extinctionConodontEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesTerranePalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Carbonate slope re‐sedimentation in a tectonically‐active setting (Western Sicily Cretaceous Escarpment, Italy)

2020

Tectonic processes are widely considered as a mechanism causing carbonate platform margin instabilities leading to the emplacement of mass transport deposits and calciturbidites. However, only few examples establishing a clear link between tectonics and re-sedimentation processes are known from the lit- erature. The two-dimensional and three-dimensional wire-cut walls of hun- dreds of quarries extracting ornamental limestones (for example, Perlato di Sicilia) from the Western Sicily Cretaceous Escarpment in Italy expose a series of mass transport deposits. The depositional architecture, spatial facies distri- bution and sedimentary features of these deposits were studied in detail. Thin sec…

010506 paleontologygeographyPillow lavageography.geographical_feature_categoryCarbonate platformStratigraphyGeochemistryGeologyEscarpment010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesCretaceousSedimentary depositional environmentTectonicsFaciesGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesSedimentary rockGeologyCarbonate slope Cretaceous mass transport deposits re-deposited facies tectonics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceSedimentology
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A Cretaceous carbonate escarpment from Western Sicily (Italy): biostratigraphy and tectono-sedimentary evolution

2020

Abstract The presence of a huge carbonate slope of Cretaceous age is recorded in some imbricated thrust sheets from the Maghrebian fold-and-thrust belt cropping out in northwesternmost Sicily (southern Italy). The sedimentological features of this escarpment, named as the Western Sicily Cretaceous Escarpment (WSCE), have been recently described. The present paper aims to provide a detailed bio-chronostratigraphic characterization of the different facies types that occur in the four lithostratigraphic units spanning the whole slope depositional system. The detailed biostratigraphic analysis and correlation of a number of well-exposed sections allowed to differentiate eight informal biozones …

010506 paleontologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAptianbiologyCarbonate platformPaleontologyEscarpment010502 geochemistry & geophysicsbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesCretaceousSedimentary depositional environmentchemistry.chemical_compoundPaleontologychemistryRudistsCretaceous Slope Biostratigraphy Rudists Tectonics CarbonatesCarbonateCenomanianGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Sea–land geology of Marettimo (Egadi Islands, central Mediterranean sea)

2016

We present a 1:10,000 scale geological map of Marettimo Island and its offshore (Egadi Archipelago, central Mediterranean Sea). The map was achieved by integrating a new geological survey with data from recent, marine, geological and geophysical surveys acquired along the adjacent continental shelf. The island is composed of a Mesozoic, mostly carbonate platform succession, which is overlain by continental to coastal marine Quaternary deposits. Extensional tectonics have affected the carbonate platform since the Late Triassic producing an initial increase of accommodation space that was filled by interbed breccias, marls and calcareous marls. During the Jurassic, a NE-SW-directed normal fau…

010506 paleontologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySettore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaContinental shelfCarbonate platformSettore GEO/03 - Geologia StrutturaleGeography Planning and Developmentstratigraphy010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencestectonicPaleontologyTectonicsMediterranean seaArchipelagoMarlEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Egadi IslandExtensional tectonicsGeological surveyGeological Map geological survey stratigraphy tectonics Egadi IslandsQuaternaryGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Letter to the editor regarding the article “Taking advantage of seagrass recovery potential to develop novel and effective meadow rehabilitation meth…

2020

Alagna et al. (2019) suggest new transplantation methods for Posidonia oceanica (Linnaeus) Delile, inspired by its natural recovery process after disturbance due to dredging operations for gas-pipelines. They observe that P. oceanica vegetative fragments naturally settled only on loose calcareous stones deployed to fill the trenches of the gas-pipeline. No recovery was noted on dead matte, sand and large calcarenitic boulders. Following a new pilot restoration project currently ongoing in the same area, we demonstrate that natural recovery also occurs on dead matte. After examining other alternative transplantation methods for P. oceanica, the Authors suggest using their "habitat enhancemen…

0106 biological sciences010501 environmental sciencesAquatic ScienceOceanography01 natural sciencesDredgingMarine pollutionMediterranean SeaEcosystemEnvironmental Restoration and Remediation0105 earth and related environmental sciencesAlismatalesbiology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEnvironmental restorationbiology.organism_classificationEcological engineeringGrasslandPollutionFisheryTransplantationSeagrassHabitatPosidonia oceanicaRestoration Substrate Ecological engineering Posidonia oceanicaEnvironmental scienceMarine Pollution Bulletin
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