High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea

High-resolution climate reconstruction, North Sea, annual banded proxy, Arctica islandica. - Until now, there has been no published documentation of North Sea year-to-year climate variability during the last 8000 to 10000 years. High-resolution instrumental time series of climatic and environmental...

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Other Authors: Epplé, Valérie Murielle
Language:English
Published: Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek [Host] 2004
Subjects:
ggo
Online Access:http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-diss000011115
http://webdoc.sub.gwdg.de/ebook/diss/Bremen/2004/E-Diss1111_epple.pdf
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spelling ftgbv:oai:gbv.de:opac-de-7:ppn:478304668 2023-05-15T15:22:27+02:00 High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea Epplé, Valérie Murielle 2004 electronic Elektronische Ressource electronic resource remote Online-Ressource 90 p. = 2486 KB, text and images http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-diss000011115 http://webdoc.sub.gwdg.de/ebook/diss/Bremen/2004/E-Diss1111_epple.pdf eng eng Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek [Host] ggo 2004 ftgbv 2016-12-25T23:09:23Z High-resolution climate reconstruction, North Sea, annual banded proxy, Arctica islandica. - Until now, there has been no published documentation of North Sea year-to-year climate variability during the last 8000 to 10000 years. High-resolution instrumental time series of climatic and environmental data for the North Sea and the adjacent North Atlantic are only available for the last decades or a century at best. Long term paleoclimatic reconstructions in higher latitudes have been predominantly undertaken using land-based annually banded archives, such as trees, varves, glaciers, and speleothems. A suitable long-term environmental archive with annual may be provided by CaCO3-skeletons of long-lived marine invertebrates. This study evaluates whether recent and subfossil shells of the long-lived bivalve Arctica islandica from the North Sea carry feasible information on Holocene climatic and oceanographic conditions. I compared modern shells of Arctica islandica from two very different habitats, a near-coastal shallow site (German Bightʺ) and a northerly, more central, deep site (Fladen Groundʺ). From the latter, subfossil shells were analysed, also. This study demonstrates that Arctica from both sites provides suitable archives of marine environmental conditions in the form of (i) variations in annual shell . @Bremen, Univ., Diss., 2004 Other/Unknown Material Arctica islandica North Atlantic Georg-August-Universität Göttingen: GOEDOC
institution Open Polar
collection Georg-August-Universität Göttingen: GOEDOC
op_collection_id ftgbv
language English
topic ggo
spellingShingle ggo
High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea
topic_facet ggo
description High-resolution climate reconstruction, North Sea, annual banded proxy, Arctica islandica. - Until now, there has been no published documentation of North Sea year-to-year climate variability during the last 8000 to 10000 years. High-resolution instrumental time series of climatic and environmental data for the North Sea and the adjacent North Atlantic are only available for the last decades or a century at best. Long term paleoclimatic reconstructions in higher latitudes have been predominantly undertaken using land-based annually banded archives, such as trees, varves, glaciers, and speleothems. A suitable long-term environmental archive with annual may be provided by CaCO3-skeletons of long-lived marine invertebrates. This study evaluates whether recent and subfossil shells of the long-lived bivalve Arctica islandica from the North Sea carry feasible information on Holocene climatic and oceanographic conditions. I compared modern shells of Arctica islandica from two very different habitats, a near-coastal shallow site (German Bightʺ) and a northerly, more central, deep site (Fladen Groundʺ). From the latter, subfossil shells were analysed, also. This study demonstrates that Arctica from both sites provides suitable archives of marine environmental conditions in the form of (i) variations in annual shell . @Bremen, Univ., Diss., 2004
author2 Epplé, Valérie Murielle
title High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea
title_short High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea
title_full High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea
title_fullStr High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea
title_full_unstemmed High-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve Arctica Islandica from the North Sea
title_sort high-resolution climate reconstruction for the holocene based on growth chronologies of the bivalve arctica islandica from the north sea
publisher Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek [Host]
publishDate 2004
url http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-diss000011115
http://webdoc.sub.gwdg.de/ebook/diss/Bremen/2004/E-Diss1111_epple.pdf
genre Arctica islandica
North Atlantic
genre_facet Arctica islandica
North Atlantic
_version_ 1766353104779870208