@phdthesis{Angelopoulos2020, author = {Angelopoulos, Michael}, title = {Mechanisms of sub-aquatic permafrost evolution in Arctic coastal environments}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {165}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Subsea permafrost is perennially cryotic earth material that lies offshore. Most submarine permafrost is relict terrestrial permafrost beneath the Arctic shelf seas, was inundated after the last glaciation, and has been warming and thawing ever since. It is a reservoir and confining layer for gas hydrates and has the potential to release greenhouse gases and affect global climate change. Furthermore, subsea permafrost thaw destabilizes coastal infrastructure. While numerous studies focus on its distribution and rate of thaw over glacial timescales, these studies have not been brought together and examined in their entirety to assess rates of thaw beneath the Arctic Ocean. In addition, there is still a large gap in our understanding of sub-aquatic permafrost processes on finer spatial and temporal scales. The degradation rate of subsea permafrost is influenced by the initial conditions upon submergence. Terrestrial permafrost that has already undergone warming, partial thawing or loss of ground ice may react differently to inundation by seawater compared to previously undisturbed ice-rich permafrost. Heat conduction models are sufficient to model the thaw of thick subsea permafrost from the bottom, but few studies have included salt diffusion for top-down chemical degradation in shallow waters characterized by mean annual cryotic conditions on the seabed. Simulating salt transport is critical for assessing degradation rates for recently inundated permafrost, which may accelerate in response to warming shelf waters, a lengthening open water season, and faster coastal erosion rates. In the nearshore zone, degradation rates are also controlled by seasonal processes like bedfast ice, brine injection, seasonal freezing under floating ice conditions and warm freshwater discharge from large rivers. The interplay of all these variables is complex and needs further research. To fill this knowledge gap, this thesis investigates sub-aquatic permafrost along the southern coast of the Bykovsky Peninsula in eastern Siberia. Sediment cores and ground temperature profiles were collected at a freshwater thermokarst lake and two thermokarst lagoons in 2017. At this site, the coastline is retreating, and seawater is inundating various types of permafrost: sections of ice-rich Pleistocene permafrost (Yedoma) cliffs at the coastline alternate with lagoons and lower elevation previously thawed and refrozen permafrost basins (Alases). Electrical resistivity surveys with floating electrodes were carried out to map ice-bearing permafrost and taliks (unfrozen zones in the permafrost, usually formed beneath lakes) along the diverse coastline and in the lagoons. Combined with the borehole data, the electrical resistivity results permit estimation of contemporary ice-bearing permafrost characteristics, distribution, and occasionally, thickness. To conceptualize possible geomorphological and marine evolutionary pathways to the formation of the observed layering, numerical models were applied. The developed model incorporates salt diffusion and seasonal dynamics at the seabed, including bedfast ice. Even along coastlines with mean annual non-cryotic boundary conditions like the Bykovsky Peninsula, the modelling results show that salt diffusion minimizes seasonal freezing of the seabed, leading to faster degradation rates compared to models without salt diffusion. Seasonal processes are also important for thermokarst lake to lagoon transitions because lagoons can generate cold hypersaline conditions underneath the ice cover. My research suggests that ice-bearing permafrost can form in a coastal lagoon environment, even under floating ice. Alas basins, however, may degrade more than twice as fast as Yedoma permafrost in the first several decades of inundation. In addition to a lower ice content compared to Yedoma permafrost, Alas basins may be pre-conditioned with salt from adjacent lagoons. Considering the widespread distribution of thermokarst in the Arctic, its integration into geophysical models and offshore surveys is important to quantify and understand subsea permafrost degradation and aggradation. Through numerical modelling, fieldwork, and a circum-Arctic review of subsea permafrost literature, this thesis provides new insights into sub-aquatic permafrost evolution in saline coastal environments.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Holm2020, author = {Holm, Stine}, title = {Methanogenic communities and metaplasmidome-encoded functions in permafrost environments exposed to thaw}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {VI, 243}, year = {2020}, abstract = {This thesis investigates how the permafrost microbiota responds to global warming. In detail, the constraints behind methane production in thawing permafrost were linked to methanogenic activity, abundance and composition. Furthermore, this thesis offers new insights into microbial adaptions to the changing environmental conditions during global warming. This was assesed by investigating the potential ecological relevant functions encoded by plasmid DNA within the permafrost microbiota. Permafrost of both interglacial and glacial origin spanning the Holocene to the late Pleistocene, including Eemian, were studied during long-term thaw incubations. Furthermore, several permafrost cores of different stratigraphy, soil type and vegetation cover were used to target the main constraints behind methane production during short-term thaw simulations. Short- and long-term incubations simulating thaw with and without the addition of substrate were combined with activity measurements, amplicon and metagenomic sequencing of permanently frozen and seasonally thawed active layer. Combined, it allowed to address the following questions. i) What constraints methane production when permafrost thaws and how is this linked to methanogenic activity, abundance and composition? ii) How does the methanogenic community composition change during long-term thawing conditions? iii) Which potential ecological relevant functions are encoded by plasmid DNA in active layer soils? The major outcomes of this thesis are as follows. i) Methane production from permafrost after long-term thaw simulation was found to be constrained mainly by the abundance of methanogens and the archaeal community composition. Deposits formed during periods of warmer temperatures and increased precipitation, (here represented by deposits from the Late Pleistocene of both interstadial and interglacial periods) were found to respond strongest to thawing conditions and to contain an archaeal community dominated by methanogenic archaea (40\% and 100\% of all detected archaea). Methanogenic population size and carbon density were identified as main predictors for potential methane production in thawing permafrost in short-term incubations when substrate was sufficiently available. ii) Besides determining the methanogenic activity after long-term thaw, the paleoenvironmental conditions were also found to influence the response of the methanogenic community composition. Substantial shifts within methanogenic community structure and a drop in diversity were observed in deposits formed during warmer periods, but not in deposits from stadials, when colder and drier conditions occurred. Overall, a shift towards a dominance of hydrogenotrophic methanogens was observed in all samples, except for the oldest interglacial deposits from the Eemian, which displayed a potential dominance of acetoclastic methanogens. The Eemian, which is discussed to serve as an analogue to current climate conditions, contained highly active methanogenic communities. However, all potential limitation of methane production after permafrost thaw, it means methanogenic community structure, methanogenic population size, and substrate pool might be overcome after permafrost had thawed on the long-term. iii) Enrichments with soil from the seasonally thawed active layer revealed that its plasmid DNA ('metaplasmidome') carries stress-response genes. In particular it encoded antibiotic resistance genes, heavy metal resistance genes, cold shock proteins and genes encoding UV-protection. Those are functions that are directly involved in the adaptation of microbial communities to stresses in polar environments. It was further found that metaplasmidomes from the Siberian active layer originate mainly from Gammaproteobacteria. By applying enrichment cultures followed by plasmid DNA extraction it was possible to obtain a higher average contigs length and significantly higher recovery of plasmid sequences than from extracting plasmid sequences from metagenomes. The approach of analyzing 'metaplasmidomes' established in this thesis is therefore suitable for studying the ecological role of plasmids in polar environments in general. This thesis emphasizes that including microbial community dynamics have the potential to improve permafrost-carbon projections. Microbially mediated methane release from permafrost environments may significantly impact future climate change. This thesis identified drivers of methanogenic composition, abundance and activity in thawing permafrost landscapes. Finally, this thesis underlines the importance to study how the current warming Arctic affects microbial communities in order to gain more insight into microbial response and adaptation strategies.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Menges2020, author = {Menges, Johanna}, title = {Organic Carbon Storage, Transfer and Transformation in the Himalaya}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {179}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The transfer of particulate organic carbon from continents to the ocean is an important component of the global carbon cycle. Transfer to and burial of photosynthetically fixed biospheric organic carbon in marine sediments can effectively sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide over geological timescales. The exhumation and erosion of fossil organic carbon contained in sedimentary rocks, i.e. petrogenic carbon, can result in remineralization, releasing carbon to the atmosphere. In contrast, eroded petrogenic organic carbon that gets transferred back to the ocean and reburied does not affect atmospheric carbon content. Mountain ranges play a key role in this transfer since they can source vast amounts of sediment including particulate organic carbon. Globally, the export of both, biospheric and petrogenic organic carbon has been linked to sediment export. Additionally, short transfer times from mountains to the ocean and high sediment concentrations have been shown to increase the likelihood of organic carbon burial. While the importance of mountain ranges in the organic carbon cycle is now widely recognized, the processes acting within mountain ranges to influence the storage, cycling and mobilization of organic carbon, as well as carbon fluxes from mountain ranges remain poorly constrained. In this thesis, I employ different methods to assess the nature and fate of particulate organic carbon in mountain belts, ranging from the molecular to regional landscape scale. These studies are located along the Trans-Himalayan Kali Gandaki River in Central Nepal. This river traverses all major geological and climatic zones of the Himalaya, from the dry northern Tibetan plateau to the high-relief, monsoon dominated steep High Himalaya and the lower relief and abundant vegetation of the Lesser Himalayan region. First, I document how biospheric organic matter has accumulated during the Holocene in the headwaters of the Kali Gandaki River valley, by combining compound specific isotope measurements with different dating methods and grain size data, and investigate the stability of this organic carbon reservoir on millennial timescales. I show, that around 1.6 ka an eco-geomorphic tipping point occurred leading to a destabilization of the landscape resulting in today's high erosion rates and the excavation of the aged organic carbon reservoir. This study highlights the climatic and geomorphic controls on biospheric organic carbon storage and release from mountain ranges. Second, I systematically investigate the spatial variation of particulate organic carbon fluxes across the Himalaya along the Kali Gandaki River, using bulk stable and radioactive isotopes combined with a new Bayesian modeling approach. The detailed dataset allows the distinction of aged and modern biospheric organic carbon as well as petrogenic organic carbon across the Himalayan mountain range and the investigation of the role of climatic and geomorphic factors in their riverine export. The data suggest a decoupling of the particulate organic carbon from the sediment yield along the Kali Gandaki River, partially driven by climatic and geomorphic processes. In contrast to the suspended sediment, a large part of the particulate organic carbon exported by the river originates from the Tibetan part of the catchment and is dominated by petrogenic organic carbon derived from Jurassic shales with only minor contributions of modern and aged biospheric organic carbon. These findings emphasize the importance of organic carbon source distribution and erosion mechanisms in determining the organic carbon export from mountain ranges. In a third step, I explore the potential of ultra-high resolution mass spectrometry for particulate organic carbon transport studies. I have generated a novel and unprecedented high-resolution molecular dataset, which contains up to 103 molecular formulas of the lipid fraction of particulate organic matter for modern and aged biospheric carbon, petrogenic organic carbon and river sediments. First, I test if this dataset can be used to better resolve different organic carbon sources and to identify new geochemical tracers. Using multivariate statistics, I identify up to 10² characteristic molecular formulas for the major organic carbon sources in the upper part of the Kali Gandaki catchment, and trace their transfer from the surrounding landscape into the river sediment. Second, I test the potential of the molecular dataset to trace molecular transformations along source-to-sink pathways. I identify changes in molecular metrics derived from the dataset, which are characteristic of transformation processes during incorporation of litter into soil, the aging of soil material, and the mobilization of the organic carbon into the river. These two studies demonstrate that high-resolution molecular datasets open a promising analytical window on particulate organic carbon and can provide novel insights into the composition, sourcing and transformation of riverine particulate organic carbon. Collectively, these studies advance our understanding of the processes contributing to the storage and mobilization of organic carbon in the Central Himalaya, the mountain belt that dominates global erosional fluxes. They do so by identifying the major sources of particulate organic carbon to the Trans-Himalayan Kali Gandaki River, by elucidating their sensitivity to climate and geomorphic processes, and by identifying some of the transformations of this material on the molecular scale. As a result, the thesis demonstrates that the amount and composition of organic carbon routed from mountain belts is a function of the dynamic interactions of geologic, biologic, geomorphic and climatic processes within the mountain belt. This understanding will ultimately help in answering whether the build-up and erosion of mountain ranges over geological time represents a net carbon source or sink to the atmosphere. Beyond this, the thesis contributes to our technical ability to characterize organic matter and attribute it to sources by scoping the potential of high-end molecular analysis.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schimpf2020, author = {Schimpf, Stefan}, title = {Herkunft und Ablagerungsmilieu quart{\"a}rer Sedimente im Einzugsgebiet des Heihe, NW China}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {xi, 186}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Der zentralasiatische Naturraum, wie er sich uns heute pr{\"a}sentiert, ist das Ergebnis eines Zusammenwirkens vieler verschiedener Faktoren {\"u}ber Jahrmillionen hinweg. Im aktuellen Kontext des Klimawandels zeigt sich jedoch, wie stark sich Stofffl{\"u}sse auch kurzfristig {\"a}ndern und dabei das Gesicht der Landschaft verwandeln k{\"o}nnen. Die Gobi-W{\"u}ste in der Inneren Mongolei (China), als Teil der gleichnamigen Trockenregionen Nordwestchinas, ist aufgrund der Ausgestaltung ihrer landschaftspr{\"a}genden Elemente sowie ihrer Landschaftsdynamik, im Zusammenhang mit der Lage zum Tibet-Plateau, in den Fokus der klimageschichtlichen Grundlagenforschung ger{\"u}ckt. Als großes Langzeitarchiv unterschiedlichster fluvialer, lakustriner und {\"a}olischer Sedimente stellt sie eine bedeutende Lokalit{\"a}t zur Rekonstruktion von lokalen und regionalen Stofffl{\"u}ssen dar.. Andererseits ist die Gobi-W{\"u}ste zugleich auch eine bedeutende Quelle f{\"u}r den {\"u}berregionalen Staubtransport, da sie aufgrund der klimatischen Bedingungen insbesondere der Erosion durch Ausblasung preisgegeben wird. Vor diesem Hintergrund erfolgten zwischen 2011 und 2014, im Rahmen des BMBF-Verbundprogramms WTZ Zentralasien - Monsundynamik \& Geo{\"o}kosysteme (F{\"o}rderkennzeichen 03G0814), mehrere deutsch-chinesische Expeditionen in das Ejina-Becken (Innere Mongolei) und das Qilian Shan-Vorland. Im Zuge dieser Expeditionen wurden f{\"u}r eine Bestimmung potenzieller Sedimentquellen erstmals zahlreiche Oberfl{\"a}chenproben aus dem gesamten Einzugsgebiet des Heihe (schwarzer Fluss) gesammelt. Zudem wurden mit zwei Bohrungen im inneren des Ejina-Beckens, erg{\"a}nzende Sedimentbohrkerne zum bestehenden Bohrkern D100 (siehe W{\"u}nnemann (2005)) abgeteuft, um weit reichende, erg{\"a}nzende Informationen zur Landschaftsgeschichte und zum {\"u}berregionalen Sedimenttransfer zu erhalten. Gegenstand und Ziel der vorliegenden Doktorarbeit ist die sedimentologisch-mineralogische Charakterisierung des Untersuchungsgebietes in Bezug auf potenzielle Sedimentquellen und Stofffl{\"u}sse des Ejina-Beckens sowie die Rekonstruktion der Ablagerungsgeschichte eines dort erbohrten, 19m langen Sedimentbohrkerns (GN100). Schwerpunkt ist hierbei die Kl{\"a}rung der Sedimentherkunft innerhalb des Bohrkerns sowie die Ausweisung von Herkunftssignalen und m{\"o}glichen Sedimentquellen bzw. Sedimenttransportpfaden. Die methodische Herangehensweise basiert auf einem Multi-Proxy-Ansatz zur Charakterisierung der klastischen Sedimentfazies anhand von Gel{\"a}ndebeobachtungen, lithologisch-granulometrischen und mineralogisch-geochemischen Analysen sowie statistischen Verfahren. F{\"u}r die mineralogischen Untersuchungen der Sedimente wurde eine neue, rasterelektronenmikroskopische Methode zur automatisierten Partikelanalyse genutzt und den traditionellen Methoden gegen{\"u}bergestellt. Die synoptische Betrachtung der granulometrischen, geochemischen und mineralogischen Befunde der Oberfl{\"a}chensedimente ergibt f{\"u}r das Untersuchungsgebiet ein logisches Kaskadenmodell mit immer wiederkehrenden Prozessbereichen und {\"a}hnlichen Prozesssignalen. Die umfangreichen granulometrischen Analysen deuten dabei auf abnehmende Korngr{\"o}ßen mit zunehmender Entfernung vom Qilian Shan hin und erm{\"o}glichen die Identifizierung von vier texturellen Signalen: den fluvialen Sanden, den D{\"u}nensanden, den Stillwassersedimenten und St{\"a}uben. Diese Ergebnisse k{\"o}nnen als Interpretationsgrundlage f{\"u}r die Korngr{\"o}ßenanalysen des Bohrkerns genutzt werden. Somit ist es m{\"o}glich, die Ablagerungsgeschichte der Bohrkernsedimente zu rekonstruieren und in Verbindung mit eigenen und literaturbasierten Datierungen in einen Gesamtkontext einzuh{\"a}ngen. F{\"u}r das Untersuchungsgebiet werden somit vier Ablagerungsphasen ausgewiesen, die bis in die Zeit des letzten glazialen Maximums (LGM) zur{\"u}ckreichen. W{\"a}hrend dieser Ablagerungsphasen kam es im Zuge unterschiedlicher Aktivit{\"a}ts- und Stabilit{\"a}tsphasen zu einer kontinuierlichen Progradation und {\"U}berpr{\"a}gung des Schwemmf{\"a}chers. Eine besonders aktive Phase kann zwischen 8 ka und 4 ka BP festgestellt werden, w{\"a}hrend der es aufgrund zunehmender fluvialer Aktivit{\"a}ten zu einer deutlich verst{\"a}rkten Schwemmf{\"a}cherdynamik gekommen zu sein scheint. In den Abschnitten davor und danach waren es vor allem {\"a}olische Prozesse, die zu einer {\"U}berpr{\"a}gung des Schwemmf{\"a}chers gef{\"u}hrt haben. Hinsichtlich der mineralogischen Herkunftssignale gibt es eine große Variabilit{\"a}t. Dies spiegelt die enorme Heterogenit{\"a}t der Geologie des Untersuchungsgebietes wider, wodurch die r{\"a}umlichen Signale nicht sehr stark ausgepr{\"a}gt sind. Dennoch, k{\"o}nnen f{\"u}r das Einzugsgebiet drei gr{\"o}ßere Bereiche deklariert werden, die als Herkunftsgebiet in Frage kommen. Das {\"o}stliche Qilian Shan Vorland zeichnet sich dabei durch deutlich h{\"o}here Chloritgehalte als prim{\"a}re Quelle f{\"u}r die Sedimente im Ejina-Becken aus. Sie unterscheiden sich insbesondere durch stark divergierende Chloritgehalte in der Tonmineral- und Gesamtmineralfraktion, was das {\"o}stliche Qilian Shan Vorland als prim{\"a}re Quelle f{\"u}r die Sedimente im Ejina-Becken auszeichnet. Dies steht in Zusammenhang mit den Gr{\"u}nschiefern, Ophioliten und Serpentiniten in diesem Bereich. Geochemisch deutet vor allem das Cr/Rb-Verh{\"a}ltnis eine große Variabilit{\"a}t innerhalb des Einzugsgebietes an. Auch hier ist es das {\"o}stliche Vorland, welches aufgrund seines hohen Anteils an mafischen Gesteinen reich an Chromiten und Spinellen ist und sich somit vom restlichen Untersuchungsgebiet abhebt. Die zeitliche aber auch die generelle Variabilit{\"a}t der Sedimentherkunft l{\"a}sst sich in den Bohrkernsedimenten nicht so deutlich nachzeichnen. Die mineralogisch-sedimentologischen Eigenschaften der erbohrten klastischen Sedimente zeugen zwar von zwischenzeitlichen {\"A}nderungen bei der Sedimentherkunft, diese sind jedoch nicht so deutlich ausgepr{\"a}gt, wie es die Quellsignale in den Oberfl{\"a}chensedimenten vermuten lassen. Ein Grund daf{\"u}r scheint die starke Vermischung unterschiedlichster Sedimente w{\"a}hrend des Transportes zu sein. Die Kombination der Korngr{\"o}ßenergebnisse mit den Befunden der Gesamt- und Schwermineralogie deuten darauf hin, dass es zwischenzeitlich eine Phase mit {\"u}berwiegend {\"a}olischen Prozessen gegeben hat, die mit einem Sedimenteintrag aus dem westlichen Bei Shan in Verbindung stehen. Neben der Zunahme ultrastabiler Schwerminerale wie Zirkon und Granat und der Abnahme opaker Schwerminerale, weisen vor allem die heutigen Verh{\"a}ltnisse darauf hin. Der Vergleich der traditionellen Schwermineralanalyse mit der Computer-Controlled-Scanning-Electron-Microscopy (kurz: CCSEM), die eine automatisierte Partikelauswertung der Proben erm{\"o}glicht, zeigt den deutlichen Vorteil der modernen Analysemethode. Neben einem zeitlichen Vorteil, den man durch die automatisierte Abarbeitung der vorbereiteten Proben erlangen kann, steht vor allem die deutlich gr{\"o}ßere statistische Signifikanz des Ergebnisses im Vordergrund. Zudem k{\"o}nnen mit dieser Methode auch chemische Variet{\"a}ten einiger Schwerminerale bestimmt werden, die eine noch feinere Klassifizierung und sicherere Aussagen zu einer m{\"o}glichen Sedimentherkunft erm{\"o}glichen. Damit ergeben sich außerdem verbesserte Aussagen zu Zusammensetzungen und Entstehungsprozessen der abgelagerten Sedimente. Die Studie verdeutlicht, dass die Sedimentherkunft innerhalb des Untersuchungsgebietes sowie die ablaufenden Prozesse zum Teil stark von lokalen Gegebenheiten abh{\"a}ngen. Die Heterogenit{\"a}t der Geologie und die Gr{\"o}ße des Einzugsgebietes sowie die daraus resultierende Komplexit{\"a}t der Sedimentgenese, machen exakte Zuordnungen zu klar definierten Sedimentquellen sehr schwer. Dennoch zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass die Sedimentzufuhr in das Ejina-Becken in erster Linie durch fluviale klastische Sedimente des Heihe aus dem Qilian Shan erfolgt sein muss. Die Untersuchungsergebnisse zeigen jedoch ebenso die Notwendigkeit einer erg{\"a}nzenden Bearbeitung angrenzender Untersuchungsgebiete, wie beispielsweise den Gobi-Altai im Norden oder den Beishan im Westen, sowie die Verdichtung der Oberfl{\"a}chenbeprobung zur feineren Aufl{\"o}sung von lokalen Sedimentquellen.}, language = {de} }