TY - JOUR A1 - Tiedemann, Ralph A1 - Schneider, Anja R. R. A1 - Havenstein, Katja A1 - Blanck, Torsten A1 - Meier, Elmar A1 - Raffel, Martina A1 - Zwartepoorte, Henk A1 - Plath, Martin T1 - New microsatellite markers allow high-resolution taxon delimitation in critically endangered Asian box turtles, genus Cuora JF - Salamandra : German journal of herpetology N2 - We isolated and characterized 16 new di- and tetranudeotide microsatellite markers for the critically endangered Asian box turtle genus Cuora, focusing on the "Cuora trifasciata" species complex. The new markers were then used to analyse genetic variability and divergence amongst five described species within this complex, namely C. aurocapitata (n = 18), C. cyclornata (n = 31), C. pani (n = 6), C. trifasciata (n = 58), and C. zhoui (n = 7). Our results support the view that all five species represent valid taxa. Within two species (C. trifasciata and C. cyclornata), two distinct morphotypes were corroborated by microsatellite divergence. For three individuals, morphologically identified as being of hybrid origin, the hybrid status was confirmed by our genetic analysis. Our results confirm the controversial species (Cuora aurocapitata, C. cyclornata) and subspecies/morphotypes (C. cyclornata meieri, C. trifasciata cf. trifasciata) to be genetically distinct, which has critical implications for conservation strategies. KW - Testudines KW - Cuora KW - box turtles KW - captive breeding KW - conservation units KW - microsatellites Y1 - 2014 SN - 0036-3375 VL - 50 IS - 3 SP - 139 EP - 146 PB - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Herpetologie und Terrarienkunde CY - Darmstadt ER - TY - THES A1 - Cao, Xianyong T1 - Vegetation and climate change in eastern continental Asia during the last 22 ka inferred from pollen data synthesis Y1 - 2014 ER - TY - THES A1 - Gaßmöller, René T1 - The interaction of subducted slabs and plume generation zones in geodynamic models Y1 - 2014 ER - TY - THES A1 - Feld, Christian T1 - Crustal structure of the Eratosthenes Seamount, Cyprus and S. Turkey from an amphibian wide-angle seismic profile T1 - Die Krustenstruktur von dem Eratosthenes Seeberg, Zypern und der Süd-Türkei anhand eines amphibischen seismischen Weitwinkel Profils N2 - In March 2010, the project CoCoCo (incipient COntinent-COntinent COllision) recorded a 650 km long amphibian N-S wide-angle seismic profile, extending from the Eratosthenes Seamount (ESM) across Cyprus and southern Turkey to the Anatolian plateau. The aim of the project is to reveal the impact of the transition from subduction to continent-continent collision of the African plate with the Cyprus-Anatolian plate. A visual quality check, frequency analysis and filtering were applied to the seismic data and reveal a good data quality. Subsequent first break picking, finite-differences ray tracing and inversion of the offshore wide-angle data leads to a first-arrival tomographic model. This model reveals (1) P-wave velocities lower than 6.5 km/s in the crust, (2) a variable crustal thickness of about 28 - 37 km and (3) an upper crustal reflection at 5 km depth beneath the ESM. Two land shots on Turkey, also recorded on Cyprus, airgun shots south of Cyprus and geological and previous seismic investigations provide the information to derive a layered velocity model beneath the Anatolian plateau and for the ophiolite complex on Cyprus. The analysis of the reflections provides evidence for a north-dipping plate subducting beneath Cyprus. The main features of this layered velocity model are (1) an upper and lower crust with large lateral changes of the velocity structure and thickness, (2) a Moho depth of about 38 - 45 km beneath the Anatolian plateau, (3) a shallow north-dipping subducting plate below Cyprus with an increasing dip and (4) a typical ophiolite sequence on Cyprus with a total thickness of about 12 km. The offshore-onshore seismic data complete and improve the information about the velocity structure beneath Cyprus and the deeper part of the offshore tomographic model. Thus, the wide-angle seismic data provide detailed insights into the 2-D geometry and velocity structures of the uplifted and overriding Cyprus-Anatolian plate. Subsequent gravity modelling confirms and extends the crustal P-wave velocity model. The deeper part of the subducting plate is constrained by the gravity data and has a dip angle of ~ 28°. Finally, an integrated analysis of the geophysical and geological information allows a comprehensive interpretation of the crustal structure related to the collision process. N2 - Im März 2010 wurden im Rahmen des "CoCoCo"-Projektes ein 650km langes amphibisches, seismisches Weitwinkel Profil aufgenommen. Dieses erstreckte sich von dem Eratosthenes Seeberg (ESM) über Zypern und der Süd-Türkei bis zum anatolischen Plateau. Das Hauptziel des Projektes ist es, den Einfluss zu untersuchen, der von dem Übergang eines Subduktion Prozesses hin zu einer Kontinent-Kontinent Kollision der afrikanischen Platte mit der zyprisch-anatolischen Platte hervorgerufen wird. Die seismischen Daten wurden einer visuelle Qualitätsüberprüfung, Frequenz-Analyse und Filterung unterzogen und zeigten eine gute Qualität. Das darauf folgende Picken der Ersteinstätze, eine Finite-Differenzen Raytracing und eine Inversion der offshore Weitwinkel Daten, führte zu einem Laufzeit Tomographie Model. Das Modell zeigt (1) P-Wellengeschwindigkeiten kleiner als 6.5 km/s in der Kruste, (2) eine variable Krustenmächtigkeit von 28 - 37 km und (3) eine obere Krustenreflektion in 5 km Tiefe unter dem ESM. Zwei Landschüsse in der Türkei, ebenfalls aufgenommen auf Zypern, Luftkanonen-Schüsse südlich von Zypern und vorausgegangene geologische und seismische Untersuchungen lieferten die Grundlage, um ein geschichtetes Geschwindigkeitsmodell für das anatolische Plateau und für den Ophiolith-Komplex auf Zypern abzuleiten. Die Analyse der Reflexionen liefert den Beweis für eine nach Norden einfallende Platte welche unter Zypern subduziert. Die Hauptkennzeichen dieses geschichteten Geschwindigkeitsmodelles sind (1) eine obere und untere Kruste mit starken lateral Änderungen in Geschwindigkeit und Mächtigkeit, (2) eine Mohotiefe in 38 - 45 km unter dem anatolischen Plateau, (3) eine flach nach Norden einfallende Platte unter Zypern mit ansteigendem Einfallwinkel und (4) eine typische Ophiolith Sequenz auf Zypern mit einer Gesamtmächtigkeit von 12 km. Die seismischen offshore / onshore Daten komplettieren und verbessern die bisherigen Kenntnisse über die Geschwindigkeitsstruktur unter Zypern und des tieferen Bereiches der offshore Tomographie. Damit liefert die Weitwinkel Seismik detaillierte Einblicke in die 2-D Geometrie und die Geschwindigkeitsstrukturen der angehobenen und überlagerten zyprisch-anatolischen Platte. Die darauf folgende Gravimetrie Modellierung bestätigt und erweitert das P-Wellen Krusten-Geschwindigkeits Modell. Der tiefere Teil der subduzierten Platte, welche einen Einfallswinkel von ~ 28° hat, wurde durch die Gravimetrie Daten belegt. Letztlich erlaubt eine ganzheitliche Analyse von geophysikalischen und geologischen Informationen die umfassende Interpretation der Krustenstruktur welche in Verbindung mit dem Kollisions Prozess steht. KW - incipient continent-continent collision KW - crustal structure of the Eratosthenes Seamount KW - controlled source wide angle seismic KW - crustal structure of south central Turkey KW - Cyprus arc KW - aktive Weitewinkel-Seismik KW - Krustenstruktur des Eratosthenes Seeberges KW - beginnende Kontinent-Kontinent Kollision KW - Krustenstruktur der Süd-Türkei KW - Zypernbogen Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-73479 ER - TY - THES A1 - Tympel, Jens Günter T1 - Numerical modeling of the Cenozoic Pamir-Tien Shan orogeny Y1 - 2014 ER - TY - THES A1 - Borchardt, Sven T1 - Rainfall, weathering and erosion BT - quantification of earth surface processes in Suguta Valley, northern Kenya, using multispectral and hyperspectral data Y1 - 2014 ER - TY - THES A1 - Pussak, Marcin T1 - Seismic characterization of geothermal reservoirs by application of the common-reflection-surface stack method and attribute analysis T1 - Seismische Charakterisierung von geothermischen Reservoiren mittels “Common-Reflection-Surface” Stapelungs-Methode und Attribut-Analysen N2 - An important contribution of geosciences to the renewable energy production portfolio is the exploration and utilization of geothermal resources. For the development of a geothermal project at great depths a detailed geological and geophysical exploration program is required in the first phase. With the help of active seismic methods high-resolution images of the geothermal reservoir can be delivered. This allows potential transport routes for fluids to be identified as well as regions with high potential of heat extraction to be mapped, which indicates favorable conditions for geothermal exploitation. The presented work investigates the extent to which an improved characterization of geothermal reservoirs can be achieved with the new methods of seismic data processing. The summations of traces (stacking) is a crucial step in the processing of seismic reflection data. The common-reflection-surface (CRS) stacking method can be applied as an alternative for the conventional normal moveout (NMO) or the dip moveout (DMO) stack. The advantages of the CRS stack beside an automatic determination of stacking operator parameters include an adequate imaging of arbitrarily curved geological boundaries, and a significant increase in signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio by stacking far more traces than used in a conventional stack. A major innovation I have shown in this work is that the quality of signal attributes that characterize the seismic images can be significantly improved by this modified type of stacking in particular. Imporoved attribute analysis facilitates the interpretation of seismic images and plays a significant role in the characterization of reservoirs. Variations of lithological and petro-physical properties are reflected by fluctuations of specific signal attributes (eg. frequency or amplitude characteristics). Its further interpretation can provide quality assessment of the geothermal reservoir with respect to the capacity of fluids within a hydrological system that can be extracted and utilized. The proposed methodological approach is demonstrated on the basis on two case studies. In the first example, I analyzed a series of 2D seismic profile sections through the Alberta sedimentary basin on the eastern edge of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. In the second application, a 3D seismic volume is characterized in the surroundings of a geothermal borehole, located in the central part of the Polish basin. Both sites were investigated with the modified and improved stacking attribute analyses. The results provide recommendations for the planning of future geothermal plants in both study areas. N2 - Ein wichtiger Beitrag der Geowissenschaften zur Bereitstellung erneuerbarer Energien besteht in der Nutzbarmachung von geothermischen Ressourcen. Für die Entwicklung von geothermischen Anlagen in großen Tiefen ist in der ersten Phase eine detaillierte geologisch-geophysikalische Erkundung erforderlich. Hierbei werden Informationen über das Temperaturfeld, zur Litho-Stratigraphie und Strukturgeologie, Geomechanik, Hydrogeologie sowie petrophysikalische Eigenschaften im Reservoir-Maßstab benötigt. Mit Hilfe aktiver seismischer Methoden können hochauflösende Abbilder des geothermischen Reservoirs geliefert werden. Dadurch können potentielle Transportwege für Fluide sowie Regionen mit hohem Wärmeabsorptionspotential identifiziert und kartiert werden. Die vorgelegte Arbeit untersucht, inwieweit mit neuen Methoden der seismischen Datenbearbeitung eine verbesserte Charakterisierung von geothermischen Reservoiren erreicht werden kann. Die Stapelung ist ein entscheidender Schritt bei der Bearbeitung von seismischen Felddaten. Die sogenannte “common-reflection-surface” Stapelung ist eine Erweiterung des klassischen Stapelungs-Konzepts. Durch ihre Anwendung können detailliertere und zuverlässigere Abbilder des Untergrundes gewonnen werden. Als wichtige Neuerung habe ich in der Arbeit aufgezeigt, dass durch diese modifizierte Art der Stapelung insbesondere die Qualität von Signalattribut-Darstellungen der seismischen Abbilder signifikant verbessert wird. Signalattribute sind ein wichtiges Werkzeug bei der Untersuchung von Reservoiren. Variationen der lithologischen und petrophysikalischen Eigenschaften spiegeln sich in Variationen in bestimmten Signalattributen (z.B. Frequenzeigenschaften, Amplitudeneigenschaften) wieder. Daraus kann auf die Qualität des geothermischen Reservoirs, z.B. hinsichtlich der Aufnahmefähigkeit von Fluiden zur Wärmeabsorption in Kreislaufsystemen, geschlossen werden. Das vorgeschlagenen methodische Konzept wird an Hand von 2 Fallstudien demonstriert. Im ersten Beispiel analysierte ich eine Reihe von 2D seismischen Profilschnitten durch das Alberta-Sedimentbecken am Ostrand der kanadischen Rocky Mountains. Bei der zweiten Anwendung wird ein 3D seismisches Volumen im Umfeld einer Geothermie-Bohrung im Zentralteil des Polnischen Sedimentbeckens mit Hilfe der modifizierten Stapelung und verbesserten Attribut-Analysen charakterisiert. Die Ergebnisse ermöglichen Empfehlungen für die Planung zukünftiger Geothermie-Anlagen in beiden Untersuchungsgebieten. KW - seismic KW - geothermischer Reservoire KW - seismische Stapelungs-Methode KW - Attribut-Analysen KW - Verarbeitung seismischer Daten KW - Common-Reflection-Surface Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-77565 ER - TY - THES A1 - Muksin, Umar T1 - A fault-controlled geothermal system in Tarutung (North Sumatra, Indonesia)investigated by seismological analysis N2 - The seismic structure (Vp, Vp/Vs, and Qp anomalies) contributes to the physical properties and the lithology of rocks and possible fluid distribution in the region. The Vp model images the geometry of the Tarutung and the Sarulla basins. Both basins have a depth of around 2.0 km. High Vp/Vs and high attenuation (low Qp) anomalies are observed along the Sarulla graben associated with a weak zone caused by volcanic activities along the graben. Low Vp/Vs and low conductivity anomalies are found in the west of the Tarutung basin. This anomaly is interpreted as dry, compact, and rigid granitic rock in the region as also found by geological observations. Low Vp, high Vp/Vs and low Qp anomalies are found at the east of the Tarutung basin which appear to be associated with the three big geothermal manifestations in Sipoholon, Hutabarat, and Panabungan area. These anomalies are connected with high Vp/Vs and low Qp anomalies below the Tarutung basin at depth of around 3 - 10 km. This suggests that these geothermal manifestations are fed by the same source of the hot fluid below the Tarutung basin. The hot fluids from below the Tarutung basin propagate to the more dilatational and more permeable zone in the northeast. Granite found in the west of the Tarutung basin could also be abundant underneath the basin at a certain depth so that it prevents the hot fluid to be transported directly to the Tarutung basin. High seismic attenuation and low Vp/Vs anomalies are found in the southwest of the Tarutung basin below the Martimbang volcano. These anomalies are associated with hot rock below the volcano without or with less amount of partial melting. There is no indication that the volcano controls the geothermal system around the Tarutung basin. The geothermal resources around the Tarutung basin is a fault-controlled system as a result of deep circulation of fluids. Outside of the basin, the seismicity delineation and the focal mechanism correlate with the shape and the characteristics of the strike-slip Sumatran fault. Within the Tarutung basin, the seismicity is distributed more broadly which coincides with the margin of the basin. An extensional duplex system in the Tarutung basin is derived from the seismicity and focal mechanism analysis which is also consistent with the geological observations. The vertical distribution of the seismicity suggests the presence of a negative flower structure within the Tarutung basin. N2 - Indonesien zählt zu den weltweit führenden Ländern bei der Nutzung von geothermischer Energie. Die geothermischen Energiequellen sind im Wesentlichen an den aktiven Vulkanismus gebunden, der durch die Prozesse an der indonesischen Subduktionszone verursacht wird. Darüber hinaus sind geotektonische Strukturen wie beispielsweise die Sumatra-Störung als verstärkende Faktoren für das geothermische Potenzial von Bedeutung. Bei der geophysikalischen Erkundung der indonesischen Geothermie-Ressourcen konzentrierte man sich bisher vor allem auf die Magnetotellurik. Passive Seismologie wurde dahingegen ausschließlich für die Überwachung von im Betrieb befindlichen Geothermie-Anlagen verwendet. Jüngste Untersuchungungen z.B. in Island und in den USA haben jedoch gezeigt, dass seismologische Verfahren bereits in der Erkundungsphase wichtige Informationen zu den physikalischen Eigenschaften, zum Spannungsfeld und zu möglichen Fluid- und Wärmetransportwegen liefern können. In der vorgelegten Doktorarbeit werden verschiedene moderne Methoden der passiven Seismologie verwendet, um beispielhaft ein neues, von der indonesischen Regierung für zukünftige geothermische Energiegewinnung ausgewiesenes Gebiet im nördlichen Teil Sumatras (Indonesien) zu erkunden. Die konkreten Ziele der Untersuchungen umfassten (1) die Ableitung von 3D Strukturmodellen der P- und S-Wellen Geschwindigkeiten (Parameter Vp und Vs), (2) die Bestimmung der Absorptionseigenschaften (Parameter Qp), und (3) die Kartierung und Charakterisierung von Störungssystemen auf der Grundlage der Seismizitätsverteilung und der Herdflächenlösungen. Für diese Zwecke habe ich zusammen mit Kollegen ein seismologisches Netzwerk in Tarutung (Sumatra) aufgebaut und über einen Zeitraum von 10 Monaten (Mai 2011 – Februar 2012) betrieben. Insgesamt wurden hierbei 42 Stationen (jeweils ausgestattet mit EDL-Datenlogger, 3-Komponenten, 1 Hz Seismometer) über eine Fläche von etwa 35 x 35 km verteilt. Mit dem Netzwerk wurden im gesamten Zeitraum 2568 lokale Erdbeben registriert. Die integrierte Betrachtung der Ergebnisse aus den verschiedenen Teilstudien (Tomographie, Erdbebenverteilung) erlaubt neue Einblicke in die generelle geologische Stukturierung sowie eine Eingrenzung von Bereichen mit einem erhöhten geothermischen Potenzial. Das tomographische Vp-Modell ermöglicht eine Bestimmung der Geometrie von Sedimentbecken entlang der Sumatra-Störung. Für die Geothermie besonders interessant ist der Bereich nordwestlich des Tarutung-Beckens. Die dort abgebildeten Anomalien (erhöhtes Vp/Vs, geringes Qp) habe ich als mögliche Aufstiegswege von warmen Fluiden interpretiert. Die scheinbar asymetrische Verteilung der Anomalien wird hierbei im Zusammenhang mit der Seismizitätsverteilung, der Geometrie der Beben-Bruchflächen, sowie struktur-geologischen Modellvorstellungen diskutiert. Damit werden wesentliche Informationen für die Planung einer zukünftigen geothermischen Anlage bereitgestellt. T2 - Seismologische Untersuchungen eines Störungs-kontrollierten geothermischen Systems in Tarutung (Nord-Sumatra, Indonesien) KW - Tarutung KW - Sumatra Störung KW - Absorptionseigenschaften KW - seismische Geschwindigkeiten KW - Tarutung KW - Sumatra fault KW - attenuation tomography KW - velocity structure Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-72065 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schollaen, Karina T1 - Tracking climate signals in tropical trees T1 - Klimasignale in tropischen Hölzern BT - new insights from Indonesian stable isotope records BT - neue Erkenntnisse von stabilen Isotopendaten aus Indonesien N2 - The tropical warm pool waters surrounding Indonesia are one of the equatorial heat and moisture sources that are considered as a driving force of the global climate system. The climate in Indonesia is dominated by the equatorial monsoon system, and has been linked to El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events, which often result in severe droughts or floods over Indonesia with profound societal and economic impacts on the populations living in the world's fourth most populated country. The latest IPCC report states that ENSO will remain the dominant mode in the tropical Pacific with global effects in the 21st century and ENSO-related precipitation extremes will intensify. However, no common agreement exists among climate simulation models for projected change in ENSO and the Australian-Indonesian Monsoon. Exploring high-resolution palaeoclimate archives, like tree rings or varved lake sediments, provide insights into the natural climate variability of the past, and thus helps improving and validating simulations of future climate changes. Centennial tree-ring stable isotope records | Within this doctoral thesis the main goal was to explore the potential of tropical tree rings to record climate signals and to use them as palaeoclimate proxies. In detail, stable carbon (δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) isotopes were extracted from teak trees in order to establish the first well-replicated centennial (AD 1900-2007) stable isotope records for Java, Indonesia. Furthermore, different climatic variables were tested whether they show significant correlation with tree-ring proxies (ring-width, δ13C, δ18O). Moreover, highly resolved intra-annual oxygen isotope data were established to assess the transfer of the seasonal precipitation signal into the tree rings. Finally, the established oxygen isotope record was used to reveal possible correlations with ENSO events. Methodological achievements | A second goal of this thesis was to assess the applicability of novel techniques which facilitate and optimize high-resolution and high-throughput stable isotope analysis of tree rings. Two different UV-laser-based microscopic dissection systems were evaluated as a novel sampling tool for high-resolution stable isotope analysis. Furthermore, an improved procedure of tree-ring dissection from thin cellulose laths for stable isotope analysis was designed. The most important findings of this thesis are: I) The herein presented novel sampling techniques improve stable isotope analyses for tree-ring studies in terms of precision, efficiency and quality. The UV-laser-based microdissection serve as a valuable tool for sampling plant tissue at ultrahigh-resolution and for unprecedented precision. II) A guideline for a modified method of cellulose extraction from wholewood cross-sections and subsequent tree-ring dissection was established. The novel technique optimizes the stable isotope analysis process in two ways: faster and high-throughput cellulose extraction and precise tree-ring separation at annual to high-resolution scale. III) The centennial tree-ring stable isotope records reveal significant correlation with regional precipitation. High-resolution stable oxygen values, furthermore, allow distinguishing between dry and rainy season rainfall. IV) The δ18O record reveals significant correlation with different ENSO flavors and demonstrates the importance of considering ENSO flavors when interpreting palaeoclimatic data in the tropics. The findings of my dissertation show that seasonally resolved δ18O records from Indonesian teak trees are a valuable proxy for multi-centennial reconstructions of regional precipitation variability (monsoon signals) and large-scale ocean-atmosphere phenomena (ENSO) for the Indo-Pacific region. Furthermore, the novel methodological achievements offer many unexplored avenues for multidisciplinary research in high-resolution palaeoclimatology. N2 - Die tropischen Gewässer um Indonesien sind eine der äquatorialen Wärme- und Feuchtigkeitsquellen, die als treibende Kraft des globalen Klimasystems betrachtet werden können. Das Klima in Indonesien ist geprägt durch das Australisch-Indonesische Monsunsystem. Weiterhin besteht eine Verknüpfung mit El Niño-Southern Oszillation (ENSO) Ereignissen, die oft zu schweren Dürren oder Überschwemmungen in der Region mit tiefgreifenden gesellschaftlichen und wirtschaftlichen Folgen führen. Der neueste IPCC-Bericht legt dar, dass ENSO auch in den nächsten 100 Jahren das vorherrschende Klimaphänomen im tropischen Pazifik bleiben wird. Ferner wird davon ausgegangen, dass sich die ENSO-bezogenen Niederschlagsextrema intensivieren werden. Wenig Übereinstimmung herrscht jedoch bislang zwischen den Klimasimulationsmodellen in Bezug auf die voraussichtlichen Veränderungen von ENSO und dem Australisch-Indonesischen Monsunsystem. Hochaufgelöste Paläoklima-Archive, wie z.B. Jahrringe oder warvierte Seesedimente, geben Auskunft über die natürliche Klimavariabilität der Vergangenheit und können somit dazu beitragen, die Computersimulationen der künftigen Klimaentwicklung zu verbessern und zu validieren. Hundertjährige stabile Jahrring-Isotopenchronologien | Das Hauptziel dieser Doktorarbeit war es, dass Potenzial von tropischen Jahrringen zur Aufzeichnung von Klimasignalen herauszustellen und deren Evaluierung als Paläoklimaproxys. Im Detail wurden stabile Kohlenstoff- (δ13C) und Sauerstoff- (δ18O) Isotopenverhältnisse in Teakbäumen analysiert, und die ersten gut replizierten hundertjährigen (AD 1900-2007) stabilen Isotopenchronologien aus Java (Indonesien) erstellt. Dabei wurden verschiedene klimatische Einflussgrößen getestet, ob diese signifikante Korrelationen mit den Jahrringparametern aufzeigen. Weiterhin wurden hochaufgelöste intra-annuelle Sauerstoffisotopenzeitreihen erstellt, um den Transfer des saisonalen Niederschlagssignals in den jeweiligen Jahrring zu bemessen. Die ermittelte Sauerstoff-Isotopenchronologie wurde anschließend auf mögliche ENSO Signale hin untersucht. Methodische Errungenschaften | Ein zweites Ziel dieser Arbeit war es neue Verfahren zur Analyse stabiler Isotope in Baumjahrringen zu entwickeln und zu optimieren. Zwei verschiedene UV-Lasermikrodissektions-Systeme wurden getestet als neues präzises Präparationswerkzeug für stabile Isotopenstudien. Darüber hinaus wurde eine verbesserte Methode für die Probenaufbereitung stabiler Isotopenmessungen anhand von Zellulose-Dünnschnitten entwickelt. Die wichtigsten Ergebnisse dieser Doktorarbeit sind: I) Die hier vorgestellten neuartigen Techniken zu Probenvorbereitung verbessern die Analyse stabiler Isotope für Jahrringstudien in Hinsicht auf Präzision, Effizienz und Qualität. Es wurde gezeigt, dass die UV-Lasermikrodissektion eine wertvolle Technik ist, um die Beprobung von Pflanzengewebe in höchster Auflösung und beispielloser Präzision durchzuführen. II) Es ist gelungen, einen Leitfaden für ein modifiziertes Verfahren der Zelluloseextraktion an Gesamtholz-Dünnschnitten und der anschließenden Jahrringaufbereitung zu erstellen. Diese neuartige Methode optimiert die Analyse stabiler Isotopenzeitreihen in zweierlei Hinsicht: schnellere und effiziente Zelluloseextraktion und präzise Trennung der Jahrringsequenzen in inter-annueller bis intra-annuelle Auflösung. III) Die hundertjährigen stabilen Jahrring-Isotopenchronologien weisen signifikante Korrelationen mit dem regionalen Niederschlag auf. In den hochaufgelösten stabilen Sauerstoffisotopenwerten spiegelt sich deutlich das Niederschlagssignal der Trocken- und der Regenzeit wieder. IV) Die stabile Sauerstoffisotopenzeitreihe zeigt signifikante Korrelationen mit verschiedenen ENSO Phasen. Dies betont, dass die verschiedenen ENSO Phasen bei der Interpretation von tropischen Paläodaten zu berücksichtigen sind. Die Ergebnisse der Dissertation zeigen, dass saisonal aufgelöste stabile Sauerstoffisotopenchronologien von indonesischen Teakbäumen ein geeigneter Proxy für mehrhundertjährige Rekonstruktionen der regionalen Niederschlagsvariabilität (Monsun-Signale) und großräumiger Ozean-Atmosphären-Systeme (ENSO) für den Indopazifik ist. Darüber hinaus bieten die neuartigen methodischen Errungenschaften viele neue Ansätze für multidisziplinäre hochaufgelöste Studien in der paläoklimatologischen Forschung. KW - Stabile Sauerstoff- und Kohlenstoffisotope KW - Dendroklimatologie KW - Tectona grandis KW - Tropen KW - UV-Lasermikrodissektion KW - oxygen and carbon stable isotopes KW - dendroclimatology KW - Tectona grandis KW - tropics KW - UV-laser microdissection Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-71947 ER - TY - THES A1 - Radeff, Giuditta T1 - Geohistory of the Central Anatolian Plateau southern margin (southern Turkey) T1 - Die geologische Entwicklung des südlichen zentralsanatolischen Plateaurandes (Süd-Türkei) N2 - The Adana Basin of southern Turkey, situated at the SE margin of the Central Anatolian Plateau is ideally located to record Neogene topographic and tectonic changes in the easternmost Mediterranean realm. Using industry seismic reflection data we correlate 34 seismic profiles with corresponding exposed units in the Adana Basin. The time-depth conversion of the interpreted seismic profiles allows us to reconstruct the subsidence curve of the Adana Basin and to outline the occurrence of a major increase in both subsidence and sedimentation rates at 5.45 – 5.33 Ma, leading to the deposition of almost 1500 km3 of conglomerates and marls. Our provenance analysis of the conglomerates reveals that most of the sediment is derived from and north of the SE margin of the Central Anatolian Plateau. A comparison of these results with the composition of recent conglomerates and the present drainage basins indicates major changes between late Messinian and present-day source areas. We suggest that these changes in source areas result of uplift and ensuing erosion of the SE margin of the plateau. This hypothesis is supported by the comparison of the Adana Basin subsidence curve with the subsidence curve of the Mut Basin, a mainly Neogene basin located on top of the Central Anatolian Plateau southern margin, showing that the Adana Basin subsidence event is coeval with an uplift episode of the plateau southern margin. The collection of several fault measurements in the Adana region show different deformation styles for the NW and SE margins of the Adana Basin. The weakly seismic NW portion of the basin is characterized by extensional and transtensional structures cutting Neogene deposits, likely accomodating the differential uplift occurring between the basin and the SE margin of the plateau. We interpret the tectonic evolution of the southern flank of the Central Anatolian Plateau and the coeval subsidence and sedimentation in the Adana Basin to be related to deep lithospheric processes, particularly lithospheric delamination and slab break-off. N2 - Il Bacino di Adana (Turchia meridionale) é situato in posizione esterna rispetto al margine sud-orientale del plateau anatolico centrale. Il bacino risulta ubicato in posizione strategica per registrare i principali cambiamenti della topografia e dell’assetto tettonico avvenuti durante il Neogene nel Mediterraneo orientale. Utilizzando dati sismici provenienti dall’industria petrolifera abbiamo correlato 34 profili sismici con le unitá corrispondenti affioranti nel Bacino di Adana. La conversione da tempi a profonditá dei profili sismici interpretati ci ha permesso di ricostruire la curva di subsidenza del Bacino di Adana e di individuare un evento caratterizato da un importante aumento della subsidenza associato ad un considerevole incremento del tasso di sedimentazione. Questo evento, avvenuto tra 5.45 e 5.33 Ma ha portato alla deposizione di quasi 1500 km3 di conglomerati e marne. La nostra analisi di provenienza della porzione conglomeratica mostra che la maggior parte del sedimento proviene dal margine sud-orientale del plateau anatolico centrale e dalle aree situate a nord di questo. La comparazione di questi risultati con la composizione litologica di conglomerati recenti e con le litologie affioranti nei bacini di drenaggio attuali mostra cambiamenti rilevanti tra le aree di provenienza del sedimento Messiniane e quelle attuali. Riteniamo che questi cambiamenti nelle aree sorgente siano il risultato del sollevamento e della successiva erosione del margine sud-orientale del plateau anatolico centrale. Questa ipotesi é supportata dal confronto delle curve di subsidenza del Bacino di Adana e del Bacino di Mut, un bacino principalmente neogenico situato sulla sommitá del margine meridionale del plateau. La comparazione delle due curve di subsidenza mostra che l’evento di forte subsidenza del Bacino di Adana é coevo ad un episodio di sollevamento del margine meridionale del plateau anatolico centrale. La raccolta di un fitto dataset strutturale acquisito nella regione di Adana mostra differenti stili deformativi per i margini nord-occidentale e sud-orientale del bacino. La porzione nord-occidentale del bacino, debolmente sismica, é caratterizzata da strutture estensionali e transtensive che tagliano I depositi neogenici, verosimilmente accomodando il sollevamento differenziale tra il bacino e il margine sud-orientale del plateau. Riteniamo che l’evoluzione tettonica del margine meridionale del plateau anatolico centrale e la contemporanea subsidenza e sedimentazione nel Bacino di Adana sia da ricondurre a processi litosferici profondi, in particolar modo delaminazione litosferica e slab break-off. KW - Hebung des Plateaus KW - Sedimentenabfolge KW - Subsidenzgeschichte KW - Adana Becken KW - Süd-Türkei KW - plateau uplift KW - sedimentary record KW - subsidence history KW - Adana Basin KW - southern Turkey Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-71865 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schaefer, Kevin A1 - Lantuit, Hugues A1 - Romanovsky, Vladimir E. A1 - Schuur, Edward A. G. A1 - Witt, Ronald T1 - The impact of the permafrost carbon feedback on global climate JF - Environmental research letters N2 - Degrading permafrost can alter ecosystems, damage infrastructure, and release enough carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) to influence global climate. The permafrost carbon feedback (PCF) is the amplification of surface warming due to CO2 and CH4 emissions from thawing permafrost. An analysis of available estimates PCF strength and timing indicate 120 +/- 85 Gt of carbon emissions from thawing permafrost by 2100. This is equivalent to 5.7 +/- 4.0% of total anthropogenic emissions for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) representative concentration pathway (RCP) 8.5 scenario and would increase global temperatures by 0.29 +/- 0.21 degrees C or 7.8 +/- 5.7%. For RCP4.5, the scenario closest to the 2 degrees C warming target for the climate change treaty, the range of cumulative emissions in 2100 from thawing permafrost decreases to between 27 and 100 Gt C with temperature increases between 0.05 and 0.15 degrees C, but the relative fraction of permafrost to total emissions increases to between 3% and 11%. Any substantial warming results in a committed, long-term carbon release from thawing permafrost with 60% of emissions occurring after 2100, indicating that not accounting for permafrost emissions risks overshooting the 2 degrees C warming target. Climate projections in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (AR5), and any emissions targets based on those projections, do not adequately account for emissions from thawing permafrost and the effects of the PCF on global climate. We recommend the IPCC commission a special assessment focusing on the PCF and its impact on global climate to supplement the AR5 in support of treaty negotiation. KW - permafrost carbon feedback KW - permafrost KW - global climate Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/9/8/085003 SN - 1748-9326 VL - 9 IS - 8 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Martinez-Garzon, Patricia A1 - Kwiatek, Grzegorz A1 - Sone, Hiroki A1 - Bohnhoff, Marco A1 - Dresen, Georg A1 - Hartline, Craig T1 - Spatiotemporal changes, faulting regimes, and source parameters of induced seismicity: A case study from the Geysers geothermal field JF - Journal of geophysical research : Solid earth N2 - The spatiotemporal, kinematic, and source characteristics of induced seismicity occurring at different fluid injection rates are investigated to determine the predominant physical mechanisms responsible for induced seismicity at the northwestern part of The Geysers geothermal field, California. We analyze a relocated hypocenter catalog from a seismicity cluster where significant variations of the stress tensor orientation were previously observed to correlate with injection rates. We find that these stress tensor orientation changes may be related to increased pore pressure and the corresponding changes in poroelastic stresses at reservoir depth. Seismic events during peak injections tend to occur at greater distances from the injection well, preferentially trending parallel to the maximum horizontal stress direction. In contrast, at lower injection rates the seismicity tends to align in a different direction which suggests the presence of a local fault. During peak injection intervals, the relative contribution of strike-slip faulting mechanisms increases. Furthermore, increases in fluid injection rates also coincide with a decrease in b values. Our observations suggest that regardless of the injection stage, most of the induced seismicity results from thermal fracturing of the reservoir rock. However, during peak injection intervals, the increase in pore pressure may likewise be responsible for the induced seismicity. By estimating the thermal and hydraulic diffusivities of the reservoir, we confirm that the characteristic diffusion length for pore pressure is much greater than the corresponding length scale for temperature and also more consistent with the spatial extent of seismicity observed during different injection rates. KW - thermal effect KW - focal mechanisms KW - geothermal KW - pore pressure KW - fluid-induced seismicity KW - reservoir characterization Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2014JB011385 SN - 2169-9313 SN - 2169-9356 VL - 119 IS - 11 SP - 8378 EP - 8396 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Hayakawa, Yuichi A1 - Codilean, Alexandru T. A1 - Matsushi, Yuki A1 - Saito, Hitoshi A1 - Oguchi, Takashi A1 - Matsuzaki, Hiroyuki T1 - Japan's sediment flux to the Pacific Ocean revisited JF - Earth science reviews : the international geological journal bridging the gap between research articles and textbooks N2 - Quantifying volumes and rates of delivery of terrestrial sediment from island arcs to subduction zones is indispensable for refining estimates of the thickness of trench fills that may eventually control the location and timing of submarine landslides and tsunami-generating mega-earthquakes. Despite these motivating insights, knowledge about the rates of erosion and sediment export from the Japanese islands to their Pacific subduction zones remains patchy regardless of the increasing availability of highly resolved data on surface deformation, climate, geology, and topography. Traditionally, natural erosion rates across the island arc have been estimated from regression of topographic catchment metrics and reservoir sedimentation rates that were recorded over several years to decades. We review current research in this context, correct for a systematic bias in one of the most widely used predictions, and present new estimates of decadal to millennial-scale erosion rates of Japan's terrestrial inner forearc. We draw on several independent and unprecedented inventories of mass wasting, reservoir sedimentation, and concentrations of cosmogenic Be-10 in river sands. We find that natural Be-10-derived denudation rates of several mm yr(-1) in the Japanese Alps have been sustained over several centuries to millennia, and are, within error, roughly consistent with sediment yields inferred from artificial reservoir sedimentation. Local exceptions may likely result from release of sediment storage or regional landsliding episodes that trigger transient sediment pulses. Our synopsis further reveals that catchments draining Japan's eastern seaboard differ distinctly in their tectonic, lithological, topographic, and climatic characteristics between the Tohoku, Japanese Alps, and Nankai inner forearc segments, which is underscored by a marked asymmetric pattern of erosion rates along the island arc. Erosion rates are highest (up to at least 3 mm yr(-1)) in the Japanese Alps that mark the collision of two subduction zones, where high topographic relief, hillslope and bedrock-channel steepness foster rapid denudation by mass wasting. Comparable, if slightly lower, erosion rates characterise the Nankai inner forearc in southwest Japan, most likely due to higher typhoon-driven rainfall totals and variability rather than its high topographic relief. In contrast, our estimated erosion and flux rates are lowest in the Tohoku inner forearc catchments that feed sediment into the Japan Trench. We conclude that collisional mountain building of the Japanese Alps drives some of the highest erosion rates in the island arc despite similar uplift and precipitation controls in southwest Japan. We infer that, prior to extensive river damming, reservoir construction, and coastal works, the gross of Japan's total sediment export to the Pacific Ocean entered the accretionary margin of the Nankai Trough as opposed to the comparatively sediment-starved Japan Trench. Compared to documented contemporary rates of sediment flux from mountainous catchments elsewhere in the Pacific, the rivers draining Japan's inner forearc take an intermediate position despite high relief, steep slopes, very high seismicity, and frequent rainstorms. However, the average rates of millennial-scale denudation in the Japanese Alps particularly are amongst the highest reported worldwide. Local mismatches between these late Holocene and modern rates emphasise the anthropogenic fingerprint on sediment retention that may have significantly reduced the island arc's mass flux to its subduction zones, as is the case elsewhere in east and southeast Asia. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Erosion KW - Japan KW - Subduction zone KW - Landslides KW - Cosmogenic nuclides KW - Sediment budget Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2014.03.004 SN - 0012-8252 SN - 1872-6828 VL - 135 SP - 1 EP - 16 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bloethe, Jan H. A1 - Munack, Henry A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Fuelling, Alexander A1 - Garzanti, Eduardo A1 - Resentini, Alberto A1 - Kubik, Peter W. T1 - Late Quaternary valley infill and dissection in the Indus River, western Tibetan Plateau margin JF - Quaternary science reviews : the international multidisciplinary research and review journal N2 - The Indus, one of Earth's major rivers, drains large parts of the NW Himalaya and the Transhimalayan ranges that form part of the western Tibetan Plateau margin. In the western Himalayan syntaxis, where local topographic relief exceeds 7 km, the Indus has incised a steep bedrock gorge at rates of several mm yr(-1). Upstream, however, the upper Indus and its tributaries alternate between bedrock gorges and broad alluvial flats flanked by the Ladakh and Zanskar ranges. We review the late Quaternary valley history in this region with a focus on the confluence of the Indus and Zanskar Rivers, where vast alluvial terrace staircases and lake sediments record major episodes of aggradation and incision. New absolute dating of high-level fluvial terrace remnants using cosmogenic Be-10, optically and infrared stimulated luminescence (OSL, IRSL) indicates at least two phases of late Quaternary valley infilling. These phases commenced before similar to 200 ka and similar to 50-20 ka, judging from terrace treads stranded >150 m and similar to 30-40 m above modern river levels, respectively. Numerous stacks of lacustrine sediments that straddle the Indus River >200 km between the city of Leh and the confluence with the Shyok River share a distinct horizontal alignment. Constraints from IRSL samples of lacustrine sequences from the Leh-Spituk area reveal a protracted lake phase from >177 ka to 72 ka, locally accumulating >50-m thick deposits. In the absence of tectonic faulting, major lithological differences, and stream capture, we attribute the formation of this and other large lakes in the region to natural damming by large landslides, glaciers, and alluvial fans. The overall patchy landform age constraints from earlier studies can be reconciled by postulating a major deglacial control on sediment flux, valley infilling, and subsequent incision that has been modulated locally by backwater effects of natural damming. While comparison with Pleistocene monsoon proxies reveals no obvious correlation, a lateor post-glacial sediment pulse seems a more likely source of this widespread sedimentation that has partly buried the dissected bedrock topography. Overall, the long residence times of fluvial, alluvial and lacustrine deposits in the region (>500 ka) support previous studies, but remain striking given the dominantly steep slopes and deeply carved valleys that characterise this high-altitude mountain desert. Recalculated late Quaternary rates of fluvial bedrock incision in the Indus and Zanskar of 1.5 +/- 0.2 mm yr(-1) are at odds with the longevity of juxtaposed valley-fill deposits, unless a lack of decisive lateral fluvial erosion helps to preserve these late Pleistocene sedimentary archives. We conclude that alternating, similar to 10(4)-yr long, phases of massive infilling and incision have dominated the late Quaternary history of the Indus valley below the western Tibetan Plateau margin. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Himalaya KW - Indus KW - Valley fills KW - Glaciation KW - Erosion KW - Lake sediment Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.04.011 SN - 0277-3791 VL - 94 SP - 102 EP - 119 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gorum, Tolga A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - van Westen, Cees J. A1 - van der Meijde, Mark A1 - Xu, Chong A1 - van der Meer, Freek D. T1 - Why so few? Landslides triggered by the 2002 Denali earthquake, Alaska JF - Quaternary science reviews : the international multidisciplinary research and review journal N2 - The 2002 M-w 7.9 Denali Fault earthquake, Alaska, provides an unparalleled opportunity to investigate in quantitative detail the regional hillslope mass-wasting response to strong seismic shaking in glacierized terrain. We present the first detailed inventory of similar to 1580 coseismic slope failures, out of which some 20% occurred above large valley glaciers, based on mapping from multi-temporal remote sensing data. We find that the Denali earthquake produced at least one order of magnitude fewer landslides in a much narrower corridor along the fault ruptures than empirical predictions for an M 8 earthquake would suggest, despite the availability of sufficiently steep and dissected mountainous topography prone to frequent slope failure. In order to explore potential controls on the reduced extent of regional coseismic landsliding we compare our data with inventories that we compiled for two recent earthquakes in periglacial and formerly glaciated terrain, i.e. at Yushu, Tibet (M-w 6.9, 2010), and Aysen Fjord, Chile (2007 M-w 6.2). Fault movement during these events was, similarly to that of the Denali earthquake, dominated by strike-slip offsets along near-vertical faults. Our comparison returns very similar coseismic landslide patterns that are consistent with the idea that fault type, geometry, and dynamic rupture process rather than widespread glacier cover were among the first-order controls on regional hillslope erosional response in these earthquakes. We conclude that estimating the amount of coseismic hillslope sediment input to the sediment cascade from earthquake magnitude alone remains highly problematic, particularly if glacierized terrain is involved. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Earthquake KW - Landslide KW - Glacial KW - Sediment cascade KW - Denali KW - Alaska Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.04.032 SN - 0277-3791 VL - 95 SP - 80 EP - 94 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Saito, H. A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Uchida, T. A1 - Hayashi, S. A1 - Oguchi, T. T1 - Rainfall conditions, typhoon frequency, and contemporary landslide erosion in Japan JF - Geology N2 - Dealing with predicted increases in extreme weather conditions due to climate change requires robust knowledge about controls on rainfall-triggered landslides. We explore relationships between rainfall and landslide size throughout the Japanese archipelago. We test whether the total volume of landslides can be predicted directly from rainfall totals, intensity, and duration using a nationwide inventory of 4744 rainfall-triggered landslides recorded from A.D. 2001 to 2011. We find that larger landslides were more abundant at the expense of smaller ones when total, maximum, and mean rainfall intensity exceeded similar to 250 mm, similar to 35 mm/h, and similar to 4 mm/h, respectively. Frequency distributions of these rainfall parameters are peaked and heavily skewed. Yet neither the most frequent nor the most extreme values of these rainfall metrics coincide consistently with the maximum landslide volumes. A striking decrease of landslide volumes at both mean and maximum rainfall intensity, as well as duration, points to an exhaustion in hillslope geomorphic response regardless of sample size, landslide type, mobilized volume, dominant lithology, or reporting bias. Our results underscore substantial offsets between the peaks of rainfall metrics and maximum associated landslide volumes, thus complicating straightforward estimates of geomorphic work from metrics of rainstorm magnitude or frequency. Only the rainfall total appears to be a suitable monotonic predictor of landslide volumes mobilized during typhoons and frontal storms. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/G35680.1 SN - 0091-7613 SN - 1943-2682 VL - 42 IS - 11 SP - 999 EP - 1002 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Boulder ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Weidinger, Johannes T. A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Munack, Henry A1 - Altenberger, Uwe A1 - Dunning, Stuart A. A1 - Tippelt, Gerold A1 - Lottermoser, Werner T1 - Giant rockslides from the inside JF - Earth & planetary science letters N2 - The growing body of research on large-scale mass wasting events so far has only scarcely investigated the sedimentology of chaotic deposits from non-volcanic terrestrial landslides such that any overarching and systematic terminological framework remains elusive. Yet recent work has emphasized the need for better understanding the internal structure and composition of rockslide deposits as a means to characterise the mechanics during the final stages of runout and emplacement. We offer a comprehensive overview on the occurrence of rock fragmentation and frictional melt both at different geographic locations, and different sections within large (>10(6) m(3)) rockslide masses. We argue that exposures of pervasively fragmented and interlocked jigsaw-cracked rock masses; basal melange containing rip-up clasts and phantom blocks; micro-breccia; and thin bands of basal frictionite are indispensable clues for identifying deposits from giant rockslides that may remain morphologically inconspicuous otherwise. These sedimentary assemblages are diagnostic tools for distinguishing large rockslide debris from macro and microscopically similar glacial deposits, tectonic fault-zone breccias, and impact breccias, and thus help avoid palaeoclimatic and tectonic misinterpretations, let alone misestimates of the hazard from giant rockslides. Moreover, experimental results from Mossbauer spectroscopy of frictionite samples support visual interpretations of thin sections, and demonstrate that short-lived (<10 s) friction-induced partial melting at temperatures >1500 degrees C in the absence of water occurred at the base of several giant moving rockslides. This finding supports previous theories of dry excess runout accompanied by comminution of rock masses down to gm-scale, and indicates that catastrophic motion of large fragmenting rock masses does not require water as a potential lubricant. KW - landslide KW - petrography KW - frictional melt KW - pseudotachylyte KW - breccia KW - Mossbauer spectroscopy Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2013.12.017 SN - 0012-821X SN - 1385-013X VL - 389 SP - 62 EP - 73 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meyer, Nele Kristin A1 - Schwanghart, Wolfgang A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Romstad, Bard A1 - Etzelmuller, Bernd T1 - Estimating the topographic predictability of debris flows JF - Geomorphology : an international journal on pure and applied geomorphology N2 - The Norwegian traffic network is impacted by about 2000 landslides, avalanches, and debris flows each year that incur high economic losses. Despite the urgent need to mitigate future losses, efforts to locate potential debris flow source areas have been rare at the regional scale. We tackle this research gap by exploring a minimal set of possible topographic predictors of debris flow initiation that we input to a Weights-of-Evidence (WofE) model for mapping the regional susceptibility to debris flows in western Norway. We use an inventory of 429 debris flows that were recorded between 1979 and 2008, and use the terrain variables of slope, total curvature, and contributing area (flow accumulation) to compute the posterior probabilities of local debris flow occurrence. The novelty of our approach is that we quantify the uncertainties in the WofE approach arising from different predictor classification schemes and data input, while estimating model accuracy and predictive performance from independent test data. Our results show that a percentile-based classification scheme excels over a manual classification of the predictor variables because differing abundances in manually defined bins reduce the reliability of the conditional independence tests, a key, and often neglected, prerequisite for the WofE method. The conditional dependence between total curvature and flow accumulation precludes their joint use in the model. Slope gradient has the highest true positive rate (88%), although the fraction of area classified as susceptible is very large (37%). The predictive performance, i.e. the reduction of false positives, is improved when combined with either total curvature or flow accumulation. Bootstrapping shows that the combination of slope and flow accumulation provides more reliable predictions than the combination of slope and total curvature, and helps refining the use of slope-area plots for identifying morphometric fingerprints of debris flow source areas, an approach used outside the field of landslide susceptibility assessments. KW - Weights-of-Evidence KW - Debris flows KW - Susceptibility KW - Slope-area plot KW - Process domains KW - Norway Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2013.10.030 SN - 0169-555X SN - 1872-695X VL - 207 SP - 114 EP - 125 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Rixen, C. T1 - Soil erosion and organic carbon export by wet snow avalanches JF - The Cryosphere : TC ; an interactive open access journal of the European Geosciences Union N2 - Many mountain belts sustain prolonged snow cover for parts of the year, although enquiries into rates of erosion in these landscapes have focused almost exclusively on the snow-free periods. This raises the question of whether annual snow cover contributes significantly to modulating rates of erosion in high-relief terrain. In this context, the sudden release of snow avalanches is a frequent and potentially relevant process, judging from the physical damage to subalpine forest ecosystems, and the amount of debris contained in avalanche deposits. To quantitatively constrain this visual impression and to expand the sparse literature, we sampled sediment concentrations of n = 28 river-spanning snow-avalanche deposits (snow bridges) in the area around Davos, eastern Swiss Alps, and inferred an orders-of-magnitude variability in specific fine sediment and organic carbon yields (1.8 to 830 t km(-2) yr(-1), and 0.04 to 131 tC km(-2) yr(-1), respectively). A Monte Carlo simulation demonstrates that, with a minimum of free parameters, such variability is inherent to the geometric scaling used for computing specific yields. Moreover, the widely applied method of linearly extrapolating plot scale sample data may be prone to substantial under- or overestimates. A comparison of our inferred yields with previously published work demonstrates the relevance of wet snow avalanches as prominent agents of soil erosion and transporters of biogeochemical constituents to mountain rivers. Given that a number of snow bridges persisted below the insulating debris cover well into the summer months, snow-avalanche deposits also contribute to regulating in-channel sediment and organic debris storage on seasonal timescales. Finally, our results underline the potential shortcomings of neglecting erosional processes in the winter and spring months in mountainous terrain subjected to prominent snow cover. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-8-651-2014 SN - 1994-0416 SN - 1994-0424 VL - 8 IS - 2 SP - 651 EP - 658 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Vogel, Kristin A1 - Riggelsen, Carsten A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Scherbaum, Frank T1 - Bayesian network learning for natural hazard analyses JF - Natural hazards and earth system sciences N2 - Modern natural hazards research requires dealing with several uncertainties that arise from limited process knowledge, measurement errors, censored and incomplete observations, and the intrinsic randomness of the governing processes. Nevertheless, deterministic analyses are still widely used in quantitative hazard assessments despite the pitfall of misestimating the hazard and any ensuing risks. In this paper we show that Bayesian networks offer a flexible framework for capturing and expressing a broad range of uncertainties encountered in natural hazard assessments. Although Bayesian networks are well studied in theory, their application to real-world data is far from straightforward, and requires specific tailoring and adaptation of existing algorithms. We offer suggestions as how to tackle frequently arising problems in this context and mainly concentrate on the handling of continuous variables, incomplete data sets, and the interaction of both. By way of three case studies from earthquake, flood, and landslide research, we demonstrate the method of data-driven Bayesian network learning, and showcase the flexibility, applicability, and benefits of this approach. Our results offer fresh and partly counterintuitive insights into well-studied multivariate problems of earthquake-induced ground motion prediction, accurate flood damage quantification, and spatially explicit landslide prediction at the regional scale. In particular, we highlight how Bayesian networks help to express information flow and independence assumptions between candidate predictors. Such knowledge is pivotal in providing scientists and decision makers with well-informed strategies for selecting adequate predictor variables for quantitative natural hazard assessments. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-14-2605-2014 SN - 1561-8633 VL - 14 IS - 9 SP - 2605 EP - 2626 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Munack, Henry A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Resentini, Alberto A1 - Limonta, Mara A1 - Garzanti, Eduardo A1 - Bloethe, Jan H. A1 - Scherler, Dirk A1 - Wittmann, Hella A1 - Kubik, Peter W. T1 - Postglacial denudation of western Tibetan Plateau margin outpaced by long-term exhumation JF - Geological Society of America bulletin N2 - The Indus River, one of Asia's premier rivers, drains the western Tibetan Plateau and the Nanga Parbat syntaxis. These two areas juxtapose some of the lowest and highest topographic relief and commensurate denudation rates in the Himalaya-Tibet orogen, respectively, yet the spatial pattern of denudation rates upstream of the syntaxis remains largely unclear, as does the way in which major rivers drive headward incision into the Tibetan Plateau. We report a new inventory of Be-10-based basinwide denudation rates from 33 tributaries flanking the Indus River along a 320 km reach across the western Tibetan Plateau margin. We find that denudation rates of up to 110 mm k.y.(-1) in the Ladakh and Zanskar Ranges systematically decrease eastward to 10 mm k.y.(-1) toward the Tibetan Plateau. Independent results from bulk petrographic and heavy mineral analyses support this denudation gradient. Assuming that incision along the Indus exerts the base-level control on tributary denudation rates, our data show a systematic eastward decrease of landscape downwearing, reaching its minimum on the Tibetan Plateau. In contrast, denudation rates increase rapidly 150-200 km downstream of a distinct knick-point that marks the Tibetan Plateau margin in the Indus River longitudinal profile. We infer that any vigorous headward incision and any accompanying erosional waves into the interior of the plateau mostly concerned reaches well below this plateau margin. Moreover, reported long-term (>10(6) yr) exhumation rates from low-temperature chronometry of 0.1-0.75 mm yr(-1) consistently exceed our Be-10-derived denudation rates. With averaging time scales of 10(3)-10(4) yr for our denudation data, we report postglacial rates of downwearing in a tectonically idle landscape. To counterbalance this apparent mismatch, denudation rates must have been higher in the Quaternary during glacial-interglacial intervals. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/B30979.1 SN - 0016-7606 SN - 1943-2674 VL - 126 IS - 11-12 SP - 1580 EP - 1594 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Boulder ER - TY - THES A1 - Munack, Henry T1 - From phantom blocks to denudational noise BT - downwearing of the Himalaya-Tibet orogen from a multi-scale perspective BT - die Abtragung des Himalaya-Tibet Orogens aus multiskaliger Perspektive N2 - Knowing the rates and mechanisms of geomorphic process that shape the Earth’s surface is crucial to understand landscape evolution. Modern methods for estimating denudation rates enable us to quantitatively express and compare processes of landscape downwearing that can be traced through time and space—from the seemingly intact, though intensely shattered, phantom blocks of the catastrophically fragmented basal facies of giant rockslides up to denudational noise in orogen-wide data sets averaging over several millennia. This great variety of spatiotemporal scales of denudation rates is both boon and bane of geomorphic process rates. Indeed, processes of landscape downwearing can be traced far back in time, helping us to understand the Earth’s evolution. Yet, this benefit may turn into a drawback due to scaling issues if these rates are to be compared across different observation timescales. This thesis investigates the mechanisms, patterns and rates of landscape downwearing across the Himalaya-Tibet orogen. Accounting for the spatiotemporal variability of denudation processes, this thesis addresses landscape downwearing on three distinctly different spatial scales, starting off at the local scale of individual hillslopes where considerable amounts of debris are generated from rock instantaneously: Rocksliding in active mountains is a major impetus of landscape downwearing. Study I provides a systematic overview of the internal sedimentology of giant rockslide deposits and thus meets the challenge of distinguishing them from macroscopically and microscopically similar glacial deposits, tectonic fault-zone breccias, and impact breccias. This distinction is important to avoid erroneous or misleading deduction of paleoclimatic or tectonic implications. -> Grain size analysis shows that rockslide-derived micro-breccia closely resemble those from meteorite impact or tectonic faults. -> Frictionite may occur more frequently that previously assumed. -> Mössbauer-spectroscopy derived results indicate basal rock melting in the absence of water, involving short-term temperatures of >1500°C. Zooming out, Study II tracks the fate of these sediments, using the example of the upper Indus River, NW India. There we use river sand samples from the Indus and its tributaries to estimate basin-averaged denudation rates along a ~320-km reach across the Tibetan Plateau margin, to answer the question whether incision into the western Tibetan Plateau margin is currently active or not. -> We find an about one-order-of-magnitude upstream decay—from 110 to 10 mm kyr^-1—of cosmogenic Be-10-derived basin-wide denudation rates across the morphological knickpoint that marks the transition from the Transhimalayan ranges to the Tibetan Plateau. This trend is corroborated by independent bulk petrographic and heavy mineral analysis of the same samples. -> From the observation that tributary-derived basin-wide denudation rates do not increase markedly until ~150–200 km downstream of the topographic plateau margin we conclude that incision into the Tibetan Plateau is inactive. -> Comparing our postglacial Be-10-derived denudation rates to long-term (>10^6 yr) estimates from low-temperature thermochronometry, ranging from 100 to 750 mm kyr^-1, points to an order- of-magnitude decay of rates of landscape downwearing towards present. We infer that denudation rates must have been higher in the Quaternary, probably promoted by the interplay of glacial and interglacial stages. Our investigation of regional denudation patterns in the upper Indus finally is an integral part of Study III that synthesizes denudation of the Himalaya-Tibet orogen. In order to identify general and time-invariant predictors for Be-10-derived denudation rates we analyze tectonic, climatic and topographic metrics from an inventory of 297 drainage basins from various parts of the orogen. Aiming to get insight to the full response distributions of denudation rate to tectonic, climatic and topographic candidate predictors, we apply quantile regression instead of ordinary least squares regression, which has been standard analysis tool in previous studies that looked for denudation rate predictors. -> We use principal component analysis to reduce our set of 26 candidate predictors, ending up with just three out of these: Aridity Index, topographic steepness index, and precipitation of the coldest quarter of the year. -> Topographic steepness index proves to perform best during additive quantile regression. Our consequent prediction of denudation rates on the basin scale involves prediction errors that remain between 5 and 10 mm kyr^-1. -> We conclude that while topographic metrics such as river-channel steepness and slope gradient—being representative on timescales that our cosmogenic Be-10-derived denudation rates integrate over—generally appear to be more suited as predictors than climatic and tectonic metrics based on decadal records. N2 - Die Kenntnis von Raten und Mechanismen geomorphologischer Prozesse, die die Erdoberfläche gestalten, ist entscheidend für das Verständnis von quartärer Landschaftsgeschichte. Denudationsraten sind dabei das Mittel zur Quantifizierung und zum Vergleich von Oberflächenabtrag; hinweg über zeitliche und räumliche Größenordnungen – von den optisch unversehrten, jedoch durchgehend zerrütteten “Phantom Blocks” der basalen Fazies katastrophaler Bergstürze bis hin zum “Denudational Noise”, dem durchaus informativen Rauschen in Datensätzen, die über ganze Orogene und tausende Jahre von Landschaftsgeschichte integrieren. Diese große räumlich-zeitliche Variabilität von Denudationsprozessen ist Chance und Herausforderung zugleich. Zum einen können Denudationsprozesse weit in der Zeit zurückverfolgt werden, was hilft, Landschaftsgeschichte nachzuvollziehen. Andererseits hat es sich gezeigt, dass geomorphologische Prozessraten mit dem Zeitraum ihrer Beobachtung skalieren, was einen Vergleich über zeitliche Größenordnungen hinweg erschwert. Diese Dissertation untersucht in drei Studien die Mechanismen, Muster und Raten von Denudation im Himalaja-Tibet Orogen. Der räumlichen (und zeitlichen) Variabilität von Denudationsprozessen folgend beginnt diese Arbeit dort, wo bedeutende Mengen von Festgestein schlagartig in erodierbaren Schutt umgewandelt werden: Bergstürze sind ein Hauptantrieb der Abtragung von aktiven Gebirgen. Studie I systematisiert die interne Sedimentologie gigantischer Bergsturzablagerungen. Sie adressiert damit Herausforderungen durch die makro- und mikroskopische Ähnlichkeit von Bergsturzablagerungen mit glazialen Ablagerungen, tektonischen Störungsbrekkzien und Impaktbrekkzien. Ziel einer solchen Systematisierung ist die Vermeidung fehlerhafter paläoklimatischer oder -tektonischer Interpretationen. -> Bergsturzbrekkzien sind auf mikroskopischer Ebene nicht von tektonischen oder Impaktbrekkzien unterscheidbar. -> Friktionit könnte weit häufiger vorkommen, als bisher angenommen. -> Mössbauer-Spektroskopie deutet auf Temperaturen ≥ 1500° C sowie die Abwesenheit von Wasser als Schmiermittel hin. Auf der mesoskaligen Ebene von Einzugsgebieten verfolgt Studie II, am Beispiel des oberen Indus in NW Indien den Weg dieser Sedimente, denn sie geben Auskunft über beckenweite Denudationsraten, sowie Pfade und Muster des Sedimenttransports am westlichen Tibetplateaurand. Diese Informationen sollen helfen, die Mechanismen der Einschneidung großer Flüsse in das Tibetplateau, sowie den gegenwärtigen erosionalen Status des Plateaurandes zu verstehen. -> Die beckenweiten Denudationsraten in den Tributären des Indus nehmen stromabwärts – und damit über den morphologischen Tibetplateaurand hinweg – von 10 auf 110 mm kyr^-1 zu. Dieser Trend wird durch unabhängige Petrographie- und Schwermineralanalysen aus denselben Proben nachgezeichnet. -> Es zeigt sich allerdings, dass der morphologische Plateaurand und der hierfür erwartbare Anstieg der Denudationsraten um ~150–200 km versetzt sind. Hieraus schließen wir, dass der westliche Rand des Tibetischen Plateaus rezent nicht maßgeblich erodiert wird. -> Ein Vergleich unserer postglazialen Denudationsraten von kosmogenem Be-10 mit Langzeit- (>10^6 yr)-Thermochronometriedaten von 100 bis 750 mm kyr^-1 deutet auf einen spätquartären Rückgang von Denudationsraten im Transhimalaya hin. Folglich muss es früher während des Quartärs Zeiten höherer erosionaler Effizienz gegeben haben. Studie III fokussiert schließlich, in einer Analyse beckenweiter Be-10-Denudationsraten, auf Denudationsmuster und -mechanismen für das gesamte Himalaja-Tibet Orogen. Auf der Suche nach zeit-invarianten tektonischen, klimatischen oder topographischen Prädiktoren für Denudationsraten wird ein Datensatz von 297 orogenweit verteilten Einzugsgebieten untersucht. Um Einblicke in die gesamte Response-Verteilung zwischen Denudationsrate und Prädiktor zu erhalten nutzen wir – anstelle der in diesem Zusammenhang vielbenutzten Methode der kleinsten Quadrate – Quantil-Regression. -> Dafür reduzieren wir einen Satz von 26 möglichen Prädiktoren, unter Nutzung der Hauptkomponentenanalyse, auf drei Prädiktoren: Ariditätsindex, topographischer Steilheitsindex und Niederschlag des kältesten Quartals. -> Die additive Quantil-Regression dieser drei Prädiktoren zeigt, dass der Steilheitsindex die besten Ergebnisse im Sinne einer zeit-invarianten Beziehung zwischen Denudationsrate und Prädiktoren liefert. -> Zusammenfassend zeigt sich, dass topographisch basierte Prädiktoren geeigneter für die Vorhersage von kosmogenen beckenweiten Denudationsraten sind als klimatische oder tektonische Prädiktoren. Wir erklären dieses Resultat mit den jeweils über Jahrtausende integrierenden Maßzahlen für Topographie und kosmogenen Denudationsraten, und der daraus folgenden Inkompatibilität der kosmogenen Denudationsraten mit den tektonischen und klimatischen Prädiktoren, die lediglich auf Jahrzehnten von Messungen beruhen. T2 - Von Phantomblöcken zu Denudationsrauschen KW - geomorphology KW - quaternary KW - denudation KW - Himalaya-Tibet orogen KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - rockslide KW - Geomorphologie KW - Quartär KW - Denudation KW - Himalaya-Tibet Orogen KW - kosmogene Nuklide KW - Bergsturz Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-72629 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bruttel, Lisa Verena A1 - Friehe, Tim T1 - Can short-term incentives induce long-lasting cooperation? Results from a public-goods experiment JF - Journal of behavioral and experimental economics N2 - This paper investigates whether providing strong cooperation incentives only at the outset of a group interaction spills over to later periods to ensure cooperation in the long run. We study a repeated linear public-good game with punishment opportunities and a parameter change after the first ten (of twenty) rounds. Our data shows that cooperation among subjects who had experienced a higher marginal return on public-good contributions or low punishment costs in rounds 1-10 rapidly deteriorated in rounds 11-20 once these incentives were removed, eventually trending below the level of cooperation in the control group. This suggests the possibility of temporary incentives backfiring in the long run. This paper ties in with the literature highlighting the potentially adverse effects of the use of incentives. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. KW - Public good game KW - Team KW - Punishment KW - Incentives KW - Experiment Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2014.09.001 SN - 2214-8043 SN - 2214-8051 VL - 53 SP - 120 EP - 130 PB - Elsevier CY - New York ER - TY - THES A1 - Maghsoudi, Samira T1 - Spatiotemporal microseismicity patterns and detection performance in mining environments Y1 - 2014 CY - Potsdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Braeuer, Benjamin A1 - Asch, Günter A1 - Hofstetter, Rami A1 - Haberland, Christian A1 - Jaser, D. A1 - El-Kelani, R. A1 - Weber, Michael H. T1 - Detailed seismicity analysis revealing the dynamics of the southern Dead Sea area JF - Journal of seismology N2 - Within the framework of the international DESIRE (DEad Sea Integrated REsearch) project, a dense temporary local seismological network was operated in the southern Dead Sea area. During 18 recording months, 648 events were detected. Based on an already published tomography study clustering, focal mechanisms, statistics and the distribution of the microseismicity in relation to the velocity models from the tomography are analysed. The determined b value of 0.74 leads to a relatively high risk of large earthquakes compared to the moderate microseismic activity. The distribution of the seismicity indicates an asymmetric basin with a vertical strike-slip fault forming the eastern boundary of the basin, and an inclined western boundary, made up of strike-slip and normal faults. Furthermore, significant differences between the area north and south of the Bokek fault were observed. South of the Bokek fault, the western boundary is inactive while the entire seismicity occurs on the eastern boundary and below the basin-fill sediments. The largest events occurred here, and their focal mechanisms represent the northwards transform motion of the Arabian plate along the Dead Sea Transform. The vertical extension of the spatial and temporal cluster from February 2007 is interpreted as being related to the locking of the region around the Bokek fault. North of the Bokek fault similar seismic activity occurs on both boundaries most notably within the basin-fill sediments, displaying mainly small events with strike-slip mechanism and normal faulting in EW direction. Therefore, we suggest that the Bokek fault forms the border between the single transform fault and the pull-apart basin with two active border faults. KW - Dead Sea basin KW - Microseismicity KW - Cluster KW - Pull-apart basin KW - Asymmetric basin KW - Transform fault Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10950-014-9441-4 SN - 1383-4649 SN - 1573-157X VL - 18 IS - 4 SP - 731 EP - 748 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Werner, Andrea A1 - Werner, Andreas A1 - Wieland, Ralf A1 - Kersebaum, Kurt-Christian A1 - Mirschel, Wilfried A1 - Ende, Hans-Peter A1 - Wiggering, Hubert T1 - Ex ante assessment of crop rotations focusing on energy crops using a multi-attribute decision-making method JF - Ecological indicators : integrating monitoring, assessment and management N2 - The cultivation of plants for use as energy resources is an agricultural and industrial sector with potentially synergistic benefits related to protecting the environment and generating income. Against the background of increasing land-use changes and new agricultural approaches to the production of energy crops, we present a method for identifying future-oriented crop rotations that supports both the economic and environmental components of decision-making strategies with respect to agriculture-related policy decisions (regional mission statements). The conflicting aspects of these objectives can be addressed with the analytic hierarchy process (AHP), a multi-attribute decision-making method that was integrated here. Three models are used to generate simulations of the defined objectives over a planning period of 30 years under the current climate scenario and provide input data for the multi-attribute assessment of several crop rotations. Based on the entire evaluation process, dimensionless global priority vectors are used to indicate how well the crop rotations meet the requirements of the defined mission statement. The method is tested in a municipality in NE Germany. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Agricultural management KW - Ex ante assessment KW - Multi-attribute decision-making KW - AHP KW - Crop rotation KW - Energy crops KW - Regional objectives KW - Indicators Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2014.03.013 SN - 1470-160X SN - 1872-7034 VL - 45 SP - 110 EP - 122 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Freundt, A. A1 - Grevemeyer, I. A1 - Rabbel, W. A1 - Hansteen, T. H. A1 - Hensen, C. A1 - Wehrmann, H. A1 - Kutterolf, S. A1 - Halama, Ralf A1 - Frische, M. T1 - Volatile (H2O, CO2, Cl, S) budget of the Central American subduction zone JF - International journal of earth sciences N2 - After more than a decade of multidisciplinary studies of the Central American subduction zone mainly in the framework of two large research programmes, the US MARGINS program and the German Collaborative Research Center SFB 574, we here review and interpret the data pertinent to quantify the cycling of mineral-bound volatiles (H2O, CO2, Cl, S) through this subduction system. For input-flux calculations, we divide the Middle America Trench into four segments differing in convergence rate and slab lithological profiles, use the latest evidence for mantle serpentinization of the Cocos slab approaching the trench, and for the first time explicitly include subduction erosion of forearc basement. Resulting input fluxes are 40-62 (53) Tg/Ma/m H2O, 7.8-11.4 (9.3) Tg/Ma/m CO2, 1.3-1.9 (1.6) Tg/Ma/m Cl, and 1.3-2.1 (1.6) Tg/Ma/m S (bracketed are mean values for entire trench length). Output by cold seeps on the forearc amounts to 0.625-1.25 Tg/Ma/m H2O partly derived from the slab sediments as determined by geochemical analyses of fluids and carbonates. The major volatile output occurs at the Central American volcanic arc that is divided into ten arc segments by dextral strike-slip tectonics. Based on volcanic edifice and widespread tephra volumes as well as calculated parental magma masses needed to form observed evolved compositions, we determine long-term (10(5) years) average magma and K2O fluxes for each of the ten segments as 32-242 (106) Tg/Ma/m magma and 0.28-2.91 (1.38) Tg/Ma/m K2O (bracketed are mean values for entire Central American volcanic arc length). Volatile/K2O concentration ratios derived from melt inclusion analyses and petrologic modelling then allow to calculate volatile fluxes as 1.02-14.3 (6.2) Tg/Ma/m H2O, 0.02-0.45 (0.17) Tg/Ma/m CO2, and 0.07-0.34 (0.22) Tg/Ma/m Cl. The same approach yields long-term sulfur fluxes of 0.12-1.08 (0.54) Tg/Ma/m while present-day open-vent SO2-flux monitoring yields 0.06-2.37 (0.83) Tg/Ma/m S. Input-output comparisons show that the arc water fluxes only account for up to 40 % of the input even if we include an "invisible" plutonic component constrained by crustal growth. With 20-30 % of the H2O input transferred into the deeper mantle as suggested by petrologic modeling, there remains a deficiency of, say, 30-40 % in the water budget. At least some of this water is transferred into two upper-plate regions of low seismic velocity and electrical resistivity whose sizes vary along arc: one region widely envelopes the melt ascent paths from slab top to arc and the other extends obliquely from the slab below the forearc to below the arc. Whether these reservoirs are transient or steady remains unknown. KW - Subduction input KW - Forearc dewatering KW - Arc magmatism KW - Subduction fluids Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00531-014-1001-1 SN - 1437-3254 SN - 1437-3262 VL - 103 IS - 7 SP - 2101 EP - 2127 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Maslin, Mark A. A1 - Brierley, Chris M. A1 - Milner, Alice M. A1 - Shultz, Susanne A1 - Trauth, Martin H. A1 - Wilson, Katy E. T1 - East African climate pulses and early human evolution JF - Quaternary science reviews : the international multidisciplinary research and review journal N2 - Current evidence suggests that all of the major events in hominin evolution have occurred in East Africa. Over the last two decades, there has been intensive work undertaken to understand African palaeoclimate and tectonics in order to put together a coherent picture of how the environment of East Africa has varied in the past. The landscape of East Africa has altered dramatically over the last 10 million years. It has changed from a relatively flat, homogenous region covered with mixed tropical forest, to a varied and heterogeneous environment, with mountains over 4 km high and vegetation ranging from desert to cloud forest. The progressive rifting of East Africa has also generated numerous lake basins, which are highly sensitive to changes in the local precipitation-evaporation regime. There is now evidence that the presence of precession-driven, ephemeral deep-water lakes in East Africa were concurrent with major events in hominin evolution. It seems the unusual geology and climate of East Africa created periods of highly variable local climate, which, it has been suggested could have driven hominin speciation, encephalisation and dispersal out of Africa. One example is the significant hominin speciation and brain expansion event at -1.8 Ma that seems to have been coeval with the occurrence of highly variable, extensive, deep-water lakes. This complex, climatically very variable setting inspired first the variability selection hypothesis, which was then the basis for the pulsed climate variability hypothesis. The newer of the two suggests that the long-term drying trend in East Africa was punctuated by episodes of short, alternating periods of extreme humidity and aridity. Both hypotheses, together with other key theories of climate-evolution linkages, are discussed in this paper. Though useful the actual evolution mechanisms, which led to early hominins are still unclear and continue to be debated. However, it is clear that an understanding of East African lakes and their palaeoclimate history is required to understand the context within which humans evolved and eventually left East Africa. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. KW - Human evolution KW - East Africa KW - Palaeoclimatology KW - Palaeoliminology KW - Tectonics KW - Hominin KW - Orbital forcing KW - Cenozoic climate transitions KW - Pulsed climate variability hypothesis Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.06.012 SN - 0277-3791 VL - 101 SP - 1 EP - 17 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - INPR A1 - Freundt, A. A1 - Halama, Ralf A1 - Suess, E. A1 - Voelker, D. T1 - Introduction to the special issue on SFB 574 "Volatiles and fluids in subduction zones: climate feedback and trigger mechanisms for natural disasters" T2 - International journal of earth sciences Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00531-014-1059-9 SN - 1437-3254 SN - 1437-3262 VL - 103 IS - 7 SP - 1729 EP - 1731 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Garcin, Yannick A1 - Schefuss, Enno A1 - Schwab, Valerie F. A1 - Garreta, Vincent A1 - Gleixner, Gerd A1 - Vincens, Annie A1 - Todou, Gilbert A1 - Sene, Olivier A1 - Onana, Jean-Michel A1 - Achoundong, Gaston A1 - Sachse, Dirk T1 - Reconstructing C-3 and C-4 vegetation cover using n-alkane carbon isotope ratios in recent lake sediments from Cameroon, Western Central Africa JF - Geochimica et cosmochimica acta : journal of the Geochemical Society and the Meteoritical Society N2 - Trees and shrubs in tropical Africa use the C-3 cycle as a carbon fixation pathway during photosynthesis, while grasses and sedges mostly use the C-4 cycle. Leaf-wax lipids from sedimentary archives such as the long-chain n-alkanes (e.g., n-C-27 to n-C-33) inherit carbon isotope ratios that are representative of the carbon fixation pathway. Therefore, n-alkane delta C-13 values are often used to reconstruct past C-3/C-4 composition of vegetation, assuming that the relative proportions of C-3 and C-4 leaf waxes reflect the relative proportions of C-3 and C-4 plants. We have compared the delta C-13 values of n-alkanes from modern C-3 and C-4 plants with previously published values from recent lake sediments and provide a framework for estimating the fractional contribution (areal-based) of C-3 vegetation cover (f(C3)) represented by these sedimentary archives. Samples were collected in Cameroon, across a latitudinal transect that accommodates a wide range of climate zones and vegetation types, as reflected in the progressive northward replacement of C-3-dominated rain forest by C-4-dominated savanna. The C-3 plants analysed were characterised by substantially higher abundances of n-C-29 alkanes and by substantially lower abundances of n-C-33 alkanes than the C-4 plants. Furthermore, the sedimentary delta C-13 values of n-C-29 and n-C-31 alkanes from recent lake sediments in Cameroon (-37.4%) to 26.5%) were generally within the range of delta C-13 values for C-3 plants, even when from sites where C-4 plants dominated the catchment vegetation. In such cases simple linear mixing models fail to accurately reconstruct the relative proportions of C-3 and C-4 vegetation cover when using the delta C-13 values of sedimentary n-alkanes, overestimating the proportion of C-3 vegetation, likely as a consequence of the differences in plant wax production, preservation, transport, and/or deposition between C-3 and C-4 plants. We therefore tested a set of non-linear binary mixing models using delta C-13 values from both C-3 and C-4 vegetation as end-members. The non-linear models included a sigmoid function (sine-squared) that describes small variations in the f(C3) values as the minimum and maximum delta C-13 values are approached, and a hyperbolic function that takes into account the differences between C-3 and C-4 plants discussed above. Model fitting and the estimation of uncertainties were completed using the Monte Carlo algorithm and can be improved by future data addition. Models that provided the best fit with the observed delta C-13 values of sedimentary n-alkanes were either hyperbolic functions or a combination of hyperbolic and sine-squared functions. Such non-linear models may be used to convert delta C-13 measurements on sedimentary n-alkanes directly into reconstructions of C-3 vegetation cover. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2014.07.004 SN - 0016-7037 SN - 1872-9533 VL - 142 SP - 482 EP - 500 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zhao, Peng A1 - Kuhn, Daniela A1 - Oye, Volker A1 - Cesca, Simone T1 - Evidence for tensile faulting deduced from full waveform moment tensor inversion during the stimulation of the Basel enhanced geothermal system JF - Geothermics : an international journal of geothermal research and its applications N2 - Our study presents the results of a moment tensor inversion of 19 microseismic events with M-L between 2.0 and 3.4, associated with the stimulation operation of an enhanced geothermal reservoir in Basel, Switzerland, in 2006. We adopt a three-step procedure to retrieve point source solution parameters based on full waveform inversion. The inversion is performed by fitting displacement amplitude spectra and displacement seismograms in the first and second step, respectively, assuming a double couple source model and thus obtaining focal solutions for all 19 events. Our results are in agreement with focal mechanisms from a previous study, which employed P wave first-motion polarities from more than 40 stations, whereas our solutions are achieved using full waveform data recorded by less than 10 surface stations. In the last step, a full moment tensor inversion is performed. The results from the moment tensor inversion show an improvement on the waveform fitting compared to the double couple models, which is verified by an F-test. We investigate the stability of the moment tensor solutions by employing different velocity models. The isotropic components of the moment tensor solutions of some events are not negligible, suggesting source volume changes due to fluid injection. Events with significant isotropic components occurred mainly during the stimulation phase and close to the injection well. On the other hand, events that occurred in the post-stimulation phase are predominantly pure shear failure and located further away from the well bore. These spatio-temporal patterns can be explained by the influence of pore pressure variations during and after the hydraulic stimulation at the geothermal site. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Induced seismicity KW - Hydraulic fracture KW - Crack opening and closure KW - Source mechanism KW - F-test Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geothermics.2014.01.003 SN - 0375-6505 SN - 1879-3576 VL - 52 SP - 74 EP - 83 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wolff, Christian Michael A1 - Kristen-Jenny, Iris A1 - Schettler, Georg A1 - Plessen, Birgit A1 - Meyer, Hanno A1 - Dulski, Peter A1 - Naumann, Rudolf A1 - Brauer, Achim A1 - Verschuren, Dirk A1 - Haug, Gerald H. T1 - Modern seasonality in Lake Challa (Kenya/Tanzania) and its sedimentary documentation in recent lake sediments JF - Limnology and oceanography N2 - From November 2006 to January 2010, a sediment trap that was cleared monthly was deployed in Lake Challa, a deep stratified freshwater lake on the eastern slope of Mt. Kilimanjaro in southern Kenya. Geochemical data from sediment trap samples were compared with a broad range of limnological and meteorological parameters to characterize the effect of single parameters on productivity and sedimentation processes in the crater basin. During the southern hemisphere summer (November-March), when the water temperature is high and the lake is biologically productive (nondiatom algae), calcite predominated in the sediment trap samples. During the "long rain" season (March-May) a small amount of organic matter and lithogenic material caused by rainfall appeared. This was followed by the cool and windy months of the southern hemisphere winter (June-October) when diatoms were the main component, indicating a diatom bloom initiated by improvement of nutrient availability related to upwelling processes. The sediment trap data support the hypothesis that the light-dark lamination couplets, which are abundant in Lake Challa cores, reflect seasonal delivery to the sediments of diatom-rich particulates during the windy months and diatom-poor material during the wet season. However, interannual and spatial variability in upwelling and productivity patterns, as well as El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)-related rainfall and drought cycles, exert a strong influence on the magnitude and geochemical composition of particle export to the hypolimnion of Lake Challa. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.2014.59.5.1621 SN - 0024-3590 SN - 1939-5590 VL - 59 IS - 5 SP - 1621 EP - 1636 PB - Wiley CY - Waco ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Albrich, Sergi A1 - Frijia, Gianluca A1 - Parente, Mariano A1 - Caus, Esmeralda T1 - The evolution of the earliest representatives of the genus Orbitoides: Implications for Upper Cretaceous biostratigraphy JF - Cretaceous research N2 - The biostratigraphy of Campanian-Maastrichtian carbonate platforms is largely based on the larger foraminiferal genus Orbitoides. However, while the taxonomy and the chronostratigraphic age of the younger species of this genus are well established, there are still many controversies on the earliest species. We have restudied their morphological characters using a large collection of samples from the type-localities and from continuous sections in the southern Pyrenees. Based on these new observations, the long forgotten species O. sanctae-pelagiae is reinstated, while O. dordoniensis is considered a junior synonym. Successive populations of O. hottingeri, O. sanctae-pelagiae and O. douvillei show gradual morphological changes in time marked by an increase in the size and complexity of the macrospheric embryonal apparatus, an increase of the size of the adult specimens of both generations and the progressive appearance and development of true lateral chamberlets. The Font de les Bagasses Unit in the southern Pyrenees preserves a high-resolution archive of the evolution of the earliest Orbitoides. Strontium isotope stratigraphy indicates that the oldest species, O. hottingeri, made its first appearance in the earliest Campanian, close to the Santonian-Campanian boundary, and was replaced by O. sanctae-pelagiae at a level closely corresponding to the boundary between the Placenticeras bidorsatum and Menabites delawarensis ammonite zones. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Larger foraminifera KW - Biostratigraphy KW - Strontium isotope stratigraphy KW - Late cretaceous KW - Orbitoides Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cretres.2014.04.013 SN - 0195-6671 SN - 1095-998X VL - 51 SP - 22 EP - 34 PB - Elsevier CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dietze, Elisabeth A1 - Maussion, F. A1 - Ahlborn, M. A1 - Diekmann, Bernhard A1 - Hartmann, K. A1 - Henkel, K. A1 - Kasper, T. A1 - Lockot, G. A1 - Opitz, S. A1 - Haberzettl, T. T1 - Sediment transport processes across the Tibetan Plateau inferred from robust grain-size end members in lake sediments JF - Climate of the past : an interactive open access journal of the European Geosciences Union N2 - Grain-size distributions offer powerful proxies of past environmental conditions that are related to sediment sorting processes. However, they are often of multimodal character because sediments can get mixed during deposition. To facilitate the use of grain size as palaeoenvironmental proxy, this study aims to distinguish the main detrital processes that contribute to lacustrine sedimentation across the Tibetan Plateau using grain-size end-member modelling analysis. Between three and five robust grain-size end-member subpopulations were distinguished at different sites from similarly-likely end-member model runs. Their main modes were grouped and linked to common sediment transport and depositional processes that can be associated with contemporary Tibetan climate (precipitation patterns and lake ice phenology, gridded wind and shear stress data from the High Asia Reanalysis) and local catchment configurations. The coarse sands and clays with grain-size modes > 250 mu m and < 2 mu m were probably transported by fluvial processes. Aeolian sands (similar to 200 mu m) and coarse local dust (similar to 60 mu m), transported by saltation and in near-surface suspension clouds, are probably related to occasional westerly storms in winter and spring. Coarse regional dust with modes similar to 25 mu m may derive from near-by sources that keep in longer term suspension. The continuous background dust is differentiated into two robust end members (modes: 5-10 and 2-5 mu m) that may represent different sources, wind directions and/or sediment trapping dynamics from long-range, upper-level westerly and episodic northerly wind transport. According to this study grain-size end members of only fluvial origin contribute small amounts to mean Tibetan lake sedimentation (19 +/- 5%), whereas local to regional aeolian transport and background dust deposition dominate the clastic sedimentation in Tibetan lakes (contributions: 42 +/- 14% and 51 +/- 11%). However, fluvial and alluvial reworking of aeolian material from nearby slopes during summer seems to limit end-member interpretation and should be cross-checked with other proxy information. If not considered as a stand-alone proxy, a high transferability to other regions and sediment archives allows helpful reconstructions of past sedimentation history. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-10-91-2014 SN - 1814-9324 SN - 1814-9332 VL - 10 IS - 1 SP - 91 EP - 106 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fahle, Marcus A1 - Dietrich, Ottfried T1 - Estimation of evapotranspiration using diurnal groundwater level fluctuations: Comparison of different approaches with groundwater lysimeter data JF - Water resources research N2 - In wetlands or riparian areas, water withdrawal by plants with access to groundwater or the capillary fringe often causes diurnal groundwater fluctuations. Various approaches use the characteristics of these fluctuations for estimation of daily groundwater evapotranspiration rates. The objective of this paper was to review the available methods, compare them with measured evapotranspiration and assess their recharge assumptions. For this purpose, we employed data of 85 rain-free days of a weighable groundwater lysimeter situated at a grassland site in the Spreewald wetland in north-east Germany. Measurements of hourly recharge and daily evapotranspiration rates were used to assess the different approaches. Our results showed that a maximum of 50% of the day to day variance of the daily evapotranspiration rates could be explained by the approaches based on groundwater fluctuations. Simple and more complex methods performed similarly. For some of the approaches, there were indications that erroneous assumptions compensated each other (e.g., when overestimated recharge counteracted underestimated storage change). We found that the usage of longer time spans resulted in improved estimates of the daily recharge rates and that the estimates were further enhanced by including two night averages. When derived from fitting estimates of recharge or evapotranspiration with according measurements the specific yield, needed to convert changes in water level to water volumes, differed considerably among the methods (from 0.022 to 0.064). Thus, the specific yield can be seen as correction factor that compensates for inadequate process descriptions. KW - evapotranspiration KW - groundwater lysimeter KW - specific yield KW - diurnal signal KW - phreatophytes KW - wetland Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2013WR014472 SN - 0043-1397 SN - 1944-7973 VL - 50 IS - 1 SP - 273 EP - 286 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Basavaiah, Nathani A1 - Wiesner, M. G. A1 - Anoop, Ambili A1 - Menzel, P. A1 - Nowaczyk, Norbert R. A1 - Deenadayalan, K. A1 - Brauer, Achim A1 - Gaye, Birgit A1 - Naumann, R. A1 - Riedel, N. A1 - Stebich, M. A1 - Prasad, Sushma T1 - Physicochemical analyses of surface sediments from the Lonar Lake, central India - implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction JF - Fundamental and applied limnology : official journal of the International Association of Theoretical and Applied Limnology N2 - We report the results of our investigations on the catchment area, surface sediments, and hydrology of the monsoonal Lonar Lake, central India. Our results indicate that the lake is currently stratified with an anoxic bottom layer, and there is a spatial heterogeneity in the sensitivity of sediment parameters to different environmental processes. In the shallow (0-5 m) near shore oxic-suboxic environments the lithogenic and terrestrial organic content is high and spatially variable, and the organics show degradation in the oxic part. Due to aerial exposure resulting from lake level changes of at least 3m, the evaporitic carbonates are not completely preserved. In the deep water (>5 m) anoxic environment the lithogenics are uniformly distributed and the delta C-13 is an indicator not only for aquatic vs. terrestrial plants but also of lake pH and salinity. The isotopic composition of the evaporites is dependent not only on the isotopic composition of source water (monsoon rainfall and stream inflow) and evaporation, but is also influenced by proximity to the isotopically depleted stream inflow. We conclude that in the deep water environment lithogenic content, and isotopic composition of organic matter can be used for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction. KW - isotopes KW - lonar lake KW - modern surface sediments KW - magnetic parameters KW - monsoon KW - palaeoenvironmental proxies Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1127/1863-9135/2014/0515 SN - 1863-9135 VL - 184 IS - 1 SP - 51 EP - 68 PB - Schweizerbart CY - Stuttgart ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Nishihara, Yu A1 - Ohuchi, Tomohiro A1 - Kawazoe, Takaaki A1 - Spengler, Dirk A1 - Tasaka, Miki A1 - Kikegawa, Takumi A1 - Suzuki, Akio A1 - Ohtani, Eiji T1 - Rheology of fine-grained forsterite aggregate at deep upper mantle conditions JF - Journal of geophysical research : Solid earth KW - high-pressure KW - olivine KW - rheology KW - upper mantle Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2013JB010473 SN - 2169-9313 SN - 2169-9356 VL - 119 IS - 1 SP - 253 EP - 273 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Farinotti, Daniel A1 - King, Edward C. A1 - Albrecht, Anika A1 - Huss, Matthias A1 - Gudmundsson, Gudmundur Hilmar T1 - The bedrock topography of Starbuck Glacier, Antarctic Peninsula, as determined by radio-echo soundings and flow modeling JF - Annals of glaciology KW - Antarctic glaciology KW - glaciological instruments and methods KW - ground-penetrating radar KW - ice-shelf tributary glaciers KW - radio-echo sounding Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3189/2014AoG67A025 SN - 0260-3055 SN - 1727-5644 VL - 55 IS - 67 SP - 22 EP - 28 PB - International Glaciological Society CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Müller, Hans J. A1 - Beckmann, Felix A1 - Dobson, David P. A1 - Hunt, Simon A. A1 - Lathe, Christian A1 - Stroncik, Nicole T1 - New techniques for high pressure falling sphere viscosimetry in DIA-type large volume presses JF - High pressure research KW - falling sphere viscosimetry KW - inelastic properties KW - high pressure KW - X-radiography Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/08957959.2014.950262 SN - 0895-7959 SN - 1477-2299 VL - 34 IS - 3 SP - 345 EP - 354 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - Abingdon ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kneis, David A1 - Chatterjee, C. A1 - Singh, R. T1 - Evaluation of TRMM rainfall estimates over a large Indian river basin (Mahanadi) JF - Hydrology and earth system sciences : HESS N2 - The paper examines the quality of satellite-abased precipitation estimates for the lower Mahanadi River basin (eastern India). The considered data sets known as 3B42 and 3B42-RT (version 7/7A) are routinely produced by the tropical rainfall measuring mission (TRMM) from passive microwave and infrared recordings. While the 3B42-RT data are disseminated in real time, the gauge-aadjusted 3B42 data set is published with a delay of some months. The quality of the two products was assessed in a two-astep procedure. First, the correspondence between the remotely sensed precipitation rates and rain gauge data was evaluated at the subbasin scale. Second, the quality of the rainfall estimates was assessed by analysing their performance in the context of rainfall-arunoff simulation. At sub-abasin level (4000 to 16 000 km(2)) the satellite-abased areal precipitation estimates were found to be moderately correlated with the gauge-abased counterparts (R-2 of 0.64-0.74 for 3B42 and 0.59-0.72 for 3B42-RT). Significant discrepancies between TRMM data and ground observations were identified at high-aintensity levels. The rainfall depth derived from rain gauge data is often not reflected by the TRMM estimates (hit rate < 0.6 for ground-abased intensities > 80 mm day(-1)). At the same time, the remotely sensed rainfall rates frequently exceed the gauge-abased equivalents (false alarm ratios of 0.2-0.6). In addition, the real-atime product 3B42-RT was found to suffer from a spatially consistent negative bias. Since the regionalisation of rain gauge data is potentially associated with a number of errors, the above results are subject to uncertainty. Hence, a validation against independent information, such as stream flow, was essential. In this case study, the outcome of rainfall-arunoff simulation experiments was consistent with the above-mentioned findings. The best fit between observed and simulated stream flow was obtained if rain gauge data were used as model input (Nash-Sutcliffe index of 0.76-0.88 at gauges not affected by reservoir operation). This compares to the values of 0.71-0.78 for the gauge-djusted TRMM 3B42 data and 0.65-0.77 for the 3B42-RT real-atime data. Whether the 3B42-RT data are useful in the context of operational runoff prediction in spite of the identified problems remains a question for further research. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-18-2493-2014 SN - 1027-5606 SN - 1607-7938 VL - 18 IS - 7 SP - 2493 EP - 2502 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Nussbaumer, S. A1 - Schaub, Y. A1 - Huggel, C. A1 - Walz, Ariane T1 - Risk estimation for future glacier lake outburst floods based on local land-use changes JF - Natural hazards and earth system sciences N2 - Effects of climate change are particularly strong in high-mountain regions. Most visibly, glaciers are shrinking at a rapid pace, and as a consequence, glacier lakes are forming or growing. At the same time the stability of mountain slopes is reduced by glacier retreat, permafrost thaw and other factors, resulting in an increasing landslide hazard which can potentially impact lakes and therewith trigger far-reaching and devastating outburst floods. To manage risks from existing or future lakes, strategies need to be developed to plan in time for adequate risk reduction measures at a local level. However, methods to assess risks from future lake outbursts are not available and need to be developed to evaluate both future hazard and future damage potential. Here a method is presented to estimate future risks related to glacier lake outbursts for a local site in southern Switzerland (Naters, Valais). To generate two hazard scenarios, glacier shrinkage and lake formation modelling was applied, combined with simple flood modelling and field work. Furthermore, a land-use model was developed to quantify and allocate land-use changes based on local-to-regional storylines and three scenarios of land-use driving forces. Results are conceptualized in a matrix of three land-use and two hazard scenarios for the year 2045, and show the distribution of risk in the community of Naters, including high and very high risk areas. The study underlines the importance of combined risk management strategies focusing on land-use planning, on vulnerability reduction, as well as on structural measures (where necessary) to effectively reduce future risks related to lake outburst floods. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-14-1611-2014 SN - 1561-8633 VL - 14 IS - 6 SP - 1611 EP - 1624 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Menges, Johanna A1 - Huguet, C. A1 - Alcaniz, Josep M. A1 - Fietz, Susanne A1 - Sachse, Dirk A1 - Rosell-Mele, A. T1 - Influence of water availability in the distributions of branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether in soils of the Iberian Peninsula JF - Biogeosciences Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-2571-2014 SN - 1726-4170 SN - 1726-4189 VL - 11 IS - 10 SP - 2571 EP - 2581 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Huck, Stefan A1 - Stein, Melody A1 - Immenhauser, Adrian A1 - Skelton, Peter W. A1 - Christ, Nicolas A1 - Foellmi, Karl B. A1 - Heimhofer, Ulrich T1 - Response of proto-North Atlantic carbonate-platform ecosystems to OAE1a-related stressors JF - Sedimentary geology : international journal of applied and regional sedimentology N2 - Integrated biostratigraphic-chemostratigraphic studies provide evidence that the proto-North Atlantic realm witnessed major changes in carbonate platform production in the run-up of the Early Aptian oceanic anoxic event (OAE) 1a. Whereas pervasive growth of Lithocodium microencrusters represents an early harbinger of OAE1a-related environmental perturbation, the subsequent replacement of oligotrophic rudist-coral-nerineid by mesotrophic orbitolinid-oyster communities was clearly associated with the event itself. In order to test the supra-regional relevance of this major community replacement, two shallow-water sections in the southern Lusitanian Basin (Portugal) are investigated by means of geochemistry (carbon and oxygen isotopes), cement petrography and detailed sedimentological analysis. The focus is on a regional, prominent discontinuity surface (S4) at the transition between oligotrophic and mesotrophic carbonate platform production, which might indicate that the major biotic change could have been associated with a phase of non-sedimentation and possibly erosion. The studied sections (Sao Julia, Crismina) provide evidence that the major Early Aptian biotic turnover was preceded by numerous subordinate but significant changes in platform ecology, which mirrored a series of progressive short-term environmental changes in the course of OAE1. Several transient mass occurrences of orbitolinids indicate repeated phases of ecological stress arguably due to enhanced nutrient input and deepening. Small-scale sea-level changes at parasequence level below the major discontinuity surface are revealed by alternations of rudist assemblages dominated by clinger or recumbent forms as well as intercalated hardground and subaerial exposure stages. Expanded phases of subaerial exposure, however, can be largely ruled out following the geochemical and cement-petrographic data presented here. Enhanced continent-derived siliciclastic input characterising the lower orbitolinid-oyster dominated limestones is in support of a shift to more humid conditions during the middle Early Aptian. This is in line with palaeoclimatic data, which propose a southward movement of the mid-latitude arid climate belt during this time. The documented rapid replacement of oligotrophic assemblages by various environmental-stress adapted carbonate platform communities might be seen as explanation for ongoing Early Aptian proto-North Atlantic carbonate production during a time of widespread platform demise and drowning in the northern Tethyan realm. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Aptian KW - Oceanic anoxic event 1a KW - Proto-North Atlantic KW - Discontinuity surfaces KW - Carbonate platform response KW - Carbon and oxygen isotopes Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2014.08.003 SN - 0037-0738 SN - 1879-0968 VL - 313 SP - 15 EP - 31 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Polanski, Stefan A1 - Fallah, Bijan A1 - Befort, Daniel J. A1 - Prasad, Sushma A1 - Cubasch, Ulrich T1 - Regional moisture change over India during the past millennium: A comparison of multi-proxy reconstructions and climate model simulations JF - Global and planetary change N2 - The Indian Monsoon Variability during the past Millennium has been simulated with the ECHAM5 model in two different time slices: Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age. The simulations are compared with new centennial-resolving paleo-reconstructions inferred from various well-dated multi-proxies from two core regions, the Himalaya and Central India. A qualitative moisture index is derived from the proxies and compared with simulated moisture anomalies. The reconstructed paleo-hydrological changes between the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Climate Anomaly depict a dipole pattern between Himalaya and Central India, which is also captured by the model. In the Medieval Climate Anomaly the model exhibits stronger (weaker) dipole signals during summer (winter) compared to Little Ice Age. In summer (winter) months of "Medieval Climate Anomaly minus Little Ice Age" the model simulates wetter conditions over eastern (western and central) Himalaya. Over Central India, a simulated weakening of Indian Summer Monsoon during warmer climate is coincident with reconstructed drying signal in the Lonar Lake record. Based on the model simulations, we can differentiate three physical mechanisms which can lead to the moisture anomalies: (i) the western and central Himalaya are influenced by extra-tropical Westerlies during winter, (ii) the eastern Himalaya is affected by summer variations of temperature gradient between Bay of Bengal and Indian subcontinent and by a zonal band of intensified Indian-East Asian monsoon link north of 25 degrees N, and (iii) Central India is dominated by summer sea surface temperature anomalies in the northern Arabian Sea which have an effect on the large-scale advection of moist air masses. The temperatures in the Arabian Sea are linked to the Ind Pacific Warm Pool, which modulates the Indian monsoon strength. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. KW - Medieval Climate Anomaly KW - Little Ice Age KW - moisture variations in India KW - atmosphere-only climate model simulations KW - Lonar Crater Lake KW - multi-proxy reconstructions Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2014.08.016 SN - 0921-8181 SN - 1872-6364 VL - 122 SP - 176 EP - 185 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mischke, Steffen A1 - Ashkenazi, Shoshana A1 - Almogi-Labin, Ahuva A1 - Goren-Inbar, Naama T1 - Ostracod evidence for the Acheulian environment of the ancient Hula Lake (Levant) during the early-mid Pleistocene transition JF - Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology : an international journal for the geo-sciences N2 - Ostracod shells from the archaeological site Gesher BenotYa'aqov (GBY) in the upper Jordan River Valley (Israel) were investigated to improve the understanding of the environmental conditions of the Acheulian occupation site during the early-mid Pleistocene transition (0.78 Ma). The diverse ostracod assemblage consists of 28 species. The distribution of most of the recorded species in the region today shows that the hydrological conditions at the early-mid Pleistocene transition were not fundamentally different from the modern ones. However, the predominance of Candona neglecta shells in the GBY sequence probably indicates cooler climatic conditions than today. Shells of Candona angulata in the artefact-richer upper half of the sequence suggest a slight salinity increase in the ancient Hula Lake from pure freshwater to slightly oligohaline conditions. This shift probably resulted from wetter conditions and a more stable lake environment with increased residence time of the lake water and stronger influence of evaporation. Shells of the brackish water ostracod Cyprideis torosa and the slightly halophilic Heterocypris sauna and Plesiocypridopsis newtoni were recorded only rarely suggesting that the lake maintained an outlet through the entire period represented by the GBY sequence. Shells of Gomphocythere ortali in GBY cycles 1 and 2 imply that a permanent freshwater stream existed close to the site. Humphcypris subterranea shells in cycles 3-5 provide further evidence that a tributary entered the lake from the south in contrast to the modern setting with the north-south flowing Jordan River at GBY. Statistical analysis of the quantitative ostracod data from GBY identified a group of samples from layers containing more abundant stone artefacts and another group of samples from layers with scarce artefacts. Samples from layers containing more abundant artefacts have relatively high abundances of C. angulata, Darwinula stevensoni and Physocypria kraepelini shells and include rare shells of Ilyocypris hartmanni, Ilyocypris salebrosa, Heterocypris incongniens and Pseudocandona sp. 2 which do not occur in the other samples. The presence of P. kraepelini and H. incongruens shells in artefact-richer sediments possibly indicates poor bottom water oxygenation in the ancient Hula lake sometimes during the periods of Acheulian occupation. However, more detailed studies are required to assess whether lower dissolved oxygen levels in the lake resulted from a slight lake level rise and possibly higher nutrient flux to the lake during wetter conditions or whether hominins already impacted lake's nutrient status by butchering at its shore or by burning of near-shore vegetation. (c) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Levant KW - Israel KW - Acheulian KW - Lower Palaeolithic KW - Ostracods KW - Palaeoecology Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2014.07.036 SN - 0031-0182 SN - 1872-616X VL - 412 SP - 148 EP - 159 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Konrad-Schmolke, Matthias A1 - Halama, Ralf T1 - Combined thermodynamic-geochemical modeling in metamorphic geology: Boron as tracer of fluid-rock interaction JF - Lithos : an international journal of mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry N2 - Quantitative geochemical modeling is today applied in a variety of geological environments from the petrogenesis of igneous rocks to radioactive waste disposal. In addition, the development of thermodynamic databases and computer programs to calculate equilibrium phase diagrams has greatly advanced our ability to model geodynamic processes. Combined with experimental data on elemental partitioning and isotopic fractionation, thermodynamic forward modeling unfolds enormous capacities that are far from exhausted. In metamorphic petrology the combination of thermodynamic and trace element forward modeling can be used to study and to quantify processes at spatial scales from mu m to km. The thermodynamic forward models utilize Gibbs energy minimization to quantify mineralogical changes along a reaction path of a chemically open fluid/rock system. These results are combined with mass balanced trace element calculations to determine the trace element distribution between rock and melt/fluid during the metamorphic evolution. Thus, effects of mineral reactions, fluid-rock interaction and element transport in metamorphic rocks on the trace element and isotopic composition of minerals, rocks and percolating fluids or melts can be predicted. Here we illustrate the capacities of combined thermodynamic-geochemical modeling based on two examples relevant to mass transfer during metamorphism. The first example focuses on fluid-rock interaction in and around a blueschist-facies shear zone in felsic gneisses, where fluid-induced mineral reactions and their effects on boron (B) concentrations and isotopic compositions in white mica are modeled. In the second example, fluid release from a subducted slab, the associated transport of B as well as variations in B concentrations and isotopic compositions in liberated fluids and residual rocks are modeled. We compare the modeled results of both examples to geochemical data of natural minerals and rocks and demonstrate that the combination of thermodynamic and geochemical models enables quantification of metamorphic processes and insights into element cycling that would have been unattainable if only one model approach was chosen. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Thermodynamic-geochemical modeling KW - Fluid-rock interaction KW - Subduction KW - Dehydration KW - Boron isotopes Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2014.09.021 SN - 0024-4937 SN - 1872-6143 VL - 208 SP - 393 EP - 414 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rehman, Hafiz Ur A1 - Tanaka, Ryoji A1 - Kobayashi, Katsura A1 - Tsujimori, Tatsuki A1 - Nakamura, Eizo A1 - Yamamoto, Hiroshi A1 - Khan, Tahseenullah A1 - Kaneko, Yoshiyuki T1 - Oxygen isotopes in Indian Plate eclogites (Kaghan Valley, Pakistan): Negative delta O-18 values from a high latitude protolith reset by Himalayan metamorphism JF - Lithos : an international journal of mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry N2 - Oxygen isotope compositions are reported for the first time for the Himalayan metabasites of the Kaghan Valley, Pakistan in this study. The highest metamorphic grades are recorded in the north of the valley, near the India-Asia collision boundary, in the form of high-pressure (HP: Group I) and ultrahigh-pressure (UHP: Group II) eclogites. The rocks show a step-wise decrease in grade from the UHP to HP eclogites and amphibolites. The protoliths of these metabasites were the Permian Panjal Trap basalts (ca. 267 +/- 2.4 Ma), which were emplaced along the northern margin of India when it was part of Gondwana. After the break-up of Gondwana, India drifted northward, subducted beneath Asia and underwent UHP metamorphism during the Eocene (ca. 45 +/- 1.2 Ma). At the regional scale, amphibolites, Group I and II eclogites yielded delta O-18 values of +5.84 and +5.91 parts per thousand, +1.66 to +424 parts per thousand, and -2.25 to +0.76 parts per thousand, respectively, relative to VSMOW. On a more local scale, within a single eclogite body, the delta O-18 values were the lowest (-2.25 to-1.44%.) in the central, the best preserved (least retrograded) parts, and show a systematic increase outward into more retrograded rocks, reaching up to +0.12 parts per thousand. These values are significantly lower than the typical mantle values for basalts of + 5.7 +/- 0.3 parts per thousand. The unusually low or negative delta O-18 values in Group II eclogites potentially resulted from hydrothermal alteration of the protoliths by interactions with meteoric water when the Indian plate was at southern high latitudes (similar to 60 degrees S). The stepwise increase in delta O-18 values, among different eclogite bodies in general and at single outcrop-scales in particular, reflects differing degrees of resetting of the oxygen isotope compositions during exhumation-related retrogression. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Himalaya KW - Kaghan KW - UHP eclogites KW - Oxygen isotope compositions KW - Laser fluorination Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2014.09.007 SN - 0024-4937 SN - 1872-6143 VL - 208 SP - 471 EP - 483 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tu, Rui A1 - Wang, Rongjiang A1 - Walter, Thomas R. A1 - Diao, FaQi T1 - Adaptive recognition and correction of baseline shifts from collocated GPS and accelerometer using two phases Kalman filter JF - Advances in space research N2 - The real-time recognition and precise correction of baseline shifts in strong-motion records is a critical issue for GPS and accelerometer combined processing. This paper proposes a method to adaptively recognize and correct baseline shifts in strong-motion records by utilizing GPS measurements using two phases Kalman filter. By defining four kinds of learning statistics and criteria, the time series of estimated baseline shifts can be divided into four time intervals: initialization, static, transient and permanent. During the time interval in which the transient baseline shift is recognized, the dynamic noise of the Kalman filter system and the length of the baseline shifts estimation window are adaptively adjusted to yield a robust integration solution. The validations from an experimental and real datasets show that acceleration baseline shifts can be precisely recognized and corrected, thus, the combined system adaptively adjusted the estimation strategy to get a more robust solution. (C) 2014 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - GPS KW - Strong-motion KW - Baseline shift KW - Kalman filter KW - Integration Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asr.2014.07.008 SN - 0273-1177 SN - 1879-1948 VL - 54 IS - 9 SP - 1924 EP - 1932 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Huang, Xiangtong A1 - Oberhaensli, Hedi A1 - von Suchodoletz, Hans A1 - Prasad, Sushma A1 - Sorrel, Philippe A1 - Plessen, Birgit A1 - Mathis, Marie A1 - Usubaliev, Raskul T1 - Hydrological changes in western Central Asia (Kyrgyzstan) during the Holocene as inferred from a palaeolimnological study in lake Son Kul JF - Quaternary science reviews : the international multidisciplinary research and review journal N2 - The hydrology of western Central Asia is highly sensitive to climatic perturbations. In order to understand its long-term variability and to infer linkages between precipitation and atmospheric and oceanic systems, we conducted a thorough sedimentary and geochemical study on a composite core retrieved in lake Son Kul (central Kyrgyzstan). A multi-proxy approach was conducted on lake sediments based on grain size analyses, magnetic susceptibility, total organic carbon (TOC), total nitrogen (TN) and carbon and oxygen isotope analyses on bulk and biogenic materials (ostracoda and molluscs shells) at a resolution equivalent to ca 40 years, aiming to characterise the sequence of palaeolimnological changes in Son Kul. As indicated by delta O-18 record of bulk carbonates, mainly consisting of aragonite, the Holocene hydrological balance was negative during most of time, suggesting an excess of evaporation (E) over precipitation (P). Limnological conditions fluctuated rapidly before 5000 cal yr BP indicating significant changes in regional hydrology and climate. In particular, the long-term negative hydrological balance was impeded by several short stages with marked increase of precipitation, lasting several decades to a few centuries (e.g., 8300-8200, 6900-6700, 6300-6100, 5500-5400, 5300-5200 and 3100 -3000 cal yr BP). Precipitation changes as inferred from 8180 data are also documented by increased minerogenic detritus and higher TOC. We propose that the seasonal pattern of precipitation varied transiently in western Central Asia during the Holocene, although evaporation changes may also account for the rapid changes observed in delta O-18 data. When the annual water balance was less critical (P <= E), the excess of water might be ascribed to increased precipitation during cold seasons mainly because winter precipitation has more negative delta O-18 than its summer equivalent. Conversely, when the annual water balance is negative (P E), the moisture was mainly delivered during the warm season, as between 5000 and 2000 cal yr BP. Our results thus imply that moisture sources could have changed as well during the Holocene. Moisture was delivered as today mainly during summer from the extended Caspian-Aral Basin and eastern Mediterranean, although Arctic and even North Atlantic seas might be important moisture sources when seasonal precipitation was dominated by winter precipitation. We hypothesise that warming Arctic and North Atlantic seas were important for the North Hemisphere circulation during the cold season. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Holocene KW - Tien Shan (western Central Asia) KW - Oxygen and carbon isotopes KW - Hydrological balance Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.09.012 SN - 0277-3791 VL - 103 SP - 134 EP - 152 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sachse, Rene A1 - Petzoldt, Thomas A1 - Blumstock, Maria A1 - Moreira, Santiago A1 - Paetzig, Marlene A1 - Ruecker, Jacqueline A1 - Janse, Jan H. A1 - Mooij, Wolf M. A1 - Hilt, Sabine T1 - Extending one-dimensional models for deep lakes to simulate the impact of submerged macrophytes on water quality JF - Environmental modelling & software with environment data news N2 - Submerged macrophytes can stabilise clear water conditions in shallow lakes. However, many existing models for deep lakes neglect their impact. Here, we tested the hypothesis that submerged macrophytes can affect the water clarity in deep lakes. A one-dimensional, vertically resolved macrophyte model was developed based on PCLake and coupled to SALMO-1D and GOTM hydrophysics and validated against field data. Validation showed good coherence in dynamic growth patterns and colonisation depths. In our simulations the presence of submerged macrophytes resulted in up to 50% less phytoplankton biomass in the shallowest simulated lake (11 m) and still 15% less phytoplankton was predicted in 100 m deep oligotrophic lakes. Nutrient loading, lake depth, and lake shape had a strong influence on macrophyte effects. Nutrient competition was found to be the strongest biological interaction. Despite a number of limitations, the derived dynamic lake model suggests significant effects of submerged macrophytes on deep lake water quality. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Lake model KW - Macrophytes KW - Water quality Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2014.05.023 SN - 1364-8152 SN - 1873-6726 VL - 61 SP - 410 EP - 423 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER -