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 - Wisotzki, Lutz A1 - Bacon, R. A1 - Brinchmann, J. A1 - Cantalupo, S. A1 - Richter, Philipp A1 - Schaye, J. A1 - Schmidt, Kasper Borello A1 - Urrutia, Tanya A1 - Weilbacher, Peter Michael A1 - Akhlaghi, M. A1 - Bouche, N. A1 - Contini, T. A1 - Guiderdoni, B. A1 - Herenz, E. C. A1 - Inami, H. A1 - Kerutt, Josephine Victoria A1 - Leclercq, F. A1 - Marino, R. A. A1 - Maseda, M. A1 - Monreal-Ibero, A. A1 - Nanayakkara, T. A1 - Richard, J. A1 - Saust, R. A1 - Steinmetz, Matthias A1 - Wendt, Martin T1 - Nearly all the sky is covered by Lyman-alpha emission around high-redshift galaxies JF - Nature : the international weekly journal of science N2 - Galaxies are surrounded by large reservoirs of gas, mostly hydrogen, that are fed by inflows from the intergalactic medium and by outflows from galactic winds. Absorption-line measurements along the lines of sight to bright and rare background quasars indicate that this circumgalactic medium extends far beyond the starlight seen in galaxies, but very little is known about its spatial distribution. The Lyman-alpha transition of atomic hydrogen at a wavelength of 121.6 nanometres is an important tracer of warm (about 104 kelvin) gas in and around galaxies, especially at cosmological redshifts greater than about 1.6 at which the spectral line becomes observable from the ground. Tracing cosmic hydrogen through its Lyman-a emission has been a long-standing goal of observational astrophysics(1-3), but the extremely low surface brightness of the spatially extended emission is a formidable obstacle. A new window into circumgalactic environments was recently opened by the discovery of ubiquitous extended Lyman-alpha emission from hydrogen around high-redshift galaxies(4,5). Such measurements were previously limited to especially favourable systems(6-8) or to the use of massive statistical averaging(9,10) because of the faintness of this emission. Here we report observations of low-surface-brightness Lyman-alpha emission surrounding faint galaxies at redshifts between 3 and 6. We find that the projected sky coverage approaches 100 per cent. The corresponding rate of incidence (the mean number of Lyman-alpha emitters penetrated by any arbitrary line of sight) is well above unity and similar to the incidence rate of high-column-density absorbers frequently detected in the spectra of distant quasars(11-14). This similarity suggests that most circumgalactic atomic hydrogen at these redshifts has now been detected in emission. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0564-6 SN - 0028-0836 SN - 1476-4687 VL - 562 IS - 7726 SP - 229 EP - 232 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Clark, Peter U. A1 - Shakun, Jeremy D. A1 - Marcott, Shaun A. A1 - Mix, Alan C. A1 - Eby, Michael A1 - Kulp, Scott A1 - Levermann, Anders A1 - Milne, Glenn A. A1 - Pfister, Patrik L. A1 - Santer, Benjamin D. A1 - Schrag, Daniel P. A1 - Solomon, Susan A1 - Stocker, Thomas F. A1 - Strauss, Benjamin H. A1 - Weaver, Andrew J. A1 - Winkelmann, Ricarda A1 - Archer, David A1 - Bard, Edouard A1 - Goldner, Aaron A1 - Lambeck, Kurt A1 - Pierrehumbert, Raymond T. A1 - Plattner, Gian-Kasper T1 - Consequences of twenty-first-century policy for multi-millennial climate and sea-level change JF - Nature climate change N2 - Most of the policy debate surrounding the actions needed to mitigate and adapt to anthropogenic climate change has been framed by observations of the past 150 years as well as climate and sea-level projections for the twenty-first century. The focus on this 250-year window, however, obscures some of the most profound problems associated with climate change. Here, we argue that the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, a period during which the overwhelming majority of human-caused carbon emissions are likely to occur, need to be placed into a long-term context that includes the past 20 millennia, when the last Ice Age ended and human civilization developed, and the next ten millennia, over which time the projected impacts of anthropogenic climate change will grow and persist. This long-term perspective illustrates that policy decisions made in the next few years to decades will have profound impacts on global climate, ecosystems and human societies - not just for this century, but for the next ten millennia and beyond. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/NCLIMATE2923 SN - 1758-678X SN - 1758-6798 VL - 6 SP - 360 EP - 369 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Corbett, Tim A1 - Siegel, Björn A1 - Thulin, Mirjam A1 - Csáky, Moritz A1 - Hödl, Klaus A1 - Kasper-Marienberg, Verena A1 - Berkovich, Ilya A1 - Czakai, Johannes A1 - Maślak-Maciejewska, Alicja A1 - Stechauner, Martin A1 - Dodou, Lida-Maria A1 - Heimann-Jelinek, Felicitas A1 - Nasr, Omar T. A1 - Halbinger, Monika A1 - Jánošíková, Magdaléna A1 - Keßler, Katrin A1 - Kauders, Anthony D. A1 - Piskačová, Zora A1 - Arnold, Rafael D. A1 - Schulz, Michael K. A1 - Shapira, Elena A1 - Sidky, Sean A1 - Sun, Cheuk Him Ryan A1 - Tirosh-Samuelson, Hava A1 - Tusan, Michelle A1 - Weigand, Susanne ED - Siegel, Björn ED - Thulin, Mirjam ED - Corbett, Tim T1 - Intersections between Jewish Studies and Habsburg Studies T2 - PaRDeS : Journal of the Association for Jewish Studies in Germany T2 - PaRDeS : Zeitschrift der Vereinigung für Jüdische Studien e. V. N2 - In the aftermath of the Shoah and the ostensible triumph of nationalism, it became common in historiography to relegate Jews to the position of the “eternal other” in a series of binaries: Christian/Jewish, Gentile/Jewish, European/Jewish, non-Jewish/Jewish, and so forth. For the longest time, these binaries remained characteristic of Jewish historiography, including in the Central European context. Assuming instead, as the more recent approaches in Habsburg studies do, that pluriculturalism was the basis of common experience in formerly Habsburg Central Europe, and accepting that no single “majority culture” existed, but rather hegemonies were imposed in certain contexts, then the often used binaries are misleading and conceal the complex and sometimes even paradoxical conditions that shaped Jewish life in the region before the Shoah. The very complexity of Habsburg Central Europe both in synchronic and diachronic perspective precludes any singular historical narrative of “Habsburg Jewry,” and it is not the intention of this volume to offer an overview of “Habsburg Jewish history.” The selected articles in this volume illustrate instead how important it is to reevaluate categories, deconstruct historical narratives, and reconceptualize implemented approaches in specific geographic, temporal, and cultural contexts in order to gain a better understanding of the complex and pluricultural history of the Habsburg Empire and the region as a whole. T3 - PaRDeS : Zeitschrift der Vereinigung für Jüdische Studien e.V. - 29 KW - Habsburg Studies KW - Jewish Studies KW - Intersections KW - Central Europe KW - Habsburg Empire KW - Habsburgstudien KW - Jüdische Studien KW - Überschneidungen KW - Zentraleuropa KW - Habsburgisches Reich Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-622072 SN - 978-3-86956-574-3 SN - 1614-6492 SN - 1862-7684 IS - 29 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER -