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Following votes in the Coniacian Working Group, the Cretaceous Subcommission and the International Commission on Stratigraphy, on May 1st, 2021, the International Union of Geological Sciences voted unanimously to ratify the Global Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) proposal for the base of the Coniacian Stage of the Upper Cretaceous Series and Cretaceous System. The lower boundary of the Coniacian Stage is placed at the base of Bed 46 of the Salzgitter-Salder section in northern Germany. The boundary is defined by the first appearance of the inoceramid bivalve species Cremnoceramus deformis erectus (Meek) and complemented by the Navigation carbon isotope event. Additional data include the bivalve genus Didymotis, foraminifera, ammonite, nannofossil and organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst events. Three auxiliary sections (Słupia Nadbrzeżna, central Poland; Střeleč, Czech Republic; El Rosario, NE Mexico) supplement the details of the boundary record in various facies, and in differing geographic and biogeographic contexts.
The climate system is one of the classical examples of a complex dynamical system consisting of interacting sub-systems through mass, momentum, and energy exchange across various spatial and temporal scales. This thesis aims to detect and quantify sub-component interactions from an information exchange (IE) perspective. For this purpose, IE estimators derived from information theory are explored and applied to the available climate data obtained from observations, reanalysis, global and regional climate models. Specifically, this thesis investigates the usefulness of information theory methods for process-oriented climate model evaluation.
Firstly, methods derived from the concepts of information theory such as transfer entropy and information flow along with their linear and non-linear estimation techniques are initially tested and applied to idealized two-dimensional dynamical systems. The results revealed an expected direction and magnitude of IE providing insights into underlying dynamics. However, as expected the linear estimators are robust for linear systems but fail for non-linear systems. Though the non-linear estimators (kernel and kraskov) showed expected results for all the idealized systems, their free tuning parameters are to be tested for consistent results. Moreover, these methods are sensitive to the available time series length.
A real world example case study involving the dynamics between the Indian and Pacific oceans revealed a physically consistent bi-directional IE. However, unexpected IE was detected in the example of North Atlantic and European air temperatures indicating hidden drivers. Though IE provides insights into system dynamics, the availability of time series length and the system at hand must be carefully taken into account before inferring any possible interpretations of the results.
Quantifying the IE from El-Ni\~{n}o southern oscillation (ENSO) and Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) to the Indian Summer Monsoon Rainfall (ISMR) with the observational and reanalysis data sets revealed that both ENSO and IOD are synergistic predictors for the inter-annual variability of the ISMR over central India i.e., the monsoon core region. Though the investigated three Global Climate Models (GCM) could not reveal the underlying IE dynamics of ENSO, IOD, and ISMR, a Regional Climate Model (RCM) simulation downscaling one of the GCMs with realistic large scale signals across the lateral boundaries showed good agreement with the observations.
Evaluating a coupled regional climate modeling system driven by two different global data sets with IE estimators revealed significant differences between the process chains linking the north-west Mediterranean sea surface temperatures, evaporation, wind speed, and the Vb-cyclone induced precipitation over Danube, Odra, and Elbe catchments in the historical period (1951-2005). Detailed investigation revealed that the north-west Mediterranean Sea in the coupled regional simulation driven by ERA-20C reanalysis corresponded to the Vb-cyclone precipitation over the three catchments while no such correspondence is noted in the EC-EARTH driven simulation. This discrepancy is attributed to the inheritance of the simulation biases from GCM into the RCM. In the future period (1965-2099), no significant changes in the processes are noted from the simulation.
Overall, this thesis used IE estimators in investigating the underlying dynamics of climate system and climate models. The estimators proved useful in providing insights into climate system dynamics assisting in a process based climate model evaluation.
Carbon is an element that controls planetary habitability, and is fundamental for life on Earth. Its behaviour has important consequences for the global climate system, the origin and evolution of life on Earth. While the biosphere and atmosphere’s carbon cycle only accounts for less than 1% of the global carbon budget, hidden reservoirs of deep carbon in the Earth’s interior comprise the predominant storage of carbon on the planet. At the Earth’s surface, 60-70 % of carbon is hosted by carbonate minerals, which are then transported to the Earth’s interior, mainly in the form of sediments, by subduction of the oceanic lithosphere. Subducting plates are subjected to decarbonation, dehydration, and melting with CO2 release via supra-subduction volcanism. Nevertheless, part of the subducted carbonates’ may survive and be further transported to the deep mantle. Direct evidence of the existence of carbonates in the Earth’s interior, possibly reaching down to the lower mantle, comes from the finding of syngenetic inclusions of carbonates in diamonds and mantle xenoliths. The presence of carbonates in the deep Earth has a critical effect on the physical properties of the mantle. Melting and chemical speciation of the mantle are strongly affected by the form of C and carbonate stability. Therefore, the study of the stability and physical properties of carbonates at high pressures and temperatures is fundamental, because understanding the processes involved in the deep carbon cycle helps to improve our picture of the whole mantle.
The systematic characterization of the elastic properties of carbonates as a function of their structure and chemical composition is of great importance because it may allow to identify their presence and distribution by seismology. Inverting seismic observations to successfully constrain the chemical composition and mineralogy of the Earth’s interior requires knowledge of the physical properties of all possible Earth’s materials at pressures and temperatures applicable to the Earth’s interior. Up to now, a multitude of studies has focused on the construction of phase diagrams and structural transitions by means of X-ray diffraction and vibrational spectroscopy experiments.
Few studies are available on the complete elastic tensor of carbonates, however most of the datasets are not accompanied by an accurate characterization of the samples, which are often solid solutions and the exact chemical composition, density or the details about the experimental methods used are not presented. The aim of this thesis is to study the effect of chemical composition on the elastic properties of carbonates, providing a reliable dataset on the elasticity of the main carbonates. In particular, the elastic properties of crystalline aragonite, CaCO3, and Fe-dolomite, (Ca, Mg, Fe)(CO3)2, with different compositions were studied by Brillouin spectroscopy at ambient conditions. Brillouin spectroscopy was also used to investigate the elastic behaviour of amorphous calcium carbonate samples with different water contents (up to 18 wt%) at high pressures, up to 20 GPa.
Furthermore, the importance of cationic substitution on the structure and high pressure behaviour of carbonates was investigated by studying a synthetic CaCO3-SrCO3 solid solution at ambient conditions and at high pressures, up to 10 GPa, by single crystal X-ray diffraction. Finally, the study of the effect of composition on the elastic properties of families of isostructural solids was also extended to a different class of materials, the metal guanidinium formates. The elasticity of a family of perovskite metal organic frameworks, metal guanidinium formates C(NH2)3MII(HCOO)3, with MII =Mn, Zn, Cu, Co, Cd and Ca was investigated by combining Brillouin spectroscopy, resonant ultrasound spectroscopy, density functional theory and thermal diffuse scattering analysis.
Extreme convective precipitation events are among the most severe hazards in central Europe and are expected to intensify under global warming. However, the degree of intensification and the underlying processes are still uncertain. In this thesis, recent advances in continuous, radar-based precipitation monitoring and convection-permitting climate modeling are used to investigate Lagrangian properties of convective rain cells such as precipitation intensity, cell area, and precipitation sum and their relationship to large-scale, environmental conditions.
Firstly, convective precipitation objects are tracked in a gauge-adjusted radar-data set and the properties of these cells are related to large-scale environmental variables to investigate the observed super-Clausius-Clapeyron (CC) scaling of convective extreme precipitation. The Lagrangian precipitation sum of convective cells increases with dew point temperature at rates well above the CC-rate with increasing rates for higher dew point temperatures. These varying, high rates are caused by a covarying increase of CAPE with dew point temperature as well as the effect of high vertical wind shear causing an increase in cell area and thus precipitation sum. At the same time, cells move faster at high vertical wind shear so that Eulerian scaling rates are lower than Lagrangian but still above the CC-rate. The results show that wind shear and static instability need to be taken into account when transferring precipitation scaling under current climate conditions to future conditions. Secondly, the representation of convective cell properties in the convection-permitting climate model COSMO-CLM is evaluated. The model can simulate the observed frequency distributions of cell properties such as lifetime, area, mean and maximum intensity, and precipitation sum. The increase of area and intensity with lifetime is also well captured despite an underestimation of the intensity of the most severe cells. Furthermore, the model can represent the temperature scaling of intensity, area, and precipitation sum but fails to simulate the observed increase of lifetime. Thus, the model is suitable to study climatologies of convective storms in Germany. Thirdly, two COSMO-CLM projections at the end of the century under emission scenario RCP8.5 were investigated. While the number of convective cells and their lifetime remain approximately constant compared to present conditions, intensity and area increase strongly. The relative increase of intensity and area is largest for the highest percentiles meaning that extreme events intensify the most. The characteristic afternoon maximum of convective precipitation is damped, and shifted to later times of day which leads to an increase of nighttime precipitation in the future. Scaling rates of cell properties with dew point temperature are nearly identical in present and future in the simulation driven by the EC-Earth model which means that the upper limit of cell properties like intensity, area, and precipitation sum could be predicted from near-surface dew point temperature. However, this result could not be reproduced by the simulation driven by MIROC5 and needs further investigation.
In this survey paper, we present a multiscale post-processing method in exploration. Based on a physically relevant mollifier technique involving the elasto-oscillatory Cauchy–Navier equation, we mathematically describe the extractable information within 3D geological models obtained by migration as is commonly used for geophysical exploration purposes. More explicitly, the developed multiscale approach extracts and visualizes structural features inherently available in signature bands of certain geological formations such as aquifers, salt domes etc. by specifying suitable wavelet bands.
Geochemical investigations on biogenic carbonates are commonly conducted to reconstruct the environmental conditions of the past. However, different carbonate producers incorporate elements to varying degrees, due to biological vital effects. Detecting and quantifying these effects is crucial to produce reliable reconstructions. These paleoreconstructions are of great importance to evaluate the consequences of our recent climate change and identify control mechanisms on the distribution of endangered species such as Desmophyllum pertusum. In chapter three we tested Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Na/Ca ratios on this species, among other coldwater scleractinians, to test if they provide reliable proxy information. The results reveal no apparent control of Mg/Ca or Sr/Ca ratios through seawater temperature, salinity or pH. Na/Ca ratios appear to be partly controlled by the seawater temperature, which is also true for other aragonitic organisms such as warm-water corals and the bivalve Mytilus edulis. However, a large variability complicates possible reconstructions by means of Na/Ca. In addition, we explore different models to explain the apparent temperature effect on Na/Ca ratios based on temperature sensitive Na and Ca pumping enzymes.
The bivalve Acesta excavata is commonly found in cold-water coral reefs among the North Atlantic, together with D. pertusum. Multiple linear regression analysis, presented in chapter four, indicates that up to 79% of the elemental variability in Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Na/Ca is explainable with temperature and salinity as independent predictor variables. Vital effects, for instance growth rate effects, are evident and make paleoreconstructions not feasible. Furthermore, organic material embedded in the shell, as well as possible stress effects can drastically change the elemental composition. Removal of these organic matrices from bulk samples for LA-ICP-MS (laser ablation inductively coupled mass spectrometer) measurements by means of oxidative cleaning is not possible, but Na/Ca ratios decrease after this cleaning. This is presumably an effect of leaching and not caused by the removal of organic matrices.
Interesting biogeochemical relations were found in the parasitic foraminifera H. sarcophaga. We report Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, Na/Ca and Mn/Ca ratios measured in H. sarcophaga from two different host species (A. excavata and D. pertusum) in chapter five. Sr/Ca ratios are significantly higher in foraminifera that lived on D. pertusum. This could indicate that dissolved host material is utilized in shell calcification of H. sarcophaga, given the naturally higher strontium concentration in the aragonite of D. pertusum. Mn/Ca ratios are highest in foraminifera that lived on A. excavata but did not fully penetrate the host’s shell. Most likely, this represents a juvenile stadium of the foraminifera during which it feeds on the organic
periostracum of the bivalve, which is enriched in Mn and Fe. The isotopic compositions are similarly affected, both δ18O and δ13C values are significantly lower in foraminifera that lived 23on D. pertusum compared to specimen that lived on A. excavata. Again, this might represent the uptake of dissolved host material or different pH regimes in the calcifying fluid of the hosts (bivalve < 8, coral > 8) that control the extent of hydration/hydroxylation reactions. Temperature reconstructions are possible using stable oxygen isotopes on this foraminifera species; however, the results are only reliable if the foraminifera lived on A. excavata. Samples of H. sarcophaga from D. pertusum would lead to overestimations of the seawater temperature due to the lower δ18O values.
Apart from biological vital effects, storage and preservation methods can significantly change the geochemical composition of different marine biogenic carbonates. In chapter six this is presented on the example of ethanol preservation, a common technique to allow extended storage of biogenic samples. The investigation reveals a significant decrease of Mg/Ca and Na/Ca ratios even after only 45 days storage in ultrapure ethanol. Sr/Ca ratios on the other hand are not influenced.
Besides temperature, salinity and pH further environmental parameters are important such as nutrient availability, especially for the distribution of cold-water corals. In chapter seven we extend the investigations on A. excavata by including the elemental ratios Ba/Ca, Mn/Ca and P/Ca. We expected P/Ca to be helpful in the otherwise difficult process of dentifying growth increments. Based on our observations we had to refute this theory. P/Ca ratios are not systematically enriched in the vicinity of growth lines. Instead, we found a regular sequence of peaks of Ba/Ca, P/Ca and Mn/Ca. This sequence as well as the peaks in general are potentially caused by equential blooms of different algae, diatoms and other planktonic organisms ...
As part of two drilling campaigns of the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP), several geophysical borehole measurements were carried out by the Leibniz Institute for Applied Geophysics (LIAG) in two lakes. The acquired data was used to answer stratigraphic and paleoclimatic research questions, including the establishment of robust age-depth models and the construction of continuous lithological profiles.
Lake Towuti is located on Sulawesi (Indonesia), within the "Indo-Pacific Warm Pool" (IPWP), a globally important region for atmospheric heat and moisture budgets. The lake exists for approximately one million years, but its exact age is uncertain. We present the first agedepth model for the approximately 100 m continuous sediment sequence from the central part of the lake. The basis for this model is the magnetic susceptibility measured in the borehole and a tephra layer with an age of about 797 ka at 72 m depth. Our age-depth model is inferred from cyclostratigraphic analysis of borehole data and covers a period from 903 ± 11 to 131 ± 67 ka. We suggest that orbital eccentricity and/or changes between global cold and warm periods are responsible for hydroclimatic changes in the IPWP, that these changes affect sedimentation processes in Lake Towuti, and that we can measure and observe this effect in the sediment properties today. Additionally, we created a continuous artificial lithological profile from a series of different borehole data using cluster analysis. This provides information from parts of the borehole where no sediment is available due to core loss.
Lake Ohrid is 1.36 million years old and is located on the Balkan Peninsula on the border between Albania and North Macedonia. The primary hole 'DEEP' in the central part of the lake has been the subject of several investigations, but information about sediments of the marginal locations 'Pestani' and 'Cerava' have not been published yet. In our study, we use natural gamma radiation (GR) measured in the borehole to generate an age-depth model for DEEP. This is performed using the correlation of GR to the global LR04 reference record of Lisiecki and Raymo (2005).
The age information is then transferred via prominent seismic marker horizons to the other two sites, Pestani and Cerava, where it provides the first age-control points for the construction of age-depth models from correlation of GR to LR04. The generated age-depth models are tested using cyclostratigraphic methods, but the limits of this approach are revealed. At DEEP, sedimentation rates (SR) from the cyclostratigraphic method and the correlative approach differ by 2.8 %, at Pestani this difference is 16.7 %, and at Cerava the quality of the data does not allow a reliable evaluation of SR using the cyclostratigraphic approach. We used cluster analysis to construct artificial lithological profiles at all three sites and integrated them into the respective age-depth models. This enables us to determine which sediment types were deposited at what time, and we recognize the change between warm and cold periods in the sediment properties at all three locations. The analyses in this study were all performed on borehole and seismic data and thus do not involve sediment core data. Especially at Pestani and Cerava, new insights into the sedimentological history of Lake Ohrid could be obtained.
In the last part we discuss the occurrence of the half-precession (HP) signal in the European region during the last one million years. The focus is on Lake Ohrid, but a range of other proxies, from the eastern Mediterranean, across the European continent, up to Greenland are analyzed in regards to HP. Applying filters, we focus on the frequency range with a period of 13-8.5 ka and only HP remains in the records. We use correlative methods to determine the clarity of the HP signal in proxies distributed across the European realm. Additionally, we determined the development of HP over time. The HP signal is clearest in the southeast and decreases toward the north. It is further more pronounced in interglacial periods and in the younger part (<621 ka) of most proxies. We suggest that there are mechanisms that transmit the HP signal from its origin near the equator to higher latitudes via different processes. In this context, for instance, the African monsoon, the Nile River and the Mediterranean outflow via the Strait of Gibraltar can be important factors.
The endemic argan tree (Argania spinosa) populations in South Morocco are highly degraded due to overbrowsing, illegal firewood extraction and the expansion of intensive agriculture. Bare areas between the isolated trees increase due to limited regrowth, but show lower soil quality than their neighbouring tree areas. Hypothetically, spatial differences of soil quality of the intertree area should result from translocation of litter or soil particles (by runoff and erosion or wind drift) from canopy-covered areas to the intertree areas. 385 soil samples were taken around the tree from the trunk along the tree drip line (within and outside the tree area) as well as the intertree area between two trees in four directions (upslope, downslope and in both directions parallel to the slope) and analysed for soil moisture, pH, electrical conductivity, percolation stability, total nitrogen content, content of soil organic carbon and C/N ratio. 74 tension-disc infiltrometer experiments were performed near the tree drip line, within and outside the tree area, to measure the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity. We found that the tree influence on its surrounding intertree area is limited, with e.g., Corg- & N-content decreasing significantly from tree trunk to tree drip line. However, intertree areas near the tree drip line differed significantly from intertree areas between two trees, yet only with a small effect. Trends for spatial patterns could be found in eastern and downslope directions due to wind drift and slope wash. Soil moisture was highest in the north due to shade from the midday sun, the influence extended to the intertree areas. The unsaturated hydraulic conductivity also showed significant differences between areas within and outside the tree area near the tree drip line. Although only limited influence of the tree on its intertree area was found, the spatial pattern around the tree suggests that reforestation measures should be aimed around tree shelters in northern or eastern directions with higher soil moistures, N- or Corg-content to ensure seedling survival.
Metal artifacts from the Paleometal Epoch (ca. 1100 BC–400 AD) of the Primorye (Russian Far East) have shed new light on the introduction of the earliest bronzes into the Pacific coastal areas of prehistoric Eurasia. However, little is known about raw material circulation and the role of metal in the context of inter-regional exchange. This paper investigates 12 copper artifacts from major Paleometal settlements using alloy composition, trace elements, and lead isotopes to explore the metal sources and distribution networks. The results suggest that most objects are made of a copper-tin alloy, but some have arsenic as a significant minor element . Geologically, copper is unlikely to have come from local ore sources, but rather from the Liaoxi corridor and Liaodong Peninsula in Northeast China. This may indicate an inland route of metal trade across Northeast China or alternately, a coastal route via the northern Korean Peninsula. Archaeologically, the combined study of artifact typology and chemistry indicates two possible origins for the metal: the Upper Xiajiadian culture in Northeast China and Slab Grave culture in Mongolia/Transbaikal. Remarkably, the connection with Upper Xiajiadian communities parallels the transport route along which millet agriculture spread from Northeast China to the Primorye during the Neolithic.
Community trait assembly in highly diverse tropical rainforests is still poorly understood. Based on more than a decade of field measurements in a biodiversity hotspot of southern Ecuador, we implemented plant trait variation and improved soil organic matter dynamics in a widely used dynamic vegetation model (the Lund-Potsdam-Jena General Ecosystem Simulator, LPJ-GUESS) to explore the main drivers of community assembly along an elevational gradient. In the model used here (LPJ-GUESS-NTD, where NTD stands for nutrient-trait dynamics), each plant individual can possess different trait combinations, and the community trait composition emerges via ecological sorting. Further model developments include plant growth limitation by phosphorous (P) and mycorrhizal nutrient uptake. The new model version reproduced the main observed community trait shift and related vegetation processes along the elevational gradient, but only if nutrient limitations to plant growth were activated. In turn, when traits were fixed, low productivity communities emerged due to reduced nutrient-use efficiency. Mycorrhizal nutrient uptake, when deactivated, reduced net primary production (NPP) by 61–72% along the gradient. Our results strongly suggest that the elevational temperature gradient drives community assembly and ecosystem functioning indirectly through its effect on soil nutrient dynamics and vegetation traits. This illustrates the importance of considering these processes to yield realistic model predictions.
Plant community biomass production is co-dependent on climatic and edaphic factors that are often covarying and non-independent. Disentangling how these factors act in isolation is challenging, especially along large climatic gradients that can mask soil effects. As anthropogenic pressure increasingly alters local climate and soil resource supply unevenly across landscapes, our ability to predict concurrent changes in plant community processes requires clearer understandings of independent and interactive effects of climate and soil. To address this, we developed a multispecies phytometer (i.e., standardized plant community) for separating key drivers underlying plant productivity across gradients. Phytometers were composed of three globally cosmopolitan herbaceous perennials, Dactylis glomerata, Plantago lanceolata, and Trifolium pratense. In 2017, we grew phytometer communities in 18 sites across a pan-European aridity gradient in local site soils and a standardized substrate and compared biomass production. Standard substrate phytometers succeeded in providing a standardized climate biomass response independent of local soil effects. This allowed us to factor out climate effects in local soil phytometers, establishing that nitrogen availability did not predict biomass production, while phosphorus availability exerted a strong, positive effect independent of climate. Additionally, we identified a negative relationship between biomass production and potassium and magnesium availability. Species-specific biomass responses to the environment in the climate-corrected biomass were asynchronous, demonstrating the importance of species interactions in vegetation responses to global change. Biomass production was co-limited by climatic and soil drivers, with each species experiencing its own unique set of co-limitations. Our study demonstrates the potential of phytometers for disentangling effects of climate and soil on plant biomass production and suggests an increasing role of P limitation in the temperate regions of Europe.
Hydro-climatic causes of widespread floods in central Europe : on rain-on-snow and Vb-cyclone events
(2021)
The presented work investigates the hydro-meteorological and hydro-climatological drivers of widespread floods in Central Europe during the past century. Due to the strong seasonality of the detected flood drivers, the thesis is divided into two parts: the first part focuses on widespread winter floods and the second one on extreme summer floods. For analysing past flood events, we profited from the dynamically downscaled centennial ERA-20C reanalysis (continuously from 1901—2010). The downscaling was performed over Europe with a coupled regional atmosphere-ocean model (COSMO-CLM+NEMO) to represent the water cycle more realistic. These high resolution atmospheric data allowed us to study the four-dimensional atmospheric state during selected floods during the early decades of the 20th century for the first time with such a high temporal and spatial resolution.
During the winter half-year, the observed floods were particularly widespread. High peak discharges were recorded simultaneously in the Rhine, Elbe, and Danube catchments. Most of these trans-basin floods were compound events caused by rainfall during extensive snowmelt (i.e., rain-on-snow events). Interestingly, the winter flood time series exhibited a remarkable high flood frequency during the 1940s and 1980s, while other decades were flood-poor. We detected a synchronization of the inter-annual flood frequency with the superposition of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and the Scandinavian pattern (SCA). The negative NAO phase is often associated with large snowfall and cyclone tracks over southern Europe, while the negative SCA pattern correlates with total precipitation in the affected river catchments.
During the summer half-year, most extreme floods in Central Europe were caused by so-called Vb-cyclones propagating from the Mediterranean Sea north-eastward to Central Europe. So far in the literature, only a few Vb-events, which occurred during the past two decades, have been analysed. We extended the previous case studies by several past Vb-cyclone floods since 1900. We investigated the processes that intensify Vb-cyclone precipitation with Lagrangian moisture-source diagnostics and the parametric transfer entropy measure TE-linear. Overall, an enhanced and dynamically driven moisture uptake over the Mediterranean Sea was found to be characteristic for Vb-events with heavy precipitation. This is supported by high information exchange from evaporation over the western basin of the Mediterranean Sea towards heavy precipitation in the Odra catchment. The dominating moisture uptake regions during the investigated events were, however, the European continent and the North Sea. A possible cause could be the pre-moistening of non-saturated continental moisture sources upstream of the affected river catchments as indicated by significant information exchange from land surface evaporation and soil moisture content along the Vb-cyclone pathway. Besides, evaporation over the Mediterranean Sea might contribute to Vb-cyclone intensification in the early stages of their development through latent heat release. On the catchment scale, orographic rainfall and convective precipitation further enhance the flood triggering rainfall. As expected, the Vb-cyclones mainly trigger precipitation along west-east orientated mountain ranges such as the Alps or Ore mountains due to their meridional pathway. Remarkably, during summer, we detected a convective fraction of up to 90% during the afternoons of individual days and up to 23% on average (based on convective cell tracking and convection-permitting simulations of selected flood events since 1900).
The presented analyses deepened the knowledge on atmospheric and hydroclimatic drivers of widespread floods in Central Europe. This will serve as a basis for future studies on the predictability of floods induced by rain-on-snow and Vb-cyclone precipitation events in the context of a changing climate.
Non-technical summary: There has been a long history of conflicts, studies, and debate over how to both protect rivers and develop them sustainably. With a pause in new developments caused by the global pandemic, anticipated further implementation of the Paris Agreement and high-level global climate and biodiversity meetings in 2021, now is an opportune moment to consider the current trajectory of development and policy options for reconciling dams with freshwater system health. Technical summary: We calculate potential loss of free-flowing rivers (FFRs) if proposed hydropower projects are built globally. Over 260,000 km of rivers, including Amazon, Congo, Irrawaddy, and Salween mainstem rivers, would lose free-flowing status if all dams were built. We propose a set of tested and proven solutions to navigate trade-offs associated with river conservation and dam development. These solution pathways are framed within the mitigation hierarchy and include (1) avoidance through either formal river protection or through exploration of alternative development options; (2) minimization of impacts through strategic or system-scale planning or re-regulation of downstream flows; (3) restoration of rivers through dam removal; and (4) mitigation of dam impacts through biodiversity offsets that include restoration and protection of FFRs. A series of examples illustrate how avoiding or reducing impacts on rivers is possible – particularly when implemented at a system scale – and can be achieved while maintaining or expanding benefits for climate resilience, water, food, and energy security. Social media summary: Policy solutions and development pathways exist to navigate trade-offs to meet climate resilience, water, food, and energy security goals while safeguarding FFRs.
U–Pb age spectra of detrital zircons related to the East European Platform could be traced in paragneiss through the whole Mid-German-Crystalline Zone (Variscides, Central Europe) from the Odenwald via the Spessart to the Ruhla crystalline forming an exotic unit between Armorica and Laurussia. The depositional ages of the paragneiss are defined by the youngest age of the detrital zircons and the oldest intrusion ages as Ordovician to Silurian. The Ediacaran dominated age spectrum of detrital zircons from the paragneiss of the East Odenwald suggests the latter to be derived from the shelf of the East European Platform (Baltica), which was influenced by the 1.5 Ga old detritus delivered from a giant intrusion (Mazury granitoid, Poland). The detrital zircon age spectrum of the lower Palaeozoic paragneiss of the East Odenwald and sandstone of the northern Holy Cross Mountains are identical. The pure Sveconorwegian spectrum of the lower Palaeozoic quartzite from the Spessart, (Kirchner and Albert Int J Earth Sci 2020) and the Ruhla (Zeh and Gerdes Gondwana Res 17:254–263, 2010) could be sourced from Bornholm and southern Sweden. A U–Pb age spectrum with 88% Palaeozoic detrital zircons from a volcano-sedimentary rock of the East Odenwald is interpreted to be derived from a Silurian magmatic arc (46%), which was probably generated during the drift of the Mid-German-Crystalline Zone micro-continent to the south. A tentative plate tectonic model of Mid-German-Crystalline Zone is presented taking into account (a) the East European Platform related age spectra of the detrital zircons (b) the Ordovician to Silurian depositional age of the metasediments (c) the Silurian and Early Devonian intrusion age of the plutonic and volcanic rocks and (d) the U–Pb ages of the Middle Devonian high-grade metamorphism. The East European Platform-related part of the Mid-German-Crystalline Zone is interpreted as a micro-continent, which drifted through the Rheic Ocean to the south and collided with the Saxothuringian (Armorican Terrane Assemblage) during the Early Devonian. Such large-scale tectonic transport from the northern continent to the southern continent is also known from the SW Iberia, where Laurussia-related metasediments of the Rheic suture zone are explained by a large scale tectonic escape (Braid et al. J Geol Soc Lond 168:383–392, 2011).
In partially molten regions inside the earth melt buoyancy may trigger upwelling of both solid and fluid phases, i.e. diapirism. If the melt is allowed to move separately with respect to the matrix, melt perturbations may evolve into solitary porosity waves. While diapirs may form on a wide range of scales, porosity waves are restricted to sizes of a few times the compaction length. Thus, the size of a partially molten perturbation controls whether a diapir or a porosity wave will emerge. We study the transition from diapiric rise to solitary porosity waves by solving the two-phase flow equations of conservation of mass and momentum in 2D with porosity dependent matrix viscosity. We systematically vary the initial size of a porosity perturbation from 1 to 100 times the compaction length. If the perturbation is much larger than a regular solitary wave, its Stokes velocity is large and therefore faster than the segregating melt. Consequently, the fluid is not able to form a porosity wave and a diapir emerges. For small perturbations solitary waves emerge, either with a positive or negative vertical matrix velocity inside. In between the diapir and solitary wave regimes we observe a third regime of solitary wave induced focusing of melt. In these cases, diapirism is dominant but the fluid is still fast enough to locally build up small solitary waves which rise slightly faster than the diapir and form finger like structures at the front of the diapir. In our numerical simulations the width of these fingers is controlled by the compaction length or the grid size, whichever is larger. In cases where the compaction length becomes similar to or smaller than the grid size the finger-like leading solitary porosity waves are no more properly resolved, and too big and too fast waves may be the result. Therefore, one should be careful in large scale two-phase flow modelling with melt focusing especially when compaction length and grid size are of similar order.
The analysis of charcoal fragments in peat and lake sediments is the most widely used approach to reconstruct past biomass burning. With a few exceptions, this method typically relies on the quantification of the total charcoal content of the sediment. To enhance charcoal analyses for the reconstruction of past fire regimes, and to make the method more relevant to studies of both plant evolution and fire management, more information must be extracted from charcoal particles. Here, I burned in the laboratory seven fuel types comprising 17 species from boreal Siberia, and build on published schemes to develop morphometric and finer diagnostic classifications of the experimentally charred particles. As most of the species used in this study are common to Northern Hemisphere forests and peatlands, these results can be directly applicable over a broad geographical scale. Results show that the effect of temperature on charcoal production is fuel dependent. Graminoids and Sphagnum, and wood (trunk) lose the most mass at low burn temperatures, whereas heathland shrub leaves, brown moss, and ferns retain the most mass at high burn temperatures. In contrast to the wood of trunk, the wood of twigs retained their mass at intermediate temperature. This suggests that species with low mass retention at hotter burning temperatures might be underrepresented in the fossil charcoal record. Charred particle aspect ratio (L/W) appeared to be the strongest indicator of the fuel type burnt. Graminoid charcoals are more elongate than those of all other fuel types, leaf charcoals are the shortest and bulkiest, and twig and wood charcoals are intermediate. Finer diagnostic features were the most useful in distinguishing between wood, graminoid, and leaf particles, but further distinctions within these fuel types are difficult. High-aspect-ratio particles dominated by graminoid and Sphagnum morphologies are robust indicators of cooler surface fires. Contrastingly, abundant wood and leaf morphologies and low-aspect-ratio particles likely indicate higher-temperature fires. However, the overlapping morphologies of leaves and wood from trees and shrubs make it hard to distinguish between high-intensity surface fires combusting living shrubs and dead wood and leaves or high-intensity crown fires combusting living trees. Despite these limitations, the combined use of charred-particle aspect ratios and fuel morphotypes can aid in more robustly interpreting changes in fuel source and fire type, thereby substantially refining histories of past wildfires. Further fields of investigation to improve the interpretation of the fossil charcoal records will require: i) More in-depth knowledge of plant anatomy for a better determination of fuel sources; ii) Relate the proportion of particular charcoal morphotypes to the quantity of biomass; iii) Link the chemical composition of fuels, combustion temperature, and charcoal production. The advanced use of image-recognition software to collect data on other charcoal features could also aid in extracting fire temperatures as well as a change in particles morphology and morphometry during particles transportation.
In the last decade, the Climate Limited-area Modeling (CLM) Community has contributed to the Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) with an extensive set of regional climate simulations. Using several versions of the COSMO-CLM community model, ERA-Interim reanalysis and eight Global Climate Models from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) were dynamically downscaled with horizontal grid spacings of 0.44◦(∼50 km), 0.22◦ (∼25 km) and 0.11◦ (∼12 km) over the CORDEX domains Europe, South Asia, East Asia, Australasia and Africa. This major effort resulted in 80 regional climate simulations publicly available through the Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF) web portals for use in impact studies and climate scenario assessments. Here we review the production of these simulations and assess their results in terms of mean near-surface temperature and precipitation to aid the future design of the COSMO-CLM model simulations. It is found that a domain-specific parameter tuning is beneficial, while increasing horizontal model resolution (from 50 to 25 or 12 km grid spacing) alone does not always improve the performance of the simulation. Moreover, the COSMO-CLM performance depends on the driving data. This is generally more important than the dependence on horizontal resolution, model version and configuration. Our results emphasize the importance of performing regional climate projections in a coordinated way, where guidance from both the global (GCM) and regional (RCM) climate modelling communities is needed to increase the reliability of the GCM-RCM modelling chain.
In this study, we determine spectral characteristics and amplitude decays of wind turbine induced seismic signals in the far field of a wind farm (WF) close to Uettingen/Germany. Average power spectral densities (PSD) are calculated from 10 min time segments extracted from (up to) 6-months of continuous recordings at 19 seismic stations, positioned along an 8 km profile starting from the WF. We identify 7 distinct PSD peaks in the frequency range between 1 Hz and 8 Hz that can be observed to at least 4 km distance; lower-frequency peaks are detectable up to the end of the profile. At distances between 300 m and 4 km the PSD amplitude decay can be described by a power law with exponent b. The measured b-values exhibit a linear frequency dependence and range from b = 0.39 at 1.14 Hz to b = 3.93 at 7.6 Hz. In a second step, the seismic radiation and amplitude decays are modeled using an analytical approach which approximates the surface-wave field. Since we observe temporally varying phase differences between seismograms recorded directly at the base of the individual wind turbines (WTs), source-signal phase information is included in the modeling approach. We show that phase differences between source signals have significant effects on the seismic radiation pattern and amplitude decays. Therefore, we develop a phase-shift-elimination-method to handle the challenge of choosing representative source characteristics as an input for the modeling. To optimize the fitting of modeled and observed amplitude decay curves, we perform a grid search to constrain the two model parameters, i.e., the seismic shear wave velocity and quality factor. The comparison of modeled and observed amplitude decays for the 7 prominent frequencies shows very good agreement and allows to constrain shear velocities and quality factors for a two-layer model of the subsurface. The approach is generalized to predict amplitude decays and radiation patterns for WFs of arbitrary geometry.
Hyrrokkin sarcophaga is a parasitic foraminifer that is commonly found in cold-water coral reefs where it infests the file clam Acesta excavata and the scleractinian coral Lophelia pertusa. Here, we present measurements of the elemental and isotopic composition of this parasitic foraminifer for the first time, analyzed by inductively coupled optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), electron probe micro analysis (EPMA) and mass spectrometry (MS). Our results reveal that the geochemical signature of H. sarcophaga depends on the host organism it infests. Sr/Ca ratios are 1.1 mmol mol-1 higher in H. sarcophaga that infest L. pertusa, which could be an indication that dissolved host carbonate material is utilised in shell calcification, given that the aragonite of L. pertusa has a naturally higher Sr concentration compared to the calcite of A. excavata.Similarly, we measure 3.1 ‰ lower δ13C and 0.25 ‰ lower δ18O values in H. sarcophaga that lived on20 L. pertusa, which might be caused by the direct uptake of the host’s carbonate material with a more negative isotopic composition or different pH regimes in these foraminifera (pH can exert a control on the extent of CO2 hydration/hydroxylation) due to the uptake of body fluids of the host. We also observe higher Mn/Ca ratios in foraminifers that lived on A. excavata but did not penetrate the host shell compared to specimen that penetrated the shell, which could be interpreted as a change in food source, changes in the calcification rate, Rayleigh fractionation or changing oxygen conditions. While our measurements provide an interesting insight into the calcification process of this unusual foraminifer, these data also indicate that the geochemistry of this parasitic foraminifer is unlikely to be a reliable indicator of paleoenvironmental conditions using Sr/Ca, Mn/Ca, δ18O or δ13C unless the host organism is known and its geochemical composition can be accounted for.
National Greenhouse Gas Inventories (GHGI) are submitted annually to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). They are estimated in compliance with Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) methodological guidance using activity data, emission factors and facility-level measurements. For some sources, the outputs from these calculations are very uncertain. Inverse modelling techniques that use high-quality, long-term measurements of atmospheric gases have been developed to provide independent verification of national GHGI. This is considered good practice by the IPCC as it helps national inventory compilers to verify reported emissions and to reduce emission uncertainty. Emission estimates from the InTEM (Inversion Technique for Emissions Modelling) model are presented for the UK for the hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) reported to the UNFCCC (HFC-125, HFC-134a, HFC-143a, HFC-152a, HFC-23, HFC-32, HFC-227ea, HFC-245fa, HFC-43-10mee and HFC-365mfc). These HFCs have high Global Warming Potentials (GWPs) and the global background mole fractions of all but two are increasing, thus highlighting their relevance to the climate and a need for increasing the accuracy of emission estimation for regulatory purposes. This study presents evidence that the long-term annual increase in growth of HFC-134a has stopped and is now decreasing. For HFC-32 there is an early indication its rapid global growth period has ended, and there is evidence that the annual increase in global growth for HFC-125 has slowed from 2018. The inverse modelling results indicate that the UK implementation of European Union regulation of HFC emissions has been successful in initiating a decline in UK emissions in the since 2018. Comparison of the total InTEM UK HFC emissions in 2020 with the average from 2009–2012 shows a drop of 35%, indicating progress toward the target of a 79% decrease in sales by 2030. The total InTEM HFC emission estimates (2008–2018) are on average 73 (62–83)% of, or 4.3 (2.7–5.9) Tg CO2-eq yr−1 lower than, the total HFC emission estimates from the UK GHGI inventory. There are also significant discrepancies between the two estimates for the individual HFCs.