102 research outputs found
GEOLOGIA/ Risolto il giallo dei Trilobiti scomparsi: si era inceppata la pompa biologica oceanica
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Interannual variability of vertical particle fluxes in the Ross Sea (Antarctica)
This study presents new data on biogenic and terrigenous particle fluxes collected by an oceanographic mooring (Mooring A) deployed in the south-western Ross Sea (Antarctica) in the frame of the Italian Long-Term Ecological Research network (LTER-Italy). Results from the years 2005 and 2008 document high mass fluxes during the summer and early autumn seasons, not coincident with the algal bloom. Downward particle fluxes exhibit a high inter-annual variability of both particulate fluxes and composition that seem related to the different factors as the phytoplankton increases, occurring between the beginning of February and the end of March, to the variations in the sea ice extent and to the resuspension and/or lateral advection processes. The flux variability may have been influenced by Iceberg B-15 that resided in the investigated area between 2000 and 2005. The decoupling of biogenic silica and organic carbon cycles is documented by differences in the rates of their respective key processes: biogenic silica dissolution and organic carbon degradation
Natural Versus Anthropic Influence on North Adriatic Coast Detected by Geochemical Analyses
This study focused on the geochemical and sedimentological characterization of recent sediments from two marine sites (S1 and E1) located in the North Adriatic Sea, between the Po River prodelta and the Rimini coast. Major and trace metal concentrations reflect the drainage area of the Po River and its tributaries, considered one of the most polluted areas in Europe. Sediment geochemistry of the two investigated sites denote distinct catchment areas. High values of Cr, Ni, Pb and Zn detected in sediments collected in the Po River prodelta (S1 site) suggest the Po River supply, while lower levels of these elements characterize sediments collected in front of the Rimini coast (E1 site), an indication of Northern Apennines provenance. Historical trends of Pb and Zn reconstructed from the sedimentary record around the E1 site document several changes that can be correlated with the industrialization subsequent to World War II, the implementation of the environmental policy in 1976 and the effects of the Comacchio dumping at the end of 1980. At the S1 site, the down core distributions of trace elements indicate a reduction of contaminants due to the introduction of the Italian Law 319/76 and the implementation of anti-pollution policies on automotive Pb (unleaded fuels) in the second half of the 1980s
Benthic foraminifera as indicators of hydrologic and environmental conditions in the Ross Sea (Antarctica)
This study, present data on benthic foraminiferal assemblages from four box cores collected in different areas of the Ross Sea during the 2005 oceanographic cruise in the framework of the Italian Antarctic Research National Programme (PNRA)
Planktonic foraminifera response to the azores high and industrial-era global warming in the central-western Mediterranean Sea
The Mediterranean Sea is warming about 20 % more rapidly than global ocean and this phenomenon is
impacting ecosystems and biodiversity. Planktonic foraminifera are an important component of surface and
subsurface water ecosystems and food chains. Their species communities have been altering across the oceans
since the Industrial Era, in response to the ongoing climate change, especially in the western Mediterranean Sea,
where a significant productivity decrease has been recently reported.
Here we show planktonic foraminifera and multispecies stable isotopes from three short sediment cores,
recovered on the eastern flank of the Sicily Channel, central Mediterranean Sea. Results fully confirm the
planktonic foraminifera productivity decrease in the Industrial Era, which is especially relevant for the second
half of the 20th century. The planktonic foraminifera productivity decrease matches with a higher number of
Large Azores High events, i.e., the establishment of an exceptional and persistent winter atmospheric highpressure ridge over the western-central Mediterranean Sea. This is an unprecedented atmospheric phenomenon for the last millennia Mediterranean Sea history, as a direct response of the global warming. Surface productivity and DCM species are especially declining since ~1960 CE, at expenses of winter mixed layer taxa,
suggesting that the Azores High activity prevents a sustained water column vertical mixing and surface water
nutrient fuelling. Our results document and confirm that the climate change has already been affecting Mediterranean marine ecosystems and the basic level of the trophic chain, by extending the surface water stratification period
Coral Patch and Ormonde seamounts as a product of the Madeira hotspot, Eastern Atlantic Ocean
New detailed swath bathymetry and bottom samples from Coral Patch and Ormonde seamounts provide constraints on the emplacement of the Madeira hotspot in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean. Swath bathymetric data document that Coral Patch is a composite structure, made up of at least nine distinct volcanic centres. Lithified pelagic carbonates infilling fissures in lava blocks constrain a minimal age for the volcanism in the Early Miocene and represent the first documentation of Coral Patch acting as an offshore terrigenous-starved seamount. At Coral Patch, as already observed at the Ormonde seamount, volcanism was emplaced on top of a pre-existing relief resulting from the regional tectonic compressive regime
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