5 research outputs found
Climatic instability, ice sheets and ocean dynamics at high northern latitudes during the last glacial period (58-10 KA BP)
International audienc
Novel archaeal macrocyclic diether core membrane lipids in a methane-derived carbonate crust from a mud volcano in the Sorokin Trough, NE Black Sea
A methane-derived carbonate crust was collected from the recently
discovered NIOZ mud volcano in the Sorokin Trough, NE Black Sea during
the 11th Training-through-Research cruise of the R/V Professor
Logachev. Among several specific bacterial and archaeal membrane
lipids present in this crust, two novel macrocyclic diphytanyl
glycerol diethers, containing one or two cyclopentane rings, were
detected. Their structures were tentatively identified based on the
interpretation of mass spectra, comparison with previously reported
mass spectral data, and a hydrogenation experiment. This macrocyclic
type of archaeal core membrane diether lipid has so far been
identified only in the deep-sea hydrothermal vent methanogen
Methanococcus jannaschii. Here, we provide the first
evidence that these macrocyclic diethers can also contain internal
cyclopentane rings. The molecular structure of the novel diethers
resembles that of dibiphytanyl tetraethers in which biphytane chains,
containing one and two pentacyclic rings, also occur. Such tetraethers
were abundant in the crust. Compound-specific isotope measurements
revealed δ13C values of –104 to
–111‰ for these new archaeal lipids, indicating that they
are derived from methanotrophic archaea acting within anaerobic
methane-oxidizing consortia, which subsequently induce authigenic
carbonate formation
Cenozoic alongslope processes and sedimentation on the NW European Atlantic margin
Based on studies of sediment accumulations deposited from-and erode by-alongslope flowing ocean currents on the European continental margin from Porcupine (Ireland) to Lofoten (Norway), the evolution of the Cenozoic paleocirculation was reconstructed as part of the STRATAGEM project. There is evidence of ocean current-controlled erosion and deposition in the Rockall Trough, in the Faeroe-Shetland Channel and on the Vøring Plateau since the late Eocene, although the circulation pattern remains ambiguous. The late Palaeogene flow in the Rockall Trough was almost probably driven by southerly-derived Tethyan Outflow Water. The extent and strength of any northerly-derived flow is uncertain. From the early Neogene (early-mid-Miocene), there was a massive regional expansion of contourite drift development both in the North Atlantic and in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. This was most probably related to the development of the Faroe Conduit, the opening of the Fram Strait and the general subsidence of the Greenland-Scotland Ridge. These may have combined to cause a considerable acceleration in the exchange and overflow of deep waters between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans. An early late Neogene (late early Pliocene) regional erosional event has been ascribed to a vigorous pulse of bottom-current activity, most probably the result of a global reorganisation of ocean currents associated with the closure of the Central American Seaway. During the late Neogene, contourites and sediment drifts developed in deep-water basins, between units of glacigenic sediments as well as infill of several paleo-slide scars. These sediments were derived from areas of bottom-current erosion as well as from the development of Plio-Pleistocene prograding sediment wedges, incorporating the extensive sediment supply derived from shelf-wide ice sheets. Presently a profound winnowing prevails along the shelf and upper slope due to the inflowing currents of Atlantic water. Depocentres of sediments derived from the winnowing are located (locally) in lower slope embayments and in slide scars