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Featured researches published by Adi Torfstein.


Geology | 2010

Northward intrusions of low- and mid-latitude storms across the Saharo-Arabian belt during past interglacials

Nicolas Waldmann; Adi Torfstein; Mordechai Stein

The rain regime of the Levant during the late Quaternary was controlled primarily by Mediterranean cyclonic systems associated with North Atlantic climate shifts. Lake levels in the Dead Sea basin have been robust recorders of the regional hydrology and generally indicate highstand (wet) conditions throughout glacial intervals and lowstands (dry) during interglacials. However, sporadic deposition of travertines and speleothems occurred in the Negev Desert and Arava Valley during past interglacials, suggesting intrusions of humidity from southern sources probably in association with enhanced activity of mid-latitude Red Sea synoptic troughs and/or low-latitude tropical plumes. The southerly incursions of wetness were superimposed on the long-term interglacial Levantine arid conditions, as refl ected by the current prevailing hyperaridity, and could have had an important impact on human migration through the Red Sea‐Dead Sea corridor.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2017

Rates and Cycles of Microbial Sulfate Reduction in the Hyper-Saline Dead Sea over the Last 200 kyrs from Sedimentary δ34S and δ18O(SO4)

Adi Torfstein; Alexandra V. Turchyn

We report the 34S and 18O(SO4) values measured in gypsum, pyrite, and elemental sulfur through a 456-m thick sediment core from the center of the Dead Sea, representing the last ~200 kyrs, as well as from the exposed glacial outcrops of the Masada M1 section located on the margins of the modern Dead Sea. The results are used to explore and quantify the evolution of sulfur microbial metabolism in the Dead Sea and to reconstruct the lake’s water column configuration during the late Quaternary. Layers and laminae of primary gypsum, the main sulfur-bearing mineral in the sedimentary column, display the highest 34S and 18O(SO4) in the range of 13-28‰ and 13-30‰, respectively. Within this group, gypsum layers deposited during interglacials have lower 34S and 18O(SO4) relative to those associated with glacial or deglacial stages. The reduced sulfur phases, including chromium reducible sulfur, and secondary gypsum crystals are characterized by extremely low 34S in the range of -27 to +7‰. The 18O(SO4) of the secondary gypsum in the M1 outcrop ranges from 8 to 14‰. The relationship between 34S and 18O(SO4) of primary gypsum suggests that the rate of microbial sulfate reduction was lower during glacial relative to interglacial times. This suggests that the freshening of the lake during glacial wet intervals, and the subsequent rise in sulfate concentrations, slowed the rate of microbial metabolism. Alternatively, this could imply that sulfate-driven anaerobic methane oxidation, the dominant sulfur microbial metabolism today, is a feature of the hypersalinity in the modern Dead Sea. Sedimentary sulfides are quantitatively oxidized during epigenetic exposure, retaining the lower 34S signature; the 18O(SO4) of this secondary gypsum is controlled by oxygen atoms derived equally from atmospheric oxygen and from water, which is likely a unique feature in this hyperarid environment.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2010

Abrupt aridities and salt deposition in the post-glacial Dead Sea and their North Atlantic connection

Mordechai Stein; Adi Torfstein; Ittai Gavrieli; Yoseph Yechieli


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2013

Impacts of abrupt climate changes in the Levant from Last Glacial Dead Sea levels

Adi Torfstein; Steven L. Goldstein; Mordechai Stein; Yehouda Enzel


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2009

U-series and oxygen isotope chronology of the mid-Pleistocene Lake Amora (Dead Sea basin)

Adi Torfstein; Alexandra Haase-Schramm; Nicolas Waldmann; Yehoshua Kolodny; Mordechai Stein


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2008

Gypsum as a monitor of the paleo-limnological-hydrological conditions in Lake Lisan and the Dead Sea

Adi Torfstein; Ittai Gavrieli; Amitai Katz; Yehoshua Kolodny; Mordechai Stein


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2015

Dead Sea drawdown and monsoonal impacts in the Levant during the last interglacial

Adi Torfstein; Steven L. Goldstein; Yochanan Kushnir; Yehouda Enzel; Gerald H. Haug; Mordechai Stein


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2014

Lithology of the long sediment record recovered by the ICDP Dead Sea Deep Drilling Project (DSDDP)

Ina Neugebauer; Achim Brauer; Markus J. Schwab; Nicolas Waldmann; Yehouda Enzel; Hiroyuki Kitagawa; Adi Torfstein; Ute Frank; Peter Dulski; Amotz Agnon; Daniel Ariztegui; Zvi Ben-Avraham; Steven L. Goldstein; Mordechai Stein


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2005

The sources and evolution of sulfur in the hypersaline Lake Lisan (paleo-Dead Sea)

Adi Torfstein; Ittai Gavrieli; Mordechai Stein


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2013

Integrated multi-site U–Th chronology of the last glacial Lake Lisan

Adi Torfstein; Steven L. Goldstein; Elisa J. Kagan; Mordechai Stein

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Mordechai Stein

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Yehouda Enzel

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Yehoshua Kolodny

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Boaz Lazar

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Yigal Erel

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Yoseph Yechieli

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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