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Featured researches published by Bettina Boucsein.


Global and Planetary Change | 2001

Accumulation of particulate organic carbon at the Eurasian continental margin during late Quaternary times: Controlling mechanisms and paleoenvironmental significance.

Rüdiger Stein; Bettina Boucsein; Kirsten Fahl; T Garcia de Oteyza; Jochen Knies; Frank Niessen

Abstract Data on the amount and composition of organic carbon were determined in sediment cores from the Kara and Laptev Sea continental margin, representing oxygen isotope stages 1–6. The characterization of organic matter is based on hydrogen index (HI) values, n-alkanes and maceral composition, indicating the predominance of terrigenous organic matter through space and time. The variations in the amount and composition of organic carbon are mainly influenced by changes in fluvial sediment supply, Atlantic water inflow, and continental ice sheets. During oxygen isotope stage (OIS) 6, high organic carbon contents in sediments from the Laptev Sea and western East Siberian Sea continental margin were probably caused by the increased glacial erosion and further transport in the eastward-flowing boundary current along the continental margin. During OIS 5 and early OIS 3, some increased amounts of marine organic matter were preserved in sediments east of the Lomonosov Ridge, suggesting an influence of nutrient-rich Pacific waters. During OIS 2, terrigenous organic carbon supply was increased along the Barents and western Kara Sea continental margin caused by extended continental ice sheets in the Barents Sea (Svalbard to Franz Josef Land) area and increased glacial erosion. Along the Laptev Sea continental margin, on the other hand, the supply of terrigenous (organic) matter was significantly reduced due to the lack of major ice sheets and reduced river discharge. Towards the Holocene, the amount of total organic carbon (TOC) increased along the Kara and Laptev Sea continental margin, reaching average values of up to 0.5 g C cm−2 ky−1. Between about 8 and 10 ka (9 and 11 Cal ka), i.e., during times when the inner shallow Kara and Laptev seas became largely flooded for the first time after the Last Glacial Maximum, maximum supply of terrigenous organic carbon occurred, which is related to an increase in coastal erosion and Siberian river discharge. During the last 8000 years, the increased amount of marine organic carbon preserved in the sediments from the Kara and Laptev Sea continental margin is interpreted as a result of the intensification of Atlantic water inflow along the Eurasian continental margin.


Marine Geology | 2000

Particulate organic matter in surface sediments of the Laptev Sea (Arctic Ocean): application of maceral analysis as organic-carbon-source indicator

Bettina Boucsein; Ruediger Stein

Abstract Surface sediments from the Laptev Sea and adjacent continental slope were studied for their composition of particulate organic matter (OM) by means of maceral analysis. The composition of macerals in sediments gives information about the environment, terrigenous supply from the hinterland, and marine OM. With reference to their biological sources, we distinguish between terrigenous and marine macerals. We found that the particulate OM in the surface sediments of the Laptev Sea is predominantly of terrigenous origin (O: 78%). However, distinct variations exist when looking in detail. In the shelf area, sediments may contain up to 99% terrigenous OM. Freshwater algae occur directly north of the river mouths, reflecting the strong fluvial influence. Relatively high amounts of marine OM (20–40%) are restricted to the upper continental slope, the Vilkitsky Strait and west of the New Siberian Islands, explained by increased surface-water productivity due to increased fluvial nutrient supply, open-water conditions, and phytoplankton blooms at the ice-edge.


Marine Geology | 2002

Organic matter deposition along the Kara and Laptev Seas continental margin (eastern Arctic Ocean) during last deglaciation and Holocene: evidence from organic^ geochemical and petrographical data

Bettina Boucsein; Jochen Knies; Ruediger Stein

Abstract Organic petrologic (maceral analysis) and bulk organic–geochemical studies were performed on five sediment cores from the Eurasian continental margin to reconstruct the environmental changes during the last ∼13 000 yr. The core stratigraphy is based on AMS-14C dating, and correlation by magnetic susceptibility and lithostratigraphic characteristics. Variations in terrigenous, freshwater, and marine organic matter deposition document paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic changes during the transition from the last deglaciation to the Holocene. Glacigenic diamictons deposited in the St. Anna Trough (northern Kara Sea) during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) are characterized by reworked terrigenous organic matter. In contrast, the Laptev Sea shelf was not covered by an ice-sheet, but was exposed by the lowered sea level. Increased deposition of marine organic matter (MOM) during deglaciation indicates enhanced surface-water productivity, possibly related to influence of Atlantic waters. The occurrence of freshwater alginite gives evidence for river discharge to the Kara and Laptev Seas after the LGM. At the eastern Laptev Sea slope, the first influence of Atlantic water masses is indicated by an increase in the contents of MOM and dinoflagellate cysts, with Operculodinium centrocarpum prior to ∼10 000 yr BP. High sedimentation rates in the Kara and the Laptev Seas with the adjacent slope at the beginning of the Holocene are presumably related to increased freshwater and sediment discharge from the Siberian rivers. Evidence for elevated Holocene freshwater discharge to the Laptev Sea has been found between ∼9.8 and 9 kyr BP, at ∼5 kyr BP and at ∼2.5 kyr BP. In the Kara Sea, an increased freshwater signal is obvious at ∼8.5 kyr BP and at ∼5 kyr BP. Higher portions of MOM were accumulated in the St. Anna Trough and at the Eurasian continental margin at several intervals during the Holocene. Increased primary productivity during these intervals is explained by seasonally ice-free conditions possibly associated with increased inflow of Atlantic waters.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2006

Anoxia and high primary production in the Paleogene central Arctic Ocean: First detailed records from Lomonosov Ridge

Ruediger Stein; Bettina Boucsein; Hanno Meyer


Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2009

Black shale formation in the late Paleocene/early Eocene Arctic Ocean and paleoenvironmental conditions: New results from a detailed organic petrological study

Bettina Boucsein; Rüdiger Stein


International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2000

Variability of river discharge and Atlantic-water inflow at the Laptev Sea continental margin during the past 15,000 years: implications from maceral and biomarker records

Bettina Boucsein; Kirsten Fahl; Rüdiger Stein


EPIC3Reports on Polar Research, Alfred Wegener Institut for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven , 300, pp. 116-126 | 1999

Quantity and quality of organic carbon in suspended matter and surface sediments of the Ob and Yenisei estuaries and adjacent coastal areas.

Bettina Boucsein; Kirsten Fahl; M. Siebold; Rüdiger Stein


EPIC3International Journal of Earth Sciences:, 89, pp. 578-591 | 2000

Late Quaternary organic matter records from the Laptev Sea continental margin: Evidence for the variability of river discharge during the last 15000 years BP.

Bettina Boucsein; Kirsten Fahl; Rüdiger Stein


Supplement to: Stein, R et al. (2001): Accumulation of particulate organic carbon at the Eurasian continental margin during late Quaternary times: Controlling mechanisms and paleoenvironmental significance. Global and Planetary Change, 31(1-4), 87-104, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0921-8181(01)00114-X | 2001

Accumulation of particulate organic carbon at the Eurasian continental margin during late Quaternary times

Ruediger Stein; Bettina Boucsein; Kirsten Fahl; T Garcia de Oteyza; Jochen Knies; Frank Niessen


Supplement to: Boucsein, Bettina; Stein, Ruediger (2008): Black shale formation in the late Paleocene/early Eocene Arctic Ocean and paleoenvironmental conditions: New results from a detailed organic petrological study. Marine and Petroleum Geology, doi:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2008.04.001 | 2008

Macerals in sediments

Bettina Boucsein; Ruediger Stein

Collaboration


Dive into the Bettina Boucsein's collaboration.

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Kirsten Fahl

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Rüdiger Stein

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Ruediger Stein

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Jochen Knies

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Frank Niessen

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Hanno Meyer

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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T Garcia de Oteyza

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Christina Müller

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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H. P. Kleiber

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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M. Behrends

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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