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Dive into the research topics where Catalina Gebhardt is active.

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Featured researches published by Catalina Gebhardt.


Nature Communications | 2016

Evidence for ice-free summers in the late Miocene central Arctic Ocean

Ruediger Stein; Kirsten Fahl; Michael Schreck; Gregor Knorr; Frank Niessen; Matthias Forwick; Catalina Gebhardt; Laura Jensen; Michael A. Kaminski; Achim J Kopf; Jens Matthiessen; Wilfried Jokat; Gerrit Lohmann

Although the permanently to seasonally ice-covered Arctic Ocean is a unique and sensitive component in the Earths climate system, the knowledge of its long-term climate history remains very limited due to the restricted number of pre-Quaternary sedimentary records. During Polarstern Expedition PS87/2014, we discovered multiple submarine landslides along Lomonosov Ridge. Removal of younger sediments from steep headwalls has led to exhumation of Miocene sediments close to the seafloor. Here we document the presence of IP25 as a proxy for spring sea-ice cover and alkenone-based summer sea-surface temperatures >4 °C that support a seasonal sea-ice cover with an ice-free summer season being predominant during the late Miocene in the central Arctic Ocean. A comparison of our proxy data with Miocene climate simulations seems to favour either relatively high late Miocene atmospheric CO2 concentrations and/or a weak sensitivity of the model to simulate the magnitude of high-latitude warming in a warmer than modern climate.


Science | 2016

The formation of peak rings in large impact craters

Joanna Morgan; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Timothy J. Bralower; E. Chenot; Gail L. Christeson; Philippe Claeys; Charles S. Cockell; Gareth S. Collins; M.J.L. Coolen; Ludovic Ferrière; Catalina Gebhardt; Kazuhisa Goto; H. Jones; David A. Kring; Erwan Le Ber; Johanna Lofi; Xiao Long; Christopher M. Lowery; Claire Mellett; R. Ocampo-Torres; Gordon R. Osinski; Ligia Pérez-Cruz; A.E. Pickersgill; Michael H. Poelchau; A. Rae; C. Rasmussen; M. Rebolledo-Vieyra; Ulrich Riller; Honami Sato; Douglas R. Schmitt

Drilling into Chicxulubs formation The Chicxulub impact crater, known for its link to the demise of the dinosaurs, also provides an opportunity to study rocks from a large impact structure. Large impact craters have “peak rings” that define a complex crater morphology. Morgan et al. looked at rocks from a drilling expedition through the peak rings of the Chicxulub impact crater (see the Perspective by Barton). The drill cores have features consistent with a model that postulates that a single over-heightened central peak collapsed into the multiple-peak-ring structure. The validity of this model has implications for far-ranging subjects, from how giant impacts alter the climate on Earth to the morphology of crater-dominated planetary surfaces. Science, this issue p. 878; see also p. 836 Rock samples from IODP/ICDP Expedition 364 support the dynamic collapse model for the formation of the Chicxulub crater. Large impacts provide a mechanism for resurfacing planets through mixing near-surface rocks with deeper material. Central peaks are formed from the dynamic uplift of rocks during crater formation. As crater size increases, central peaks transition to peak rings. Without samples, debate surrounds the mechanics of peak-ring formation and their depth of origin. Chicxulub is the only known impact structure on Earth with an unequivocal peak ring, but it is buried and only accessible through drilling. Expedition 364 sampled the Chicxulub peak ring, which we found was formed from uplifted, fractured, shocked, felsic basement rocks. The peak-ring rocks are cross-cut by dikes and shear zones and have an unusually low density and seismic velocity. Large impacts therefore generate vertical fluxes and increase porosity in planetary crust.


The Holocene | 2012

New insights into paleoenvironmental changes in Laguna Potrok Aike, southern Patagonia, since the Late Pleistocene: The PASADO multiproxy record

Cristina Recasens; Daniel Ariztegui; Catalina Gebhardt; Claudia Gogorza; Torsten Haberzettl; Annette Hahn; Pierre Kliem; Agathe Lisé-Pronovost; Andreas Lücke; Nora I. Maidana; Christoph Mayr; Christian Ohlendorf; Frank Schäbitz; Guillaume St-Onge; Michael Wille; Bernd Zolitschka

A series of long sediment cores was retrieved from Laguna Potrok Aike, Southern Patagonia, within the framework of PASADO (Potrok Aike Maar Lake Sediment Archive Drilling Project), an ICDP (International Continental Scientific Drilling Program) lake drilling project. This maar lake, located at 52°S, 70°W in the Province of Santa Cruz (Argentina), in the southernmost continental area of the world, is one of the few permanent lakes in the region, providing a unique continuous paleoclimatic and paleoecological lacustrine record for the last glacial cycle. Previous multiproxy studies of this site have characterized the environmental history of these dry lands in the Patagonian Steppe for the last 16 cal. ka BP. This new series of sediment cores provides a much longer record of climate variability in Southern Patagonia since 51.3 cal. ka BP. Using a multiproxy strategy, a set of samples (mostly from core catcher material) was analyzed for physical properties, rock magnetism, geochemistry, CNS elemental analysis, stable isotopes, pollen and diatoms. This preliminary multiproxy limnogeological interpretation sheds new light on the regional Pleistocene and Holocene environmental history, revealing lake-level variations through time and identifying time windows of interest where higher resolution analyses will be carried out.


Gsa Today | 2017

Chicxulub and the Exploration of Large Peak-Ring Impact Craters through Scientific Drilling

David A. Kring; Philippe Claeys; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Joanna Morgan; Gareth S. Collins; Timothy J. Bralower; E. Chenot; Gail L. Christeson; Charles S. Cockell; M.J.L. Coolen; Ludovic Ferrière; Catalina Gebhardt; Kazuhisa Goto; H. Jones; Johanna Lofi; Christopher M. Lowery; Claire Mellett; R. Ocampo-Torres; Ligia Pérez-Cruz; A.E. Pickersgill; Michael H. Poelchau; A. Rae; C. Rasmussen; M. Rebolledo-Vieyra; Ulrich Riller; Honami Sato; Jan Smit; Sonia M. Tikoo; Naotaka Tomioka; Jaime Urrutia-Fucugauchi

The Chicxulub crater is the only well-preserved peak-ring crater on Earth and linked, famously, to the K-T or K-Pg mass extinction event. For the first time, geologists have drilled into the peak ring of that crater in the International Ocean Discovery Program and International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (IODP-ICDP) Expedition 364. The Chicxulub impact event, the environmental calamity it produced, and the paleobiological consequences are among the most captivating topics being discussed in the geologic community. Here we focus attention on the geological processes that shaped the ~200-km-wide impact crater responsible for that discussion and the expedition’s first year results.


Nature | 2018

Rapid recovery of life at ground zero of the end-Cretaceous mass extinction

Christopher M. Lowery; Timothy J. Bralower; Jeremy D. Owens; Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar; H. Jones; Jan Smit; Michael T. Whalen; Phillipe Claeys; Kenneth A. Farley; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Joanna Morgan; S.L. Green; E. Chenot; Gail L. Christeson; Charles S. Cockell; M.J.L. Coolen; Ludovic Ferrière; Catalina Gebhardt; Kazuhisa Goto; David A. Kring; Johanna Lofi; R. Ocampo-Torres; Ligia Pérez-Cruz; A.E. Pickersgill; Michael H. Poelchau; A. Rae; C. Rasmussen; M. Rebolledo-Vieyra; Ulrich Riller; Honami Sato

The Cretaceous/Palaeogene mass extinction eradicated 76% of species on Earth1,2. It was caused by the impact of an asteroid3,4 on the Yucatán carbonate platform in the southern Gulf of Mexico 66 million years ago5, forming the Chicxulub impact crater6,7. After the mass extinction, the recovery of the global marine ecosystem—measured as primary productivity—was geographically heterogeneous8; export production in the Gulf of Mexico and North Atlantic–western Tethys was slower than in most other regions8–11, taking 300 thousand years (kyr) to return to levels similar to those of the Late Cretaceous period. Delayed recovery of marine productivity closer to the crater implies an impact-related environmental control, such as toxic metal poisoning12, on recovery times. If no such geographic pattern exists, the best explanation for the observed heterogeneity is a combination of ecological factors—trophic interactions13, species incumbency and competitive exclusion by opportunists14—and ‘chance’8,15,16. The question of whether the post-impact recovery of marine productivity was delayed closer to the crater has a bearing on the predictability of future patterns of recovery in anthropogenically perturbed ecosystems. If there is a relationship between the distance from the impact and the recovery of marine productivity, we would expect recovery rates to be slowest in the crater itself. Here we present a record of foraminifera, calcareous nannoplankton, trace fossils and elemental abundance data from within the Chicxulub crater, dated to approximately the first 200 kyr of the Palaeocene. We show that life reappeared in the basin just years after the impact and a high-productivity ecosystem was established within 30 kyr, which indicates that proximity to the impact did not delay recovery and that there was therefore no impact-related environmental control on recovery. Ecological processes probably controlled the recovery of productivity after the Cretaceous/Palaeogene mass extinction and are therefore likely to be important for the response of the ocean ecosystem to other rapid extinction events.Micro- and nannofossil, trace fossil and geochemical evidence from the Chicxulub impact crater demonstrates that proximity to the asteroid impact site did not determine rates of recovery of marine ecosystems after the end-Cretaceous mass extinction.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2017

MeBo70 Seabed Drilling on a Polar Continental Shelf: Operational Report and Lessons From Drilling in the Amundsen Sea Embayment of West Antarctica

Karsten Gohl; Tim Freudenthal; Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand; Johann Philipp Klages; Robert D Larter; Torsten Bickert; Steven M. Bohaty; Werner Ehrmann; Oliver Esper; Thomas Frederichs; Catalina Gebhardt; K. Küssner; Gerhard Kuhn; Heiko Pälike; Thomas A Ronge; P. Simões Pereira; James A Smith; Gabriele Uenzelmann-Neben; C. van de Flierdt

A multibarrel seabed drill rig was used for the first time to drill unconsolidated sediments and consolidated sedimentary rocks from an Antarctic shelf with core recoveries between 7% and 76%. We deployed the MARUM-MeBo70 drill device at nine drill sites in the Amundsen Sea Embayment. Three sites were located on the inner shelf of Pine Island Bay from which soft sediments, presumably deposited at high sedimentation rates in isolated small basins, were recovered from drill depths of up to 36 m below seafloor. Six sites were located on the middle shelf of the eastern and western embayment. Drilling at five of these sites recovered consolidated sediments and sedimentary rocks from dipping strata spanning ages from Cretaceous to Miocene. This report describes the initial coring results, the challenges posed by drifting icebergs and sea ice, and technical issues related to deployment of the MeBo70. We also present recommendations for similar future drilling campaigns on polar continental shelves.


Science | 2013

Pliocene Warmth, Polar Amplification, and Stepped Pleistocene Cooling Recorded in NE Arctic Russia

Julie Brigham-Grette; Martin Melles; Pavel S Minyuk; Andrei Andreev; Pavel E. Tarasov; Robert M. DeConto; Sebastian Koenig; Norbert R Nowaczyk; Volker Wennrich; Peter Rosén; Eeva Haltia; Timothy L Cook; Catalina Gebhardt; Carsten Meyer-Jacob; Jeffrey A. Snyder; Ulrike Herzschuh


Scientific Drilling | 2011

The Lake El'gygytgyn Scientific Drilling Project – Conquering Arctic Challenges through Continental Drilling

Martin Melles; Julie Brigham-Grette; Pavel S Minyuk; Christian Koeberl; Andrei Andreev; Timothy L Cook; G. Fedorov; Catalina Gebhardt; Eeva Haltia-Hovi; Maaret Kukkonen; Norbert R Nowaczyk; Georg Schwamborn; Volker Wennrich


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2013

Mechanisms of lake-level change at Laguna Potrok Aike (Argentina) – insights from hydrological balance calculations

Christian Ohlendorf; Michael Fey; Catalina Gebhardt; Torsten Haberzettl; Andreas Lücke; Christoph Mayr; Frank Schäbitz; Michael Wille; Bernd Zolitschka


Sedimentary Geology | 2011

The PASADO core processing strategy — A proposed new protocol for sediment core treatment in multidisciplinary lake drilling projects

Christian Ohlendorf; Catalina Gebhardt; Annette Hahn; Pierre Kliem; Bernd Zolitschka

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Frank Niessen

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Timothy L Cook

Worcester State University

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Pavel S Minyuk

Russian Academy of Sciences

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