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Dive into the research topics where Gerhard H. Schleser is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerhard H. Schleser.


Nature | 2006

The twentieth century was the wettest period in northern Pakistan over the past millennium

Kerstin Treydte; Gerhard H. Schleser; Gerhard Helle; David Frank; Matthias Winiger; Gerald H. Haug; Jan Esper

Twentieth-century warming could lead to increases in the moisture-holding capacity of the atmosphere, altering the hydrological cycle and the characteristics of precipitation. Such changes in the global rate and distribution of precipitation may have a greater direct effect on human well-being and ecosystem dynamics than changes in temperature itself. Despite the co-variability of both of these climate variables, attention in long-term climate reconstruction has mainly concentrated on temperature changes. Here we present an annually resolved oxygen isotope record from tree-rings, providing a millennial-scale reconstruction of precipitation variability in the high mountains of northern Pakistan. The climatic signal originates mainly from winter precipitation, and is robust over ecologically different sites. Centennial-scale variations reveal dry conditions at the beginning of the past millennium and through the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, with precipitation increasing during the late nineteenth and the twentieth centuries to yield the wettest conditions of the past 1,000 years. Comparison with other long-term precipitation reconstructions indicates a large-scale intensification of the hydrological cycle coincident with the onset of industrialization and global warming, and the unprecedented amplitude argues for a human role.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 1999

ISOTOPE SIGNALS AS CLIMATE PROXIES: THE ROLE OF TRANSFER FUNCTIONS IN THE STUDY OF TERRESTRIAL ARCHIVES

Gerhard H. Schleser; Gerhard Helle; Andreas Lücke; Heinz Vos

Abstract The use of stable isotopes as climate proxies is widely accepted for climate reconstruction. Re-establishing climate signals, e.g. temperature, from isotope values of biological materials requires some knowledge of the system’s response behaviour. The related problems are discussed in conjunction with stable isotopes of two different terrestrial archives: carbon isotope data of tree rings from southern Germany and oxygen isotope data of diatoms from Lake Holzmaar, Germany. Carbon isotope temperature coefficients (Δδ13C/ΔT) derived from tree rings were chosen as an example for non-linear transformation of environmental signals through biological systems explaining negative and positive temperature coefficients. Thin radial tree ring sections taken from tree rings of different species (poplar, beech and oak) show carbon isotope variations of up to 3‰ with a characteristic, annually recurring isotope pattern. This behaviour is discussed in view of time resolution, isotope signature conservation and the question of storage and remobilisation of photosynthates with time. For Lake Holzmaar it is shown that isotope proxy signals derived from diatoms may not be unambiguously translated into abiotic environmental forcing factors, such as for example temperature. Corresponding measurements reveal that the isotopic input signal varies considerably and nonlinearly with temperature.


Chemical Geology | 1999

Carbon isotope behaviour in wood and cellulose during artificial aging

Gerhard H. Schleser; J. Frielingsdorf; A. Blair

Abstract Modern wood was subjected to an artificial decay process to investigate its behaviour with respect to the stable carbon isotope composition of wood and the corresponding cellulose. Four different woods were used, namely: oak (Quercus robur), beech (Fagus sylvatica), pine (Pinus sylvestris), sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) and pure spruce cellulose. The process of decay was simulated by heating samples in water at 180°C from minutes to months. During the decay period, the carbon content of wood increased to almost 70% while the cellulose content decreased gradually to zero. The degradation proceeds according to a two stage process: an initial very fast break down is followed by a rather slow degradation. After a strong discrimination against 13 C during the initial phase, the 13C/12C ratio increases again, mostly up to its initial value. The carbon isotope trend for cellulose shows a similar pattern though it is less pronounced. Maximum discrimination was 1‰ relative to the untreated wood. δ13C values of cellulose decreased by up to 0.3‰. The 13 C depletion is presumably a consequence of the preferential decomposition of cellulose as compared to lignin. Data on fossil trees are compared with the results obtained from this treatment of aging. The 13 C decrease is in line with observations from these fossil woods, but the ensuing 13 C enrichment is at most weakly to be seen.


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2009

A novel approach for the homogenization of cellulose to use micro‐amounts for stable isotope analyses

W. Laumer; Laia Andreu; Gerhard Helle; Gerhard H. Schleser; Thomas Wieloch; Holger Wissel

Climate reconstructions using stable isotopes from tree-rings are steadily increasing. The investigations concentrate mostly on cellulose due to its high stability. In recent years the available amount of cellulose has steadily decreased, mainly because micro-structures of plant material have had to be analyzed. Today, the amounts of cellulose being studied are frequently in the milligram and often in the microgram range. Consequently, homogeneity problems with regard to the stable isotopes of carbon and oxygen from cellulose have occurred and these have called for new methods in the preparation of cellulose for reliable isotope analyses. Three different methods were tested for preparing isotopically homogenous cellulose, namely mechanical grinding, freezing by liquid nitrogen with subsequent milling and ultrasonic breaking of cellulose fibres. The best precision of isotope data was achieved by freeze-milling and ultrasonic breaking. However, equipment for freeze-milling is expensive and the procedure is labour-intensive. Mechanical grinding resulted in a rather high loss of material and it is also labour-intensive. The use of ultrasound for breaking cellulose fibres proved to be the best method in terms of rapidity of sample throughput, avoidance of sample loss, precision of isotope results, ease of handling, and cost.


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 1999

Environmental history of the German Lower Rhine Embayment during the Middle Miocene as reflected by carbon isotopes in brown coal

Andreas Lücke; Gerhard Helle; Gerhard H. Schleser; Isabel Figueiral; Volker Mosbrugger; Timothy Peter Jones; Nick Rowe

Stable carbon isotope investigations have been carried out on Miocene brown coal from the Garzweiler Seam of the German Lower Rhine Embayment. Material studied included fossil wood from seven different taxa, and brown coal matrix. Isotope results from macrofossil analysis show variations of more than 6‰ within individual samples and reveal a general isotopic difference between angiosperm and gymnosperm wood specimens. According to mean carbon isotope values found for gymnosperms, angiosperms and brown coal matrix (−23.3‰, −26.0‰ and −25.8‰), the peat-forming vegetation of the Garzweiler Seam was dominated by angiosperm taxa. Results from brown coal matrix establish a continuous high-resolution depth profile of carbon isotope variations during the late Middle Miocene. They show a significant and characteristic isotope pattern with distinct medium- and short-term cycles (high-frequency variations) in the two main units of Garzweiler Seam (locally split into three units). The medium-term δ13C variations are most likely caused by varying proportions of gymnosperms within the peat-forming vegetation while high-frequency oscillations seem to be a direct signal of environmental changes. A long-term decline of carbon isotope values observed within the complete Garzweiler Seam from base to top is presumably due to a cooling trend in the Miocene.


Organic Geochemistry | 2003

Variations in organic matter composition in sediments from Lake Huguang Maar (Huguangyan), south China during the last 68 ka: implications for environmental and climatic change

Andreas Fuhrmann; Jens Mingram; Andreas Lücke; Houyuan Lu; Brian Horsfield; Jiaqi Liu; Jörg F. W. Negendank; Gerhard H. Schleser; Heinz Wilkes

Abstract This study presents a continuous and long-term palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic record from a lacustrine sediment core (Lake Huguang Maar) at the northern coast of the South China Sea, extending back to about 68 cal ka BP. We provide a comprehensive ecosystem analysis from the opportunity to combine organic geochemical and palynological data. Several climatically induced changes to the flora and fauna have been recognised. From 68 to 58 and 48 to 40.5 cal ka BP, relatively depleted δ 13 C TOC (−31.3 to −25.0‰) and δ 13 C values of mid- and long-chain n -alkanes (−34.3 to −30.2‰), as well as high percentages of tropical pollen, indicate a vegetation dominated by subtropical/tropical forest (C 3 plants). An expansion of a mixed C 3 /C 4 open grassland between 58 and 48 and particularly after 40.5 cal ka BP mirrors drier climatic conditions, in conjunction with a lowering of atmospheric CO 2 concentrations; δ 13 C TOC (−24.1 to −16.8‰) and δ 13 C values of n -alkyl lipids (−28.9 to −24.1‰) are heavier, higher percentages of non-arboreal pollen were observed and the wood/grass lignin index (WGLI) from open pyrolysis (Py–GC) indicates a higher input of grass lignin. Abundant oxidised terrigenous particles that resulted from increased fire activity and/or greater erosion rates are a further hint of enhanced dryness. The clear drop in moisture availability suggests that this site is sensitive in fluctuations of the summer and winter monsoon activity in accordance with other proxy records in south-east Asia. The response of the aquatic ecosystem is documented by an extremely large δ 13 C shift of algal-derived botryococcenes from −35.4 to −6.2‰, which records a change towards a bicarbonate carbon source at low dissolved CO 2 concentrations.


Science of The Total Environment | 2011

Pooled versus separate measurements of tree-ring stable isotopes.

Isabel Dorado Liñán; Emilia Gutiérrez; Gerhard Helle; Ingo Heinrich; Laia Andreu-Hayles; Octavi Planells; Markus Leuenberger; Carmen Bürger; Gerhard H. Schleser

δ(13)C and δ(18)O of tree rings contain time integrated information about the environmental conditions weighted by seasonal growth dynamics and are well established as sources of palaeoclimatic and ecophysiological data. Annually resolved isotope chronologies are frequently produced by pooling dated growth rings from several trees prior to the isotopic analyses. This procedure has the advantage of saving time and resources, but precludes from defining the isotopic error or statistical uncertainty related to the inter-tree variability. Up to now only a few studies have compared isotope series from pooled tree rings with isotopic measurements from individual trees. We tested whether or not the δ(13)C and the δ(18)O chronologies derived from pooled and from individual tree rings display significant differences at two locations from the Iberian Peninsula to assess advantages and constraints of both methodologies. The comparisons along the period 1900-2003 reveal a good agreement between pooled chronologies and the two mean master series which were created by averaging raw individual values (Mean) or by generating a mass calibrated mean (MassC). In most of the cases, pooled chronologies show high synchronicity with averaged individual samples at interannual scale but some differences also show up especially when comparing δ(18)O decadal to multi-decadal variations. Moreover, differences in the first order autocorrelation among individuals may be obscured by pooling strategies. The lack of replication of pooled chronologies prevents detection of a bias due to a higher mass contribution of one sample but uncertainties associated with the analytical process itself, as sample inhomogeneity, seems to account for the observed differences.


Tellus B | 2008

Climatic significance of tree‐ring width and δ13C in a Spanish pine forest network

Laia Andreu; Octavi Planells; Emilia Gutiérrez; Gerhard Helle; Gerhard H. Schleser

This paper examines tree-ring width and δ13C chronologies from a network of five Iberian pine forests to determine their sensitivity to climate variability under different site conditions. Interseries comparisons revealed better and more homogenous agreement among δ13C records than among tree-ring width series of the different sites. This suggests that δ13C ratios may preferentially record large-scale climatic signals, whereas ring-width variations may reflect more local factors. A negative relationship was found between ring-width and δ13C. As inferred from response function analyses, ring-width and δ13C showed significant relationships with climate. The analyses of different sites and species revealed unshared tree-ring width responses to summer temperature and precipitation, whereas all δ13C series were highly sensitive to current year summer precipitation and, to a lesser extent, to current summer temperature. A strong summer precipitation signal seems to dominate the δ13C of trees growing under Mediterranean climate, even when the mean climatic site conditions do not indicate distinct summer drought. Therefore, δ13C values reflect precipitation variability during the summer season better than tree-ring widths. This demonstrates that δ13C from tree-rings can be a very useful tool for climatic reconstruction in the Mediterranean region, especially when climate-growth relationships are weak.


Journal of Paleolimnology | 1999

Sedimentation patterns of diatoms in Lake Holzmaar, Germany - (on the transfer of climate signals to biogenic silica oxygen isotope proxies)

Susanne Raubitschek; Andreas Lücke; Gerhard H. Schleser

The seasonal sedimentation pattern of diatom valves in Lake Holzmaar was investigated during 1995 by deploying sediment traps at three different lake depths. According to the sedimentation pattern, the major reproduction zone of diatoms was restricted to the upper 6 m of the water body. The population growth started late in April and blooms of Cyclotella cf. comensis Grun., which dominates the plankton diatoms, and Fragilaria crotonensis Kitton were collected in traps during June and September, and July, respectively. During summer, the seasonal sedimentation pattern of each taxon, as collected in the upper traps, was reflected in the concentrations in the lowest trap. However, in May and from September onwards, the community composition in the lowest trap and augmented trapping rates suggest both sediment focusing and resuspension of bottom sediments.The temperature signals as recorded by δ18O values of diatom valves should, therefore, reflect integrated temperatures between 0 and 6 m depth. However, temperatures during summer and autumn are expected to be accentuated in the sedimentary record since the isotopic signal is weighted by both the number and the weight-mass of the valves. During summer, the transfer of these signals by the sedimenting diatoms retains the information pattern recorded, while in spring and autumn/winter additional influxes caused by resuspension may somewhat alter those temperature informations. The proxy signals finally stored in the sediments, may, therefore, not precisely represent the successive temperatures currently recorded during 1995 within mid-lake.


Archive | 2004

Interpreting Climate Proxies from Tree-rings

Gerhard Helle; Gerhard H. Schleser

Trees, as long living plants, are governed by environmental and/or climate changes within their habitat. Their growth rings record to a large extent the temporal dynamics of these changes either directly or through tree physiological reactions. They render the highest time resolution thus far possible for environmental or climate reconstructions of the past 10,000 years (exactly dated, annually resolved, see: [828], [994]). Trees are a substantial part of the human environment with a high socio-economic value. Their large geographical extension over various regions of the world, including those with greatest population densities but also marginal areas allows to gain unique informations about local and regional consequences of global climate change.

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Andreas Lücke

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Gerhard Helle

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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