Jan-Rainer Riethdorf
University of Tokyo
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Featured researches published by Jan-Rainer Riethdorf.
Paleoceanography | 2012
Lars Max; Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Ralf Tiedemann; Maria Smirnova; Lester Lembke-Jene; Kirsten Fahl; Dirk Nürnberg; A. G. Matul; Gesine Mollenhauer
Past changes in North Pacific sea surface temperatures and sea-ice conditions are proposed to play a crucial role in deglacial climate development and ocean circulation but are less well known than from the North Atlantic. Here, we present new alkenone-based sea surface temperature records from the subarctic northwest Pacific and its marginal seas (Bering Sea and Sea of Okhotsk) for the time interval of the last 15 kyr, indicating millennial-scale sea surface temperature fluctuations similar to short-term deglacial climate oscillations known from Greenland ice-core records. Past changes in sea-ice distribution are derived from relative percentage of specific diatom groups and qualitative assessment of the IP25 biomarker related to sea-ice diatoms. The deglacial variability in sea-ice extent matches the sea surface temperature fluctuations. These fluctuations suggest a linkage to deglacial variations in Atlantic meridional overturning circulation and a close atmospheric coupling between the North Pacific and North Atlantic. During the Holocene the subarctic North Pacific is marked by complex sea surface temperature trends, which do not support the hypothesis of a Holocene seesaw in temperature development between the North Atlantic and the North Pacific. Key Points: - Millennial-scale changes in SST in the North Pacific during the last 15 kyr - Changes in sea-ice extent suggest a close coupling to SST fluctuations - Middle to late Holocene SSTs show no clear SST trend in the North Pacific
Geo-marine Letters | 2016
Marie Méheust; Ruediger Stein; Kirsten Fahl; Lars Max; Jan-Rainer Riethdorf
Due to its strong influence on heat and moisture exchange between the ocean and the atmosphere, sea ice is an essential component of the global climate system. In the context of its alarming decrease in terms of concentration, thickness and duration, understanding the processes controlling sea-ice variability and reconstructing paleo-sea-ice extent in polar regions have become of great interest for the scientific community. In this study, for the first time, IP25, a recently developed biomarker sea-ice proxy, was used for a high-resolution reconstruction of the sea-ice extent and its variability in the western North Pacific and western Bering Sea during the past 18,000 years. To identify mechanisms controlling the sea-ice variability, IP25 data were associated with published sea-surface temperature as well as diatom and biogenic opal data. The results indicate that a seasonal sea-ice cover existed during cold periods (Heinrich Stadial 1 and Younger Dryas), whereas during warmer intervals (Bølling-Allerød and Holocene) reduced sea ice or ice-free conditions prevailed in the study area. The variability in sea-ice extent seems to be linked to climate anomalies and sea-level changes controlling the oceanographic circulation between the subarctic Pacific and the Bering Sea, especially the Alaskan Stream injection though the Aleutian passes.
Geochemistry International | 2013
M. A. Levitan; T. G. Kuzmina; V. L. Luksha; I. A. Roshchina; K. V. Syromyatnikov; Lars Max; D. Nuernberg; Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Ralf Tiedemann
The analysis of the lithology, grain-size distribution, clay minerals, and geochemistry of Upper Pleistocene sediments from the submarine Shirshov Ridge (Bering Sea) showed that the main source area was the Yukon-Tanana terrane of Central Alaska. The sedimentary materials were transported by the Yukon River through Beringia up to the shelf break, where they were entrained by a strong northwestward-flowing sea current. The lithological data revealed several pulses of ice-rafted debris deposition, roughly synchronous with Heinrich events, and periods of weaker bottom-current intensity. Based on the geochemical results, we distinguished intervals of an increase in paleoproductivity and extension of the oxygen minimum zone. The results suggest that there were three stages of deposition driven by glacioeustatic sea-level fluctuations and glacial cycles in Alaska.
Geology | 2014
Lars Max; Lukas Belz; Ralf Tiedemann; Kirsten Fahl; Dirk Nürnberg; Jan-Rainer Riethdorf
During the past decades, remarkable changes in sea-surface temperature (SST) and sea-ice extent have been observed in the marginal seas of the subarctic Pacific. However, little is known about natural climate variability at millennial time scales far beyond instrumental observations. Geological proxy records, such as those derived from marine sediments, offer a unique opportunity to investigate millennial-scale natural climate variability of the Artic and subarctic environments during past glacial-interglacial cycles. Here we provide reconstructions of sea-ice variability inferred from IP25 (Ice Proxy with 25 carbon atoms) sea-ice biomarker and SST fluctuations based on alkenone unsaturation index (Graphic) of the subarctic Pacific realm between 138 and 70 ka. Warmest sea-surface conditions were found during the early Eemian interglacial (128 to 126 ka), exceeding modern SSTs by ∼2 °C. The further North Pacific climate evolution is marked by pronounced oscillations in SST and sea-ice extent on millennial time scales, which correspond remarkably well to short-term temperature oscillations known from Greenland and the North Atlantic. These results imply a common forcing, which seems to be closely coupled to dynamics of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. However, immediate propagation of such climate fluctuations far beyond the North Atlantic basin suggests a rapid circumpolar coupling mechanism probably acting through the atmosphere, a prerequisite to explain the apparent synchronicity of remote climatic reorganizations in the subarctic Pacific.
Oceanology | 2013
E. A. Ovsepyan; Elena P. Ivanova; Lars Max; Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Dirk Nürnberg; Ralf Tiedemann
The benthic and planktonic foraminiferal assemblages and the distribution of coarse grain-size factions were studied in the upper 4.5 m of the Core SO201-2-85KL (57°30.30′ N, 170°24.79′ E, water depth 968 m) retrieved from the Shirshov Ridge. This part of the core covers 7.5 to 50 kyr BP. The glacial period is established to be characterized by low surface water productivity, the wide distribution of sea ice and/or icebergs in this area, and a high oxygen concentration in the bottom layer. Enhanced productivity is inferred from the maximum abundance of planktonic foraminifers at the very beginning of the deglaciation. The late Bølling-Allerød interstadial and the early Holocene were marked by the further two-phase increase in the surface productivity and the weakened ventilation of the bottom water.
Climate of The Past | 2013
Lars Max; Lester Lembke-Jene; Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Ralf Tiedemann; Dirk Nürnberg; Hartmut Kühn; Andreas Mackensen
Climate of The Past | 2012
Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Dirk Nürnberg; Lars Max; Ralf Tiedemann; S. Gorbarenko; Mikhail I Malakhov
Paleoceanography | 2013
Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Lars Max; Dirk Nürnberg; Lester Lembke-Jene; Ralf Tiedemann
Derkachev, Alexander, Portnyagin, Maxim, Ponomareva, Vera, Gorbarenko, Sergey, Malakhov, Mikhail, Nürnberg, Dirk, Riethdorf, Jan-Rainer, Tiedemann, Ralf and van den Bogaard, Christel (2011) Marker tephra layers in the Holocene-Pleistocene deposits of the Bering Sea and the north-western Pacific Ocean [Poster] In: KALMAR - Second Bilateral Workshop on Russian-German Cooperation on Kurile-Kamchatka and Aleutean Marginal Sea-Island Arc Systems, 16.05.-20.05.2011, Trier. | 2011
A. N. Derkachev; Maxim Portnyagin; V. V. Ponomareva; Sergey A. Gorbarenko; Mikhail I Malakhov; Dirk Nürnberg; Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Ralf Tiedemann; Christel van den Bogaard
[Talk] In: KALMAR - Second Bilateral Workshop on Russian-German Cooperation on Kurile-Kamchatka and Aleutean Marginal Sea-Island Arc Systems, 16.05.-20.05.2011, Trier . KALMAR - Kurile-Kamchatka and Aleutean Marginal Sea - Island Arc Systems : Program and Abstracts ; Workshop in Russian-German Cooperation, May 16 - 20, 2011 Trier, Germany . | 2011
Jan-Rainer Riethdorf; Lars Max; Dirk Nürnberg; Ralf Tiedemann