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Dive into the research topics where Kees C. Welten is active.

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Featured researches published by Kees C. Welten.


Nature | 2015

Timing and climate forcing of volcanic eruptions for the past 2,500 years

M. Sigl; Mai Winstrup; Joseph R. McConnell; Kees C. Welten; Gill Plunkett; Francis Ludlow; Ulf Büntgen; Marc W. Caffee; Nathan Chellman; Dorthe Dahl-Jensen; Hubertus Fischer; Sepp Kipfstuhl; Conor Kostick; Olivia J. Maselli; Florian Mekhaldi; Robert Mulvaney; Raimund Muscheler; Daniel R. Pasteris; Jonathan R. Pilcher; Matthew W. Salzer; Simon Schüpbach; Jørgen Peder Steffensen; B. M. Vinther; Thomas E. Woodruff

Volcanic eruptions contribute to climate variability, but quantifying these contributions has been limited by inconsistencies in the timing of atmospheric volcanic aerosol loading determined from ice cores and subsequent cooling from climate proxies such as tree rings. Here we resolve these inconsistencies and show that large eruptions in the tropics and high latitudes were primary drivers of interannual-to-decadal temperature variability in the Northern Hemisphere during the past 2,500 years. Our results are based on new records of atmospheric aerosol loading developed from high-resolution, multi-parameter measurements from an array of Greenland and Antarctic ice cores as well as distinctive age markers to constrain chronologies. Overall, cooling was proportional to the magnitude of volcanic forcing and persisted for up to ten years after some of the largest eruptive episodes. Our revised timescale more firmly implicates volcanic eruptions as catalysts in the major sixth-century pandemics, famines, and socioeconomic disruptions in Eurasia and Mesoamerica while allowing multi-millennium quantification of climate response to volcanic forcing.


Science | 2012

Radar-Enabled Recovery of the Sutter’s Mill Meteorite, a Carbonaceous Chondrite Regolith Breccia

Peter Jenniskens; Marc Fries; Q.-Z. Yin; Michael E. Zolensky; Alexander N. Krot; Scott A. Sandford; Derek W. G. Sears; Robert Beauford; Denton S. Ebel; Jon M. Friedrich; Kazuhide Nagashima; Josh Wimpenny; Akane Yamakawa; Kunihiko Nishiizumi; Yasunori Hamajima; Marc W. Caffee; Kees C. Welten; M. Laubenstein; Andrew M. Davis; Steven B. Simon; Philipp R. Heck; Edward D. Young; Issaku E. Kohl; Mark H. Thiemens; Morgan H. Nunn; Takashi Mikouchi; Kenji Hagiya; Kazumasa Ohsumi; Thomas A. Cahill; Jonathan A. Lawton

The Meteor That Fell to Earth In April 2012, a meteor was witnessed over the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California. Jenniskens et al. (p. 1583) used a combination of photographic and video images of the fireball coupled with Doppler weather radar images to facilitate the rapid recovery of meteorite fragments. A comprehensive analysis of some of these fragments shows that the Sutters Mill meteorite represents a new type of carbonaceous chondrite, a rare and primitive class of meteorites that contain clues to the origin and evolution of primitive materials in the solar system. The unexpected and complex nature of the fragments suggests that the surfaces of C-class asteroids, the presumed parent bodies of carbonaceous chondrites, are more complex than previously assumed. Analysis of this rare meteorite implies that the surfaces of C-class asteroids can be more complex than previously assumed. Doppler weather radar imaging enabled the rapid recovery of the Sutter’s Mill meteorite after a rare 4-kiloton of TNT–equivalent asteroid impact over the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in northern California. The recovered meteorites survived a record high-speed entry of 28.6 kilometers per second from an orbit close to that of Jupiter-family comets (Tisserand’s parameter = 2.8 ± 0.3). Sutter’s Mill is a regolith breccia composed of CM (Mighei)–type carbonaceous chondrite and highly reduced xenolithic materials. It exhibits considerable diversity of mineralogy, petrography, and isotope and organic chemistry, resulting from a complex formation history of the parent body surface. That diversity is quickly masked by alteration once in the terrestrial environment but will need to be considered when samples returned by missions to C-class asteroids are interpreted.


Nature | 2015

Precise interpolar phasing of abrupt climate change during the last ice age

Christo Buizert; Betty M. Adrian; Jinho Ahn; Mary R. Albert; Richard B. Alley; Daniel Baggenstos; Thomas K. Bauska; R. Bay; Brian B. Bencivengo; Charles R. Bentley; Edward J. Brook; Nathan Chellman; Gary D. Clow; Jihong Cole-Dai; Howard Conway; Eric D. Cravens; Kurt M. Cuffey; Nelia W. Dunbar; Jon Edwards; John M. Fegyveresi; Dave G. Ferris; T. J. Fudge; Chris J. Gibson; Vasileios Gkinis; Joshua J. Goetz; Stephanie Gregory; Geoffrey M. Hargreaves; Nels Iverson; Jay A. Johnson; Tyler R. Jones

The last glacial period exhibited abrupt Dansgaard–Oeschger climatic oscillations, evidence of which is preserved in a variety of Northern Hemisphere palaeoclimate archives. Ice cores show that Antarctica cooled during the warm phases of the Greenland Dansgaard–Oeschger cycle and vice versa, suggesting an interhemispheric redistribution of heat through a mechanism called the bipolar seesaw. Variations in the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) strength are thought to have been important, but much uncertainty remains regarding the dynamics and trigger of these abrupt events. Key information is contained in the relative phasing of hemispheric climate variations, yet the large, poorly constrained difference between gas age and ice age and the relatively low resolution of methane records from Antarctic ice cores have so far precluded methane-based synchronization at the required sub-centennial precision. Here we use a recently drilled high-accumulation Antarctic ice core to show that, on average, abrupt Greenland warming leads the corresponding Antarctic cooling onset by 218 ± 92 years (2σ) for Dansgaard–Oeschger events, including the Bølling event; Greenland cooling leads the corresponding onset of Antarctic warming by 208 ± 96 years. Our results demonstrate a north-to-south directionality of the abrupt climatic signal, which is propagated to the Southern Hemisphere high latitudes by oceanic rather than atmospheric processes. The similar interpolar phasing of warming and cooling transitions suggests that the transfer time of the climatic signal is independent of the AMOC background state. Our findings confirm a central role for ocean circulation in the bipolar seesaw and provide clear criteria for assessing hypotheses and model simulations of Dansgaard–Oeschger dynamics.


Nature Communications | 2015

Multiradionuclide evidence for the solar origin of the cosmic-ray events of ᴀᴅ 774/5 and 993/4

Florian Mekhaldi; Raimund Muscheler; Florian Adolphi; Ala Aldahan; Juerg Beer; Joseph R. McConnell; Göran Possnert; Michael Sigl; Anders Svensson; Hans-Arno Synal; Kees C. Welten; Thomas E. Woodruff

The origin of two large peaks in the atmospheric radiocarbon (14C) concentration at AD 774/5 and 993/4 is still debated. There is consensus, however, that these features can only be explained by an increase in the atmospheric 14C production rate due to an extraterrestrial event. Here we provide evidence that these peaks were most likely produced by extreme solar events, based on several new annually resolved 10Be measurements from both Arctic and Antarctic ice cores. Using ice core 36Cl data in pair with 10Be, we further show that these solar events were characterized by a very hard energy spectrum with high fluxes of solar protons with energy above 100 MeV. These results imply that the larger of the two events (AD 774/5) was at least five times stronger than any instrumentally recorded solar event. Our findings highlight the importance of studying the possibility of severe solar energetic particle events.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 1994

AMS measurements of 10Be and 26Al for studying shielding effects in meteorites

Kees C. Welten; L. Lindner; K. van der Borg; C. Alderliesten; J.J. van Roijen; A.F.M. de Jong; L. Schultz

Abstract The 10 Be activites in 21 diogenites vary from 17 to 27 dpm/kg. These variations can primarily be ascribed to shielding effects, as was deduced from their correlation with the 22 Ne/ 21 Ne ratio. The 10 Be production rates in small diogenites are 10–30% higher than was predicted by a semi-empirical model based on the Knyahinya chondrite. This implies that 10 Be is less shielding dependent than expected. Our first AMS measurements of 26 Al in chondrites agree with earlier 26 Al γ-ray results.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2013

COSMOGENIC RADIONUCLIDES AND NOBLE GASES IN CHELYABINSK METEORITE

Kunihiko Nishiizumi; Marc W. Caffee; L. Huber; Kees C. Welten; R. Wieler

Veins of clay and carbonate in the nakhlite meteorite Lafayette formed by dissolution and replacement of olivine.NanoSIMS measurements record δD values up to +4725‰ in Lafayette which reveal martian waters of crustal origin are incorporated into the smectite and adjacent olivine.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2017

Annama H chondrite—Mineralogy, physical properties, cosmic ray exposure, and parent body history

Tomas Kohout; Jakub Haloda; Patricie Halodová; M. M. M. Meier; Colin Maden; Henner Busemann; M. Laubenstein; Marc W. Caffee; Kees C. Welten; Jens Hopp; Mario Trieloff; R. R. Mahajan; Sekhar Naik; Josep M. Trigo-Rodríguez; Carles E. Moyano-Cambero; M. I. Oshtrakh; A.A. Maksimova; Andrey V. Chukin; V. A. Semionkin; Maksim S. Karabanalov; I. Felner; Evegeniya V. Petrova; Evgeniia V. Brusnitsyna; V. I. Grokhovsky; Grigoriy A. Yakovlev; Maria Gritsevich; Esko Lyytinen; Jarmo Moilanen; Nikolai A. Kruglikov; Aleksey V. Ishchenko

The fall of the Annama meteorite occurred early morning (local time) on April 19, 2014 on the Kola Peninsula (Russia). Based on mineralogy and physical properties, Annama is a typical H chondrite. It has a high Ar-Ar age of 4.4 Ga. Its cosmic ray exposure history is atypical as it is not part of the large group of H chondrites with a prominent 7 - 8 Ma peak in the exposure age histograms. Instead, its exposure age is within uncertainty of a smaller peak at 30 \pm 4 Ma. The results from short-lived radionuclides are compatible with an atmosperic pre-entry radius of 30 - 40 cm. However, based on noble gas and cosmogenic radionuclide data, Annama must have been part of a larger body (radius >65 cm) for a large part of its cosmic ray exposure history. The 10Be concentration indicates a recent (3 - 5 Ma) breakup which may be responsible for the Annama parent body size reduction to 30 - 35 cm pre-entry radius.


European Journal of Mineralogy | 2006

Miller Butte 03002: a new rare iron meteorite (IID) from Antarctica

Massimo D'Orazio; Luigi Folco; Kees C. Welten; Marc W. Caffee; Natale Perchiazzi; Pierre Rochette

The Miller Butte (MIB) 03002 iron meteorite was found during the XIX (2003–2004) Antarctic campaign of the Italian Programma Nazionale delle Ricerche in Antartide (PNRA) in northern Victoria Land (Antarctica). MIB 03002 is classified as a medium octahedrite belonging to the rare IID chemical group, and it is the first IID iron among the 30,000 specimens so far returned from Antarctica. The bulk chemistry of this meteorite indicates that it represents an intermediate member of the differentiation series of IID irons. Polygonal kamacite, shear planes in the Widmanstatten structure and relics of cross-hatched e-structure indicate that MIB 03002 experienced important shock metamorphism (T ≥ 700 °C and P ≥ 13 GPa) and post-shock annealing, after primary cooling. With a terrestrial age of ~ 610 ka, MIB 03002 is the oldest meteorite fall in northern Victoria Land so far, and the oldest Antarctic iron found on blue ice. Possible relationships between the old terrestrial age of MIB 03002 and the regional glacial dynamics of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet in northern Victoria Land are also discussed.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 1997

Cosmic-ray exposure ages of diogenites and the recent collisional history of the howardite, eucrite and diogenite parent body/bodies

Kees C. Welten; Louis Lindner; Klaas van der Borg; T. Loeken; P. Scherer; L. Schultz


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2001

Cosmic-ray exposure history of two Frontier Mountain H-chondrite showers from spallation and neutron-capture products

Kees C. Welten; Kunihiko Nishiizumi; Jozef Masarik; Marc W. Caffee; A. J. T. Jull; S. E. Klandrud; R. Wieler

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Jozef Masarik

Comenius University in Bratislava

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M. Laubenstein

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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