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Dive into the research topics where Kirstin Werner is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirstin Werner.


Science | 2011

Enhanced Modern Heat Transfer to the Arctic by Warm Atlantic Water

Robert F. Spielhagen; Kirstin Werner; Steffen Aagaard Sørensen; Katarzyna Zamelczyk; Evguenia Kandiano; Gereon Budéus; Katrine Husum; Thomas M. Marchitto; Morten Hald

Water flow from the Atlantic Ocean into the Arctic through the Fram Strait is warmer than at any time in the past 2000 years. The Arctic is responding more rapidly to global warming than most other areas on our planet. Northward-flowing Atlantic Water is the major means of heat advection toward the Arctic and strongly affects the sea ice distribution. Records of its natural variability are critical for the understanding of feedback mechanisms and the future of the Arctic climate system, but continuous historical records reach back only ~150 years. Here, we present a multidecadal-scale record of ocean temperature variations during the past 2000 years, derived from marine sediments off Western Svalbard (79°N). We find that early–21st-century temperatures of Atlantic Water entering the Arctic Ocean are unprecedented over the past 2000 years and are presumably linked to the Arctic amplification of global warming.


Polar Research | 2015

Variability in transport of terrigenous material on the shelves and the deep Arctic Ocean during the Holocene

Carolyn Wegner; Katrina E. Bennett; Anne de Vernal; Matthias Forwick; Michael Fritz; Maija Heikkilä; Magdalena Łacka; Hugues Lantuit; Michał Laska; Mateusz Moskalik; Matthew O'Regan; Joanna Pawłowska; Agnieszka Promińska; Volker Rachold; Jorien E. Vonk; Kirstin Werner

Arctic coastal zones serve as a sensitive filter for terrigenous matter input onto the shelves via river discharge and coastal erosion. This material is further distributed across the Arctic by ocean currents and sea ice. The coastal regions are particularly vulnerable to changes related to recent climate change. We compiled a pan-Arctic review that looks into the changing Holocene sources, transport processes and sinks of terrigenous sediment in the Arctic Ocean. Existing palaeoceanographic studies demonstrate how climate warming and the disappearance of ice sheets during the early Holocene initiated eustatic sea-level rise that greatly modified the physiography of the Arctic Ocean. Sedimentation rates over the shelves and slopes were much greater during periods of rapid sea-level rise in the early and middle Holocene, as a result of the relative distance to the terrestrial sediment sources. However, estimates of suspended sediment delivery through major Arctic rivers do not indicate enhanced delivery during this time, which suggests enhanced rates of coastal erosion. The increased supply of terrigenous material to the outer shelves and deep Arctic Ocean in the early and middle Holocene might serve as analogous to forecast changes in the future Arctic.


Spielhagen, Robert F., Müller, Juliane, Wagner, Axel, Werner, Kirstin, Lohmann, Gerrit, Prange, Matthias and Stein, Rüdiger (2014) Holocene Environmental Variability in the Arctic Gateway Integrated Analysis of Interglacial Climate Dynamics (INTERDYNAMIC). SpringerBriefs in Earth System Sciences . Springer, Berlin (u.a.), pp. 37-42. ISBN 978-3-319-00693-2 DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-00693-2_7 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00693-2_7>. | 2015

Holocene Environmental Variability in the Arctic Gateway

Robert F. Spielhagen; Juliane Müller; Axel Wagner; Kirstin Werner; Gerrit Lohmann; Matthias Prange; Rüdiger Stein

Environmental changes in the region connecting the Arctic Ocean and the northern North Atlantic were studied for the last 9,000 years (9 ka) by a combination of proxy-based paleoceanographic reconstructions as well as transient and time-slice simulations with climate models. Today, the area is perennially ice-covered in the west and ice-free in the east. Results show that sea-ice conditions were highly variable on short timescales in the last 9 ka. However, sea-ice proxies reveal an overall eastward movement of the sea-ice margin, in line with a decreasing influence of warm Atlantic Water advected to the Arctic Ocean. These cooling trends were rapidly reversed 100 years ago and replaced by the general warming in the Arctic. Model results show a consistently high freshwater input to the Arctic Ocean during the last 7 ka. The signal is robust against the Holocene cooling trend, however sensitive towards the warming trend of the last century. These results may play a role in the observed Arctic changes.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2012

Holocene cooling culminates in sea ice oscillations in Fram Strait

Juliane Müller; Kirstin Werner; Ruediger Stein; Kirsten Fahl; Matthias Moros; Eystein Jansen


Paleoceanography | 2013

Atlantic Water advection versus sea‐ice advances in the eastern Fram Strait during the last 9 ka: Multiproxy evidence for a two‐phase Holocene

Kirstin Werner; Robert F. Spielhagen; Dorothea Bauch; H. Christian Hass; Evgeniya Kandiano


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2011

Atlantic Water advection to the eastern Fram Strait – multiproxy evidence for late Holocene variability

Kirstin Werner; Robert F. Spielhagen; Dorothea Bauch; H. Christian Hass; Evgeniya Kandiano; Katarzyna Zamelczyk


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

Holocene sea subsurface and surface water masses in the Fram Strait – Comparisons of temperature and sea-ice reconstructions

Kirstin Werner; Juliane Müller; Katrine Husum; Robert F. Spielhagen; Evgeniya Kandiano; Leonid Polyak


Boreas | 2010

A 12.5-kyr history of vegetation dynamics and mire development with evidence of Younger Dryas larch presence in the Verkhoyansk Mountains, East Siberia, Russia.

Kirstin Werner; Pavel E. Tarasov; Andrei Andreev; Stefanie-Katharina Müller; Frank Kienast; Michael Zech; Wolfgang Zech; Bernhard Diekmann


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2014

Neoglacial change in deep water exchange and increase of sea-ice transport through eastern Fram Strait: evidence from radiogenic isotopes

Kirstin Werner; Martin Frank; Claudia Teschner; Juliane Müller; Robert F. Spielhagen


Marine Geology | 2014

A Late Glacial-Early Holocene multiproxy record from the eastern Fram Strait, Polar North Atlantic

Steffen Aagaard-Sørensen; Katrine Husum; Kirstin Werner; Robert F. Spielhagen; Morten Hald; Thomas M. Marchitto

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Katrine Husum

Norwegian Polar Institute

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Juliane Müller

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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H. Christian Hass

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Matthias Moros

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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Ruediger Stein

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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