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Featured researches published by Laura Gemery.


Nature Communications | 2016

Evidence for an ice shelf covering the central Arctic Ocean during the penultimate glaciation

Martin Jakobsson; Johan Nilsson; Leif G. Anderson; Jan Backman; Göran Björk; Thomas M. Cronin; Nina Kirchner; Andrey Koshurnikov; Larry A. Mayer; Riko Noormets; Matthew O'Regan; Christian Stranne; R. A. Ananiev; Natalia Barrientos Macho; Dennis Cherniykh; H.K. Coxall; Björn Eriksson; Tom Flodén; Laura Gemery; Örjan Gustafsson; Kevin W. Jerram; Carina Johansson; Alexey Khortov; Rezwan Mohammad; Igor Semiletov

The hypothesis of a km-thick ice shelf covering the entire Arctic Ocean during peak glacial conditions was proposed nearly half a century ago. Floating ice shelves preserve few direct traces after their disappearance, making reconstructions difficult. Seafloor imprints of ice shelves should, however, exist where ice grounded along their flow paths. Here we present new evidence of ice-shelf groundings on bathymetric highs in the central Arctic Ocean, resurrecting the concept of an ice shelf extending over the entire central Arctic Ocean during at least one previous ice age. New and previously mapped glacial landforms together reveal flow of a spatially coherent, in some regions >1-km thick, central Arctic Ocean ice shelf dated to marine isotope stage 6 (∼140 ka). Bathymetric highs were likely critical in the ice-shelf development by acting as pinning points where stabilizing ice rises formed, thereby providing sufficient back stress to allow ice shelf thickening.


Hydrobiologia | 2017

An Arctic and Subarctic ostracode database: biogeographic and paleoceanographic applications

Laura Gemery; Thomas M. Cronin; William M. Briggs; Elisabeth M. Brouwers; Eugene I. Schornikov; Anna Stepanova; Adrian M. Wood; Moriaki Yasuhara

A new Arctic Ostracode Database-2015 (AOD-2015) provides census data for 96 species of benthic marine Ostracoda from 1340 modern surface sediments from the Arctic Ocean and subarctic seas. Ostracoda is a meiofaunal, Crustacea group that secretes a bivalved calcareous (CaCO3) shell commonly preserved in sediments. Arctic and subarctic ostracode species have ecological limits controlled by temperature, salinity, oxygen, sea ice, food, and other habitat-related factors. Unique species ecology, shell chemistry (Mg/Ca ratios, stable isotopes), and limited stratigraphic ranges make them a useful tool for paleoceanographic reconstructions and biostratigraphy. The database, described here, will facilitate the investigation of modern ostracode biogeography, regional community structure, and ecology. These data, when compared to downcore faunal data from sediment cores, will provide a better understanding of how the Arctic has been affected by climatic and oceanographic change during the Quaternary. Images of all species and biogeographic distribution maps for selected species are presented, with brief discussion of representative species’ biogeographic and ecological significance. Publication of AOD-2015 is open-sourced and will be available online at several public websites with latitude, longitude, water depth, and bottom water temperature for most samples. It includes material from Arctic abyssal plains and submarine ridges, continental slopes, and shelves of the Kara, Laptev, East Siberian, Chukchi, Beaufort Seas, and several subarctic regions.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Enhanced Arctic Amplification Began at the Mid-Brunhes Event ~400,000 years ago

Thomas M. Cronin; Gary S. Dwyer; Emma K. Caverly; Jesse Farmer; Lauren H. DeNinno; Julio Rodríguez-Lázaro; Laura Gemery

Arctic Ocean temperatures influence ecosystems, sea ice, species diversity, biogeochemical cycling, seafloor methane stability, deep-sea circulation, and CO2 cycling. Today’s Arctic Ocean and surrounding regions are undergoing climatic changes often attributed to “Arctic amplification” – that is, amplified warming in Arctic regions due to sea-ice loss and other processes, relative to global mean temperature. However, the long-term evolution of Arctic amplification is poorly constrained due to lack of continuous sediment proxy records of Arctic Ocean temperature, sea ice cover and circulation. Here we present reconstructions of Arctic Ocean intermediate depth water (AIW) temperatures and sea-ice cover spanning the last ~ 1.5 million years (Ma) of orbitally-paced glacial/interglacial cycles (GIC). Using Mg/Ca paleothermometry of the ostracode Krithe and sea-ice planktic and benthic indicator species, we suggest that the Mid-Brunhes Event (MBE), a major climate transition ~ 400–350 ka, involved fundamental changes in AIW temperature and sea-ice variability. Enhanced Arctic amplification at the MBE suggests a major climate threshold was reached at ~ 400 ka involving Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), inflowing warm Atlantic Layer water, ice sheet, sea-ice and ice-shelf feedbacks, and sensitivity to higher post-MBE interglacial CO2 concentrations.


Climate of The Past | 2017

Central Arctic Ocean paleoceanography from ∼ 50 ka to present, on the basis of ostracode faunal assemblages from the SWERUS 2014 expedition

Laura Gemery; Thomas M. Cronin; Robert K. Poirier; Christof Pearce; Natalia Barrientos; Matthew O'Regan; Carina Johansson; Andrey Koshurnikov; Martin Jakobsson

Late Quaternary paleoceanographic changes at the Lomonosov Ridge, central Arctic Ocean, were reconstructed from a multicore and gravity core recovered during the 2014 SWERUS-C3 Expedition. Ostracode assemblages dated by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) indicate changing sea-ice conditions and warm Atlantic Water (AW) inflow to the Arctic Ocean from ∼ 50 ka to present. Key taxa used as environmental indicators include Acetabulastoma arcticum (perennial sea ice), Polycope spp. (variable seaice margins, high surface productivity), Krithe hunti (Arctic Ocean deep water), and Rabilimis mirabilis (water mass change/AW inflow). Results indicate periodic seasonally seaice-free conditions during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 (∼ 57–29 ka), rapid deglacial changes in water mass conditions (15–11 ka), seasonally sea-ice-free conditions during the early Holocene (∼ 10–7 ka) and perennial sea ice during the late Holocene. Comparisons with faunal records from other cores from the Mendeleev and Lomonosov ridges suggest generally similar patterns, although sea-ice cover during the Last Glacial Maximum may have been less extensive at the new Lomonosov Ridge core site (∼ 85.15 N, 152 E) than farther north and towards Greenland. The new data provide evidence for abrupt, large-scale shifts in ostracode species depth and geographical distributions during rapid climatic transitions.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2010

Quaternary Sea-ice history in the Arctic Ocean based on a new Ostracode sea-ice proxy

Thomas M. Cronin; Laura Gemery; W. M. Briggs; Martin Jakobsson; Leonid Polyak; E. M. Brouwers


Climate of The Past | 2016

The 3.6 ka Aniakchak tephra in the Arctic Ocean: a constraint on the Holocene radiocarbon reservoir age in the Chukchi Sea

Christof Pearce; Aron Varhelyi; Stefan Wastegård; Francesco Muschitiello; Natalia Barrientos; Matthew O'Regan; Thomas M. Cronin; Laura Gemery; Igor Semiletov; Jan Backman; Martin Jakobsson


Climate of The Past | 2017

Deglacial sea level history of the East Siberian Sea and Chukchi Sea margins

Thomas M. Cronin; Matthew O'Regan; Christof Pearce; Laura Gemery; Michael R. Toomey; Igor Semiletov; Martin Jakobsson


Climate of The Past Discussions | 2017

Deglacial sea-level history of the East Siberian Sea Margin

Thomas M. Cronin; Matthew O'Regan; Christof Pearce; Laura Gemery; Michael R. Toomey; Igor Semiletov; Martin Jakobsson


Climate of The Past | 2017

The De Long Trough: a newly discovered glacial trough on the East Siberian continental margin

Matthew O'Regan; Jan Backman; Natalia Barrientos; Thomas M. Cronin; Laura Gemery; Nina Kirchner; Larry A. Mayer; Johan Nilsson; Riko Noormets; Christof Pearce; Igor Semiletov; Christian Stranne; Martin Jakobsson


Archive | 2010

Arctic Ostracode Database 2010

Thomas M. Cronin; Laura Gemery; Elisabeth M. Brouwers; William M. Briggs; Adrian M. Wood; Anna Stepanova; Eugene I. Schornikov; J. Farmer; K.E.S. Smith

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Thomas M. Cronin

Louisiana State University

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Elisabeth M. Brouwers

United States Geological Survey

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William M. Briggs

University of Colorado Boulder

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Igor Semiletov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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