Naohisa Nishida
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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Featured researches published by Naohisa Nishida.
Science | 2014
F. Javier Hernández-Molina; Dorrik A. V. Stow; Carlos A. Alvarez-Zarikian; Gary D Acton; André Bahr; Barbara Balestra; Emmanuelle Ducassou; Roger D. Flood; José-Abel Flores; Satoshi Furota; Patrick Grunert; David A. Hodell; Francisco J Jiménez-Espejo; J.K. Kim; Lawrence A. Krissek; Junichiro Kuroda; B. Li; Estefanía Llave; Johanna Lofi; Lucas J. Lourens; M. Miller; Futoshi Nanayama; Naohisa Nishida; Carl Richter; Cristina Roque; Hélder Pereira; María Fernanda Sánchez Goñi; Francisco Javier Sierro; Arun Deo Singh; Craig R. Sloss
The when of Mediterranean water outflow The trickle of water that began to flow from the Mediterranean Sea into the Atlantic Ocean after the opening of the Strait of Gibraltar turned into a veritable flood by the end of the Pliocene 2 to 3 million years ago. It then began to influence large-scale ocean circulation in earnest. Hernández-Molina et al. describe marine sediment cores collected by an ocean drilling expedition (see the Perspective by Filippelli). The results reveal a detailed history of the timing of Mediterranean outflow water activity and show how the addition of that warm saline water to the cooler less-salty waters of the Atlantic was related to climate changes, deep ocean circulation, and plate tectonics. Science, this issue p. 1244; see also p. 1228 Mediterranean outflow water began to enter the Atlantic and influence global ocean circulation by the late Pliocene. [Also see Perspective by Filippelli] Sediments cored along the southwestern Iberian margin during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 339 provide constraints on Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW) circulation patterns from the Pliocene epoch to the present day. After the Strait of Gibraltar opened (5.33 million years ago), a limited volume of MOW entered the Atlantic. Depositional hiatuses indicate erosion by bottom currents related to higher volumes of MOW circulating into the North Atlantic, beginning in the late Pliocene. The hiatuses coincide with regional tectonic events and changes in global thermohaline circulation (THC). This suggests that MOW influenced Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), THC, and climatic shifts by contributing a component of warm, saline water to northern latitudes while in turn being influenced by plate tectonics.
Cretaceous Research | 2006
Masaki Matsukawa; Makoto Ito; Naohisa Nishida; Kazuto Koarai; Martin G. Lockley; Douglas J. Nichols
Sedimentology | 2014
Makoto Ito; Kazuaki Ishikawa; Naohisa Nishida
Marine Geology | 2013
Naohisa Nishida; Makoto Ito; Atsuyuki Inoue; Shigeru Takizawa
Sedimentary Geology | 2013
Naohisa Nishida; Ken Ikehara
Journal of the Geological Society of Japan | 2009
Naohisa Nishida; Makoto Ito
Cretaceous Research | 2008
Masaki Matsukawa; Makoto Ito; Naohisa Nishida; Kazuto Koarai; Martin G. Lockley
Quaternary International | 2016
Naohisa Nishida; Osamu Kazaoka; Kentaro Izumi; Yusuke Suganuma; Makoto Okada; Itaru Ogitsu; Hiroomi Nakazato; Shun Kameyama; Atsushi Kagawa; Masaaki Morisaki; Hisashi Nirei
Sedimentology | 2016
Yoshihiro Kase; Maromi Sato; Naohisa Nishida; Makoto Ito; Muhammad Ma'ruf Mukti; Ken Ikehara; Shigeru Takizawa
Marine Geology | 2016
Naohisa Nishida