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Featured researches published by Robert Moschen.


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2013

Modification of climate signals by human activities recorded in varved sediments (AD 1608–1942) of Lake Holzmaar (Germany)

Ulrike Kienel; Heinz Vos; Peter Dulski; Andreas Lücke; Robert Moschen; Norbert R Nowaczyk; Markus J. Schwab

Paleolimnological data from varved sediments in Lake Holzmaar (Eifel, Germany) were combined with documentary data on human activities, long-term data from the Historical Climate Database (HISKLID) for Germany and with recent monitoring data to evaluate changes in deposition that arose from climatic and human influences. The sediment data included seasonal layer thickness in an established varve chronology (1608–1942 AD), subannual chemical element counts, and multiannual organic matter data (TOC, TN, δ13Corg), all combined on an annual scale. Indicators for detritus deposition (lithogenic element counts and detritus layers) determined the first principal component (PC1) of the sediment data. This detritus PC1 was compared to the first PCs of the seasonal precipitation and temperature from HISKLID. While no relation was found to precipitation, the correlation with the temperature PC1 determined by spring to fall temperatures was significant. From 1608 to 1870, a positive correlation of the PCs suggests an increase of detritus deposition in the lake center with increasing non-winter temperatures. These may be linked by lake-internal sediment redeposition that increases when the periods of winter stratification become shorter and that of lake circulation longer. The detritus deposition is modulated by external detritus input depending on the intensity of erosion-conducive land use (wood pasture, wood cutting, and rotational slash-and-burn cultivation). Detritus input diminished when land use slowed down with population decrease as the consequence of plague epidemics, warfare and emigration. After 1870, forest regeneration and improving agricultural practices led to a stabilization of the catchment. Erosion and detritus deposition decreased progressively. The negative correlation of detritus deposition with the gradually increasing temperature presumably mimics a cause-effect relation, although a link with decreasing freeze–thaw action is possible. The modernization of agriculture proceeded with manuring and fertilizing, which caused an increase of lake productivity as indicated by summer blooms of diatoms with enhanced nutrient demand, increased δ13Corg values and sulfur concentrations. Within this well established data base we found combinations of criteria that may be used to deduce natural climatic or anthropogenic influences. The quantitative attribution of these influences remains a challenging task in paleolimnology because their interaction makes the detection of linking mechanisms difficult even at high degree of detail and the processes themselves remain debatable.


The Holocene | 2012

A combined pollen and δ18OSphagnum record of mid-Holocene climate variability from Dürres Maar (Eifel, Germany)

Norbert Kühl; Robert Moschen

In this study we investigate pollen and oxygen isotopes of moss cellulose from the peat bog ‘Dürres Maar’ in the Eifel low mountain range, Germany (450 m a.s.l.) to quantitatively infer mid-Holocene climate change for the period between ~7000 and 3800 cal. BP. Pollen was analysed on the same samples from which Sphagnum leaves were isolated to extract cellulose for the determination of its oxygen isotope composition (δ18O Sphagnum ). To quantitatively estimate January and July temperature and annual precipitation from the pollen data, we applied a probabilistic indicator taxa method (‘pdf-method’). The pollen-based reconstructions indicate July temperatures ~1°C higher around 6000 cal. BP than after ~5500 cal. BP, which is consistent with a ~1‰ decrease in δ18O Sphagnum during the same period. While the pollen-based climate reconstructions indicate little variability in summer temperature after ~5500 cal. BP, winter temperature shows several pronounced cold excursions of ~2–4°C in this period, which was likely accompanied by changes in precipitation patterns. Test reconstructions leaving out specific taxa indicate that not only larger climate trends, but also relatively small-scale climate variability can robustly be reconstructed with the pdf-method. This is of particular importance for reliable reconstructions of climate variability not only during the Holocene, but also in former interglacials, for which archives are rare and pollen is often the only suitable proxy in terrestrial records. The stable isotope values agree with the reconstructions based on pollen for the time between ~4500 and 3500 cal. BP, but not for the period before 4500 cal. BP. We explain this difference by atmospheric circulation patterns being different in the mid and late Holocene, respectively.


Biogeosciences | 2012

Climate-related changes in peatland carbon accumulation during the last millennium

Dan J. Charman; David W. Beilman; Maarten Blaauw; Robert K. Booth; Simon Brewer; Frank M. Chambers; J.A. Christen; Angela V. Gallego-Sala; Sandy P. Harrison; P.D.M. Hughes; Stephen T. Jackson; Atte Korhola; Dmitri Mauquoy; Fraser J.G. Mitchell; I. C. Prentice; M. van der Linden; F. De Vleeschouwer; Zicheng Yu; J. Alm; I. E. Bauer; Y. M. C. Corish; Michelle Garneau; V. Hohl; Yongsong Huang; Edgar Karofeld; G. Le Roux; Julie Loisel; Robert Moschen; Jonathan E. Nichols; Tiina M. Nieminen


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2011

Inter-laboratory comparison of oxygen isotope compositions from biogenic silica

Bernhard Chapligin; Melanie J. Leng; Elizabeth A. Webb; Anne Alexandre; Justin P. Dodd; Akira Ijiri; Andreas Lücke; Aldo Shemesh; Andrea Abelmann; Ulrike Herzschuh; Fred J. Longstaffe; Hanno Meyer; Robert Moschen; Yusuke Okazaki; Nicholas H. Rees; Zachary D. Sharp; Hilary J. Sloane; Corinne Sonzogni; George E. A. Swann; Florence Sylvestre; Jonathan J. Tyler; Ruth Yam


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2006

Transfer and early diagenesis of biogenic silica oxygen isotope signals during settling and sedimentation of diatoms in a temperate freshwater lake (Lake Holzmaar, Germany)

Robert Moschen; Andreas Lücke; Jörn Parplies; Ulrich Radtke; Gerhard H. Schleser


Chemical Geology | 2009

Stable carbon and oxygen isotopes in sub-fossil Sphagnum: Assessment of their applicability for palaeoclimatology

Robert Moschen; Norbert Kühl; Ingo Rehberger; Andreas Lücke


Quaternary International | 2012

A millennial record of environmental change in peat deposits from the Misten bog (East Belgium).

François De Vleeschouwer; Anna Pazdur; Cédric Luthers; Maurice Streel; Dmitri Mauquoy; Cécile Wastiaux; Gaël Le Roux; Robert Moschen; Maarten Blaauw; Jacek Pawlyta; Jarek Sikorski; Natalia Piotrowska


Journal of Quaternary Science | 2009

A multiproxy record of late Holocene natural and anthropogenic environmental change from the Sphagnum peat bog Dürres Maar, Germany: implications for quantitative climate reconstructions based on pollen†

Norbert Kühl; Robert Moschen; Stéphanie Wagner; Simon Brewer; Odile Peyron


Limnology and Oceanography | 2009

Controls on the seasonal and interannual dynamics of organic matter stable carbon isotopes in mesotrophic Lake Holzmaar, Germany.

Robert Moschen; Andreas Lücke; Jörn Parplies; Gerhard H. Schleser


Climate of The Past | 2011

Temperature variability at Dürres Maar, Germany during the Migration Period and at High Medieval Times, inferred from stable carbon isotopes of Sphagnum cellulose

Robert Moschen; Norbert Kühl; S. Peters; Heinz Vos; Andreas Lücke

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Andreas Lücke

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Andrea Abelmann

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Bernhard Chapligin

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Hanno Meyer

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Melanie J. Leng

British Geological Survey

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Justin P. Dodd

Northern Illinois University

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