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Dive into the research topics where Shirley A van Kreveld is active.

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Featured researches published by Shirley A van Kreveld.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2002

Apparent long-term cooling of the sea surface in the northeast Atlantic and Mediterranean during the Holocene.

Olivier Marchal; Isabel Cacho; Thomas F. Stocker; Joan O. Grimalt; Eva María Calvo; Belen Martrat; Nicholas J Shackleton; Maryline J. Vautravers; Elsa Cortijo; Shirley A van Kreveld; Carin Andersson; Nalan Koc; Mark R. Chapman; Laura Sbaffi; Jean-Claude Duplessy; Michael Sarnthein; Jean-Louis Turon; Josette Duprat; Eystein Jansen

Reconstructions of upper ocean temperature (T) during the Holocene (10–0 ka B.P.) were established using the alkenone method from seven, high accumulation sediment cores raised from the northeast Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea (361N–751N). All these paleo-T records document an apparent long-term cooling during the last 10 kyr. In records with indication of a constant trend, the apparent cooling ranges from � 0.27 to � 0.151C kyr � 1 . Records with indication of time-variable trend show peak-to-peak amplitudes in apparent temperatures of 1.2–2.91C. A principal component analysis shows that there is one factor which accounts for a very large fraction (67%) of the total variance in the biomarker paleo-T records and which dominates these records over other potential secondary influences. Two possible contributions are (1) a widespread surface cooling, which may be associated with the transition fromthe Hypsithermal interval ( B9–5.7 ka B.P.) to the Neoglaciation (B5.7–0 ka B.P.); and (2) a change in the seasonal timing and/or duration of the growth period of alkenone producers (prymnesiophyte algae). The first contribution is consistent with many climate proxy records from the northeast Atlantic area and with climate model simulations including Milankovitch forcing. The second contribution is consistent with the divergence between biomarker and summer faunal paleo-T fromearly to late Holocene observed in two cores. Further work is necessary, and in particular the apparent discordance between biomarker and faunal T records for the relative stable Holocene period must be understood, to better constrain the climatic and ecological contributions to the apparent cooling observed in the former records. r 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.


EPIC3In: Schäfer P., Ritzrau W., Schlüter M., Thiede J. (eds) The northern North Atlantic: A Changing Environment, Springer, Berlin, pp. 364-410 | 2001

Fundamental Modes and Abrupt Changes in North Atlantic Circulation and Climate over the last 60 ky — Concepts, Reconstruction and Numerical Modeling

Michael Sarnthein; Karl Stattegger; Derek Dreger; Helmut Erlenkeuser; Pieter Meiert Grootes; B. Haupt; Simon Jung; Thorsten Kiefer; Wolfgang Kuhnt; Uwe Pflaumann; Christian Schäfer-Neth; Hartmut Schulz; Michael Schulz; Dan Seidov; J. Simstich; Shirley A van Kreveld; Elke Vogelsang; Antje Völker; Mara Weinelt

Centennial- to millennial-scale changes in global climate over the last 60 ky were first documented in ice cores from Greenland, with ice sheets around the North Atlantic and its thermohaline circulation (THC) as prime candidates for a potential trigger mechanism. To reach a new quality in understanding the origin and causal links behind these changes, two strategies were intimately tied together in this synthesis, high-resolution 3-D ocean modeling and paleoceanographic reconstructions. Here, five time series with a time resolution of several decades and various time slices of surface and deep-water paleoceanography were established from hundreds of deep-sea cores for the purpose of monitoring rapid changes across the North Atlantic and testing or initiating model results. Three fundamental modes were found to operate Atlantic THC. Today, mode I shows intensive formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and strong heat and moisture fluxes to the continents adjacent to the North Atlantic. Peak glacial mode II leads to a reduction in NADW formation by 30-50%, in line with a clear drop in heat flux to Europe. The glacial Nordic Seas, however, remain ice-free during summer and little influenced by meltwater, in contrast to the sea west ofIreland, where iceberg meltwater blocks an eastbound flow into the Norwegian Sea and induces a cold longshore current from Faeroe to the Pyrenees. The subsequent Heinrich 1 (HI) meltwater mode III leads to an entire stop in NADW and intermediate-water production as well as a reversed pattern of THC, stopping any heat advection from the central and South Atlantic to the north. In contrast to earlier views, the Younger Dryas, possibly induced by Siberian meltwater, began with mode I and ended with mode III, continuing into the Preboreal. Modeling the impact of modes I to III on the global carbon budget, we find that the atmosphere has lost 34-54 ppmv CO2 from interglacial to glacial times, but has gained 23-62 ppmv CO2 at the end of HI within a few decades, equivalent to 33-90% of modem, man-made CO2 release. The robust 1500-y Dansgaard- Oeschger (D-O) cycles and their multiples of as much as 7200 years, the Heinrich event cycles, are tied to periodical changes between THC modes I/II and II/III. In the Irminger Sea rapid D-O coolings are in phase with initial meltwater injections from glaciers on East Greenland, here suggesting an internal trigger process in accordance with binge-purge models. Ice rafting from East Greenland and Iceland occurs only 240-280 y later, probably inducing a slight sea-level rise and, in tum, Heinrich ice rafting from the Laurentian ice sheet during H1, H2, H4, H5. At H1 a major surge from the Barents shelf has lagged initial cooling by 1500 y and entails the most prominent and extended reversal in Atlantic THC over the last 60 ky (probably also at the end of glacial stage 4, at H6). Meltwater stratification in the Inninger Sea reaches its maximum only 640 y after initial meltwater injection and induces, via seasonal sea-ice formation, brine-water injections down to 4 km water depth, signals leading the classic D-O jump to maximum warmth by only 125 y. It may be inferred from this short-phase lag that brine water-controlled deep-water formation probably entrains warm water from further south, thereby forming the key trigger mechanism for the final tum-on of the Atlantic THC mode II roughly within a decade (or mode I, in case of favorable Milankovitch forcing).


Organic Geochemistry | 2003

Climatic dependence of the organic matter contributions in the north eastern Norwegian Sea over the last 15,000 years

Belen Martrat; Joan O. Grimalt; Joan Villanueva; Shirley A van Kreveld; Michael Sarnthein

Abstract Lipids are used for the evaluation of the different organic matter contributions in the north eastern Norwegian Sea (M23258 site, 75°N, 14°E) over the last 15,000 years. Development of a mass balance model based on the down-core quantification of the C 37 alkenones, the odd carbon numbered n -alkanes (A odd ) and the unresolved complex mixture of hydrocarbons (UCM) has allowed three main organic matter inputs involving marine, continental and ancient reworked organic matter to be recognized. The model shows good agreement between measured and reconstructed TOC values. Similarly, a strong parallelism is observed between predicted components such as marine TOC and carbonate content, which was determined independently. Representation of the model results within a time scale based on 15 AMS- 14 C measurements shows that the main changes in organic matter constituents are coincident with the major climatic events of the last 15,000 years. Thus, the predominance of reworked organic matter is characteristic of Termination Ia (up to 70%), continental organic matter was dominant during the Bolling-Allerod (B-A) and Younger Dryas (YD) periods (about 85%) and a strong increase of marine organic matter occurred in the Holocene (between 50 and 75%). This agreement reflects the main hydrographic changes that determined the deposition of sedimentary materials between 0 and 15 cal ka: ice-rafted detritus from the Barents continental platform, ice-melting waters from the Arctic fluvial system discharging into the Barents Sea and dominance of North Atlantic currents, respectively. In this respect, the high-resolution down-core record resulting from the mass balance and lipid measurements allows for the identification of millennial scale events such as the increase of reworked organic matter at the final retreat of the Barents ice sheet at the end of the deglaciation period (Termination Ib).


In Supplement to: Sarnthein, Michael; van Kreveld, Shirley A; Erlenkeuser, Helmut; Grootes, Pieter Meiert; Kucera, Michal; Pflaumann, Uwe; Schulz, Michael (2003): Centennial-to-millennial-scale periodicities of Holocene climate and sediment injections off western Barents shelf, 75°N. Boreas, 32(3), 447-461, doi:10.1111/j.1502-3885.2003.tb01227.x | 2003

Distribution of foraminifera of sediment core GIK23258-2

Michael Sarnthein; Shirley A van Kreveld; Helmut Erlenkeuser; Pieter Meiert Grootes; Michal Kucera; Uwe Pflaumann; Michael Schulz


Supplement to: Sarnthein, Michael; van Kreveld, Shirley A; Erlenkeuser, Helmut; Grootes, Pieter Meiert; Kucera, Michal; Pflaumann, Uwe; Schulz, Michael (2003): Centennial-to-millennial-scale periodicities of Holocene climate and sediment injections off western Barents shelf, 75°N. Boreas, 32(3), 447-461, doi:10.1111/j.1502-3885.2003.tb01227.x | 2003

Sedimentology and geochemistry of core GIK23258-2 in the Barents Sea

Michael Sarnthein; Shirley A van Kreveld; Helmut Erlenkeuser; Pieter Meiert Grootes; Michal Kucera; Uwe Pflaumann; Michael Schulz


Supplement to: Martrat, B et al. (2003): Climatic dependence of organic matter contributions in the north eastern Norwegian Sea over the last 15,000 years. Organic Geochemistry, 34(8), 1057-1070, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0146-6380(03)00084-6 | 2003

Temporal evolution of organic carbon and lipid content and derived SST of sediment core GIK23258-2, Norwegian Sea

Belen Martrat; Joan O Grimalt; Joan Villanueva; Shirley A van Kreveld; Michael Sarnthein


In supplement to: Sarnthein, M et al. (2003): Centennial-to-millennial-scale periodicities of Holocene climate and sediment injections off western Barents shelf, 75°N. Boreas, 32(3), 447-461, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1502-3885.2003.tb01227.x | 2003

(Table 1) Age determination of sediment cores GIK23258-2/-3

Michael Sarnthein; Shirley A van Kreveld; Helmut Erlenkeuser; Pieter Meiert Grootes; Michal Kucera; Uwe Pflaumann; Michael Schulz


In supplement to: Sarnthein, M et al. (2003): Centennial-to-millennial-scale periodicities of Holocene climate and sediment injections off western Barents shelf, 75°N. Boreas, 32(3), 447-461, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1502-3885.2003.tb01227.x | 2003

Sea surface temperatures of sediment core GIK23258-2

Michael Sarnthein; Shirley A van Kreveld; Helmut Erlenkeuser; Pieter Meiert Grootes; Michal Kucera; Uwe Pflaumann; Michael Schulz


In supplement to: Sarnthein, M et al. (2003): Centennial-to-millennial-scale periodicities of Holocene climate and sediment injections off western Barents shelf, 75°N. Boreas, 32(3), 447-461, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1502-3885.2003.tb01227.x | 2003

Sedimentation rates of sediment core GIK23258-2

Michael Sarnthein; Shirley A van Kreveld; Helmut Erlenkeuser; Pieter Meiert Grootes; Michal Kucera; Uwe Pflaumann; Michael Schulz


In supplement to: Sarnthein, M et al. (2003): Centennial-to-millennial-scale periodicities of Holocene climate and sediment injections off western Barents shelf, 75°N. Boreas, 32(3), 447-461, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1502-3885.2003.tb01227.x | 2003

Power spectral density of 6-10 kyr BP of sediment core GIK23258-2

Michael Sarnthein; Shirley A van Kreveld; Helmut Erlenkeuser; Pieter Meiert Grootes; Michal Kucera; Uwe Pflaumann; Michael Schulz

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