Teresa Drago
University of Lisbon
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Teresa Drago.
Progress in Oceanography | 2002
J. Vitorino; Anabela Oliveira; Jean-Marie Jouanneau; Teresa Drago
Results of a program of observations carried out on the northern Portuguese shelf and slope, between July 1996 and June 1999 are used to characterise the main physical processes of the winter regime. The data set includes time series of waves and currents at mid-shelf (86 m depth) and of winds, atmospheric pressure and sea level at the coast, as well as hydrographic and suspended particle matter (SPM) observations carried during three multidisciplinary surveys. The wave regime was found to be characterised by highly energetic conditions during the winter, with storm events leading to waves of significant heights exceeding 5 m with mean periods of over 10 s. Prevailing southerly winds force a downwelling regime over the shelf with poleward flow at mid-shelf (~10–20 cm/s) and offshore transport in the bottom Ekman layer. Episodic strong upwelling events can occur during this period, leading to important changes in the near bottom stratification at mid-shelf. Tidal currents at mid-shelf are dominated by the contribution of the M2 tide (~3 cm/s) and are polarised in the cross-shelf direction, reflecting the guiding effect of the Porto Canyon.
Progress in Oceanography | 2002
João Alveirinho Dias; Jean-Marie Jouanneau; Ramon Gonzalez; M.F. Araújo; Teresa Drago; C. Garcia; Anabela Oliveira; Aurora Rodrigues; J. Vitorino; Olivier Weber
Abstract The Galicia-Minho Shelf features two large mud patches, the Douro and the Galicia Mud patches. These are recent sediment bodies that have accumulated under a combination of conditions including: (1) abundant supplies of sediment; (2) morphological barriers that act as sediment traps; and (3) hydrographic conditions that favour the accumulation of fine sediment in these sinks. This paper describes the mechanisms controlling the deposition of the fine-grained sediment depositions and the processes that result in resuspension processes on the Galicia-Minho Shelf. Fine-grained sediments are provided from discharges from the river basins on the southern sector of the shelf, mainly the Douro and Minho rivers. Sediments are exported from river estuaries onto the shelf during episodic flood events. In contrast, most of the sediments originating from the Galician hinterland fail to contribute significantly to sedimentation on the shelf, because they are retained in the Galician Rias, which function as sediment traps. Sediments deposited on the shelf are frequently remobilized, particularly during southwesterly storms that coincide with downwelling conditions. Once in suspension the fine-grained sediments are transported northwards by the poleward flowing bottom currents and are eventually deposited on the Douro and Galicia Mud patches after a series of resuspension events. The locations of the two mud patches are strongly influenced by the shelf morphology. Fines already deposited on the mud patches are occasionally reintroduced into the system by large storm events. Some material from the Douro Mud patch and adjacent areas is re-deposited in the Galicia Mud patch. It is probable that sediments re-suspended from the Galicia Mud patch are carried off the shelf when storm events coincide with downwelling conditions.
Progress in Oceanography | 2002
Jean-Marie Jouanneau; Olivier Weber; Teresa Drago; Aurora Rodrigues; Anabela Oliveira; João Alveirinho Dias; C. Garcia; Sabine Schmidt; J. L. Reyss
Abstract Thus study is based on 31 box-core samples collected mainly from the mud-patches of the Galician and North-Portuguese shelf. Each of these cores, some decimetres in length, have been described, radiographied and sampled each centimetre for grain-size analysis and measurement of the particulate organic carbon (Corg) content. 210Pb excess profiles have been measured using gamma spectrometry, which, combined with the analysis of the vertical variations of the sedimentary facies, have allowed estimates of sedimentation rates. These rates were found to vary between 0.05 and 0.40 cm yr−1. Considering the latitudinal variation of sedimentation rates around the 100m contour, we note that the maximum rates occurred off the Douro estuary in the southern sector and also near the Galician rias to the north. The organic content (Corg) of sediments varied between 0.4 and 2%. Latitudinally Corg showed a decrease from the South to the North. These results coupled with the sedimentary map (see Dias, Gonzalez, Garcia & Diaz del Rio, 2001 ) have permitted us to establish the detrital mass budget and an inventory of Corg burial.
Progress in Oceanography | 2002
J. Vitorino; Álvaro Oliveira; Jean-Marie Jouanneau; Teresa Drago
Abstract The northern Portuguese shelf, between 41°N and 42°N, is characterised by the presence of a mid-shelf mud deposit, the Douro Mud Patch (DMP). Observations conducted between July 1996 and June 1999 under the framework of project OMEX II–II, are used to examine the impact of the dynamic processes in the lower water column, particularly on the DMP. The typical wave conditions observed during the winter maintain a highly energetic environment, capable of promoting the erosion of fine sediments at mid-shelf depths. However, the bottom nepheloid layers generated beneath these waves only extend a few meters above the bottom and are contained within rocky outcrops with similar heights that fringe the outer shelf. Each year there are about ten storms, mostly associated with southerly winds that create downwelling conditions over the shelf. The waves associated with these storms produce shear velocities over 3 cm/s at mid-shelf and bottom nepheloid layers which extend a few tens of meters above the bottom and spread offshore, over the outer shelf and upper slope. A rough estimate suggests that these events account for an offshore export of about 20×10 6 kg of fine sediments each year (equivalent to 1–2% of sediments trapped at DMP).
Oceanologica Acta | 1998
Teresa Drago; Anabela Oliveira; Fernando Magalhães; João Cascalho; Jean-Marie Jouanneau; João Vitorino
Abstract On the basis of sedimentological and oceanographical data, a transport scheme for fine-grained material is proposed in order to explain the location of a muddy deposit present in the northern Portuguese continental shelf, north-west off the Douro River mouth. This mid-shelf deposit is recent, active and its main source is apparently the Douro River. The sediment supply can be related with the oceanographic conditions in winter regime, characterised by a poleward along-shelf current with a bottom westward component, as a consequence of a south-west wind. The resulting fine sediment transport, essentially made in the bottom nepheloid layer, is believed to have a north-west direction.
Journal of Coastal Research | 2007
Filipa Naughton; María Fernanda Sánchez Goñi; Teresa Drago; M. C. Freitas; Anabela Oliveira
Abstract Holocene changes are recorded by sedimentology and palynology on a 20 m long core retrieved in the mouth of the Douro estuary (northwestern Portugal). Results show that the early Holocene (10720–6530 calibrated [cal] YBP) was characterized by a warm and humid climate as testified by a well-established Pinus–Quercus–Alnus regional forest. Shelf and slope foraminifera assemblages as well as echinoderms gradually increased toward the end of this period, reflecting the sea-level rise that occurred between 11500 and 6000 cal yr BP. A gravel barrier developed in the southern part of the estuary as a result of sea-level rise attenuation and strong hydrodynamism of the river. A radical change from regional fluvially transported pollen assemblages (mainly composed of trees) to pollen spectra derived from local vegetation (mainly Ericaceae and Poaceae) occurred between 6530 and 1500 cal yr BP, contemporaneously to the settlement of the gravel barrier. This suggests that the northward migration of the river main channel, already testified by the existence of a palaeovalley with its axis located southward of the present main channel, occurred as early as 6530 cal yr BP.
The Holocene | 2013
Eduardo Leorri; Francisco Fatela; Teresa Drago; Sarah L. Bradley; João Moreno; Alejandro Cearreta
The absence of accurate sea-level index points in SW Europe has long precluded the development of Holocene sea-level curves and the correct understanding of tectonic activity. In order to understand the coastal evolution and the major drivers in the Minho area, Portugal, we have combined micropaleontological and sedimentological data, where the chronological framework is provided by 13 radiocarbon ages. The stratigraphic reconstruction is in agreement with regional models of evolution and provides new sea-level index points that support a regional isostatic model producing the first complete Holocene sea-level curve from this area. Field data and model reconstructions present a good agreement for the region considered and vertical land movement estimates derived from the isostatic model are in agreement with GPS vertical velocities. At regional scale, our results support a north–south trend for SW Europe, where isostatic rebound seems to be minimized in the south of the Iberian Peninsula while local factors (sedimentation, local geomorphology, etc.) tend to dominate during the late Holocene. This newly produced sea-level curve has helped to improve isostatic model predictions and provide pre-anthropogenic sea-level rise rates against which modern rates can be compared.
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science | 2009
Teresa Drago; V Ferreira-Bartrina; A M P Santos; J Pinheiro
The majority of the works concerning fish productivity are based in fish landing records. However, in order to understand the causes of variability in fish productivity (natural and/or anthropogenic) it is essential to have information from periods when human impacts (e.g., fisheries) are considered unimportant. This can be achieved through the use of fish remains, i.e. scales, vertebrae and otoliths, from sediment records. The obtained data can be used to develop time series of fish stocks revealing the history of fish population dynamics over the last centuries or millennia. The majority of these works are located in Eastern Boundary Current Systems (e.g., Benguela, Peru-Humboldt, California), because these are associated with coastal upwelling and high productivity, which in some cases is at the origin of low bottom oxygen levels, leading to scale preservation. A search for fish remains in the Portuguese margin sediments is in progress in the context of the ongoing research project POPEI (High-resolution oceanic paleoproductivity and environmental changes; correlation with fish populations), which intend to fill the gap in studies of this type for the Canary Current System. In this paper we review some general ideas of the use of fish remains, related studies, methodologies and data processing, as well as presenting the first results of POPEI.
Science of The Total Environment | 2017
Mário Mil-Homens; Carlos Vale; Pedro Quelhas Brito; Filipa Naughton; Teresa Drago; Joana Raimundo; Bárbara Anes; Sabine Schmidt; Miguel Caetano
Stable Pb isotopic ratios and concentrations of Al, Cu and Pb were measured in a 5m long sediment core (VC2B) retrieved at 96m water depth in the southwestern Iberian Atlantic shelf. Five phases during the last 9.5kyrs were identified, two of them (Roman Period and modern mining) marked by a decrease of 206Pb/207Pb ratios reflecting additional inputs of Pb derived from mining activities. The Roman Period was also characterized by high 208Pb/206Pb ratios suggesting the exploitation of the outcropping portion of the orebody intensely weathered when compared with the other formations later mined. The shift of 208Pb/206Pb ratios towards linearity took approximately 1.0kyrs, which may mirror the time of environmental recovery from the impact of Roman mining activities. The application of a mixing model allowed the quantification of the contribution associated with anthropogenic mining activities to the shelf sediments. The maximum values of Pb contamination occurred in the 20th century. This study gives direct evidence of Pb and Cu exploitation over the last 2000years. The stable Pb isotopic signatures point to legacy of mining activities that are still the prevailing metal source recorded in the southwestern Iberian Atlantic shelf sediments.
Marine Micropaleontology | 2007
Filipa Naughton; M.F. Sánchez Goñi; Stéphanie Desprat; Jean-Louis Turon; Josette Duprat; Bruno Malaizé; C. Joli; Elsa Cortijo; Teresa Drago; M. C. Freitas