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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

A Late Pleistocene to Mid-Holocene Stable Oxygen Isotope Record from a Belize Stalagmite

Crosby, Maria Rose January 2010 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Amy E. Frappier / A ~7,000 year stable isotope record from a Central American stalagmite is presented as a record of rainfall and consequently Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) tropical rain belt strength over the late Pleistocene to mid-Holocene. The "amount effect" explains the well-documented inverse relationship between rainfall amount and stable oxygen isotope values observed in tropical monsoon regions and consequently in stalagmite calcite from those regions. ITCZ rainfall influences much of the Central American tropical region and here a ~7,000 year stable isotope record from stalagmite ATM1 harvested from Actún Tunichil Muknal Cave in Belize is presented as a record of ITCZ influenced rainfall during the late Pleistocene to mid-Holocene (5,561 ± 2,488 BP - 12,605 ± 284 BP). Three major oxygen isotope excursions occur within the record. These excursions correspond to the global cold Younger Dryas and 8.2 ka events and a relatively undocumented wet period around 6,300 bp. The Younger Dryas manifests as a relatively moist period in central Belize while the 8.2 ka event manifests as a relatively dry period. The reason for the opposite responses to cooling elsewhere in the globe is posited to be due to orbital forcings. The 6,300 bp relatively wet period appears to be synoptic in scale and two possible triggers for the isotope excursion are presented: eustatic sea level rise causing lagoonal constriction, warming of water off the coast of Belize, and thus increased evaporation and precipitation over the study region; and hurricane clusters, evidenced in the region in the succeeding 1,000 years, in which the location of the Azores High funnels hurricanes to make landfall near the central Belize region. ATM1 provides evidence for tropical leads and/or lags to global climate events and bolsters the idea that high and low latitude climate relationships are complexly interlinked. / Thesis (MS) — Boston College, 2010. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Geology and Geophysics.
22

Size variation and body proportions in an isolated Holocene-aged population of Hominids from Palau, Micronesia and its impact on our understanding of variation in extinct Hominids.

De Klerk, Bonita 01 February 2013 (has links)
This thesis investigated whether a fragmented assemblage of fossilized Homo sapiens remains collected from Palau; Micronesia represents a population exhibiting a case of insular dwarfing. The earliest occupation of Palau is ca. 4000 YBP, and the fossil assemblage studied here dates between 2900 – 1400 YBP, thus providing a relatively short time in which body size reduction, due to insular dwarfism could occur. There are well known cases, in both the modern and fossil context, where insular dwarfism and body size reduction is known to occur in human populations that are isolated, but the results of this reduction are seen over a much longer period (e.g., tens of thousands of years). Metric dimensions of the humerus, radius, ulna, femur, tibia, and fibula and os coxa are quantified in order to evaluate other potential insular dwarfs in fossil hominin assemblages, such as Homo floresiensis. Previous studies have shown that the Palau archipelago has remained relatively isolated from human contact due to the surrounding currents, providing ideal conditions for insular dwarfism to occur. Comparing measurements taken on populations encompassing a reasonable range of human variation, this study quantified and compared the Palauan measurements and joint ratios to determine which variables might differentiate among these population groups, thus indicating traits potentially uniquely signalling a reduction in human body size. Disproportionate joint sizes were observed in the humerus, ulna, tibia, and femur of the Palauan sample. While individual measurements from the Palau sample all fall comfortably within the range of measurements taken from other small-bodied human individuals, the articular surfaces of Palauan specimens do not resemble those from other well-established, small-bodied insular populations. As the articular surfaces are smaller relative to the epiphyseal diameters and may be a reflection of the relatively short time in which the reduction has taken place. Morphologically the Palauan population exhibits small orbits, a large interorbital distance, an inflated glabella region and protruding supraorbital tori. A reduction in the mandible may account for the overcrowding of teeth observed in the dentition. The Palauan individuals have disproportionately large maxillary teeth. The mandibular dentition, however, varies: the incisors, canine and first molars are large, while reduction is seen most easily in the premolars and the second molar. This dental reduction is coupled with significant differences between the cervico-enamel junctions for these teeth and the corresponding crown measurements. Large teeth, inflated glabella, and protruding supraorbital tori may be an indication of a founding population. These traits are all found in Australomelanesian populations, and it is thus possible that the Palauan population under study originated from Melanesia (e.g. New Guinea or South East Asia). Application of the present study to Homo floresiensis, a fossil hominin suggested by some authors to have undergone insular dwarfing, reveals that while H. floresiensis is small for some measurements, most fall within the range of the small-bodied comparative sample from Palau. The stature of H. floresiensis is not unusually small and falls within the ranges of the comparative sample used here. The only comparison that can be made for joint size is that both the Palauan and H. floresiensis femoral heads are small and both exhibit the same disproportionate dimensions of the proximal tibia. As potential body size reduction is possibly responsible for the Palauan traits, the similarity in joint proportions may be attributed to insular dwarfing when the population first became isolated, as these joint irregularities are not seen in established insular dwarfs (Andaman and Nicobarese). The differences present in the measurements obtained for all the small-bodied samples examined suggests that even though insular populations may present as small-bodied, the island populations (fossil or extant) should be viewed as a case by case study. Isolation, life history, founding population (genetics) and environmental conditions all affect population body size over time, but to assume that all isolated populations will decrease body size in the same way is incorrect. What is seen in Palauan specimens is likely the adaptive responses of a isolated population from Melanesia, resulting in the insular dwarfism observed. By examining the available aspects of this insular population and found that it was consistent in reflecting size and proportions of small-bodied populations.
23

Diatom-based reconstruction of the Holocene evolution of Lake St Lucia, South Africa

Gomes, Megan January 2016 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Science. March 2016 / Coastal waterbodies along the east coast of southern Africa evolved from fluvial origins that were slowly drowned by rising sea levels during the Holocene. The accumulation of sediment in these systems is relatively undisturbed, providing ideal sites from which longer term observations of palaeo-climatic variability over most of the Holocene period can be made. Lake St. Lucia, on the north coast of KwaZulu- Natal, is the largest estuarine lagoon in Africa and is widely regarded as one of the most important shallow water systems globally. Despite the importance of this system, little is currently know about the processes driving the long-term evolution of the lake. This study aimed to reconstruct the hydrological changes associated with the Holocene evolution of Lake St. Lucia using fossil diatoms. Analyses were performed on two sediment cores from the North Lake (15.6 m) and False Bay (15.9 m) basins of Lake St. Lucia. Age models, each based on eight radiocarbon dates, revealed continuous sedimentary records covering ~8300 cal. yr BP. A total of 150 samples were examined resulting in a total of 113 species recorded which were used to infer changes in environmental conditions based on their reported ecological preferences. / GR 2016
24

Secrets from a deep reef : structure, biogeography and palaeoclimate reconstruction from Mingulay Reef complex sediment cores

Douarin, Melanie Amelie Laetitia January 2013 (has links)
A multi-disciplinary study of sediment core records from the Mingulay Reef Complex, a cold-water coral reefs system off western Scotland, highlights the potential of cold-water corals from which detailed centennial-scale palaeo-environmental reconstructions can be derived. This study provides a new insight on the mechanisms controlling Lophelia pertusa reef build-up, shifts in biodiversity, the physical/chemical/biological processes and the sedimentary regime. A detailed record of Mingulay Complex growth history shows unprecedented high average accumulation rates of 3 – 4 mm a-1. Marine radiocarbon reconstruction derived from paired 14C and U-series dated fossil corals revealed substantial abrupt oceanic shifts during the Holocene that have repetitively affected cold-water coral growth, eventually causing local disappearance. These periods of reduced accumulation rates are synchronous with other coral structures from the NE Atlantic illustrating basin wide events. Finally, trace/minor element ratios reproducibility within coral skeleton was investigated to test if palaeo-environmental reconstructions could be made from cold-water corals.
25

High-Resolution Record of Vegetation and Climate Change During the Holocene in Southwestern Québec

Lagace, Amanda Lee 13 September 2019 (has links)
A varved sediment sequence spanning the past ~11.0 ka was collected from Lac Noir (45.77N, 75.13W, 168 m a.s.l.) in southwestern Québec. A high-resolution pollen record documents the post-glacial vegetation history of the region over the course of the Holocene. The record shows an initial open spruce woodland, the establishment of the boreal and mixed conifer-hardwood forest into the area, as well as the expansion and contractions of tree populations in response to climate variability during the Holocene. The well known Tsuga decline at Lac Noir lasted 500 years starting at 5.5 ka and it took 1 460 years for hemlock to recover. The highest frequency of fire activity occurred during the early Holocene, and the lowest in the mid-Holocene. The late Holocene saw an increase in fire frequency, which could be attributed to a drier climate in eastern North America during this period. The impact of climate variability, fire disturbances and possible biotic factors on the Lac Noir vegetation are examined.
26

Reconstitution des fluctuations holocènes en relation avec les changements climatiques et l'antropisation sur les côtes bretonnes à partir de bio-indicateurs fossiles (chironomidés, pollen et foraminifères benthiques) / No

Fernane, Assia 17 December 2014 (has links)
L’évolution du climat Holocène a fait jusqu’ici l’objet de très peu d’études au niveau de la Bretagne. Celles-ci, s’inscrivant dans un contexte à la fois paléo-environnemental et archéologique, présentent souvent un caractère local et ponctuel qui permet difficilement de replacer les changements paléoenvironnementaux observés dans un contexte climatique plus global. Pourtant, la Bretagne, par sa particularité géographique et son exposition océanique, constitue un milieu de prédilection pour l’étude du climat puisqu’elle est fortement exposée, à l’actuel comme ce fut aussi le cas par le passé, aux aléas climatiques typiques de l’Atlantique Nord (régimes de tempêtes notamment) induits par les changements de configurations atmosphériques et océaniques. De plus, la région Bretagne présente une grande diversité de milieux littoraux, avec la présence de rias, d’estuaires, de marais salants, etc. Or, les environnements côtiers sous influence fluviale sont des puits sédimentaires soumis à de forts taux de sédimentation qui offrent l’opportunité d’enregistrer les changements environnementaux passés sur des milliers d’années. Les milieux d’arrière-plage (dunes, lagunes, tourbières), abondamment présents dans la région, constituent ainsi des domaines protégés de l’érosion marine et renferment des remplissages sédimentaires ayant potentiellement enregistré l’évolution séculaire et/ou millénaire du littoral breton, avec très certainement l’empreinte de certains évènements hydrodynamiques majeurs, mais aussi des traces de l’occupation humaine, dont certains auteurs ont montré le caractère précoce et croissant depuis le mésolithique. Ici, nous nous proposons de conduire des reconstitutions paléoenvironnementales et paléoclimatiques à partir de plusieurs séquences sédimentaires prélevées autour du littoral breton, afin de mieux comprendre la réalité des forçages naturels et/ou anthropiques sur les écosystèmes analysés. Pour mener à bien notre étude, nous avons développé une approche paléoécologique multidisciplinaire impliquant plusieurs disciplines complémentaires : sédimentologie et pétrographie, palynologie (pollen et dinokystes) et micropaléontologie(foraminifères benthiques et Chironomidae). Au final, l’analyse des séquences sédimentaires fournit une vision très précise et complète des fluctuations climatiques et environnementales qui ont caractérisé le Nord-Ouest de la France durant la seconde partie de l’Holocène, i.e. depuis les 7000 dernières années. Le recoupement des données entre les différents sites étudiés (1 site Nord Finistère et 2 sites Morbihan),montre l’hétérogénéité spatiale des données paléoécologiques qui caractérisent le secteur. Alors que les séquences prélevées sur les côtes sud bretonnes enregistrent un signal d’anthropisation dès le Néolithique moyen, celle-ci n’apparaît qu’à partir de l’Age du Bronze sur les côtes nord bretonnes, en accord avec les données archéologiques. De plus, nos données montrent que la néolithisation ne s’effectue pas de façon continue mais montre des phases de régression autour de la transition Néolithique final - Age du Bronze, en lien très certainement avec des détériorations climatiques. En effet, les périodes de froid signalées sur le nord de l’Europe durant l’Holocène et caractérisées par des récurrences de tempêtes dans la région Bretagne, semblent synchrones avec les chutes des marqueurs d’anthropisation mais aussi avec les retraits des populations de la côte vers l’intérieur des terres tels que décrits par les études archéologiques depuis le Néolithique final. Ces résultats suggèrent un impact direct du climat sur les dynamiques de population et d’occupation des territoires depuis le Néolithique en Bretagne. / No
27

Geology and paleoseismology of the Trans-Yamuna active fault system, Himalayan foothills of northwest India

Oatney, Emily M. 09 October 1998 (has links)
Satellite image interpretation, geologic mapping, and paleoseismic trenching are used to investigate the Trans-Yamuna active fault system in the northwestern Doon Valley of the Indian Himalayan foothills. This east-west fault system is subparallel to and crosses the Main Boundary thrust near the structural transition from the Nahan salient to the Dehra Dun reentrant. The Trans-Yamuna active fault system may terminate to the east at a lateral ramp of the Main Boundary thrust. A south-side-up, relatively linear fault trace with variable fault dips suggests that the fault system is high-angle reverse with a component of strike-slip. It is subdivided into the Sirmurital, Dhamaun, and Bharli faults, which probably connect at depth. The Dhamaun fault is exposed where it cuts the late Holocene upper Bhatrog terrace deposit of the Giri River. A paleoseismic investigation of the Sirmurital fault at another Giri River terrace did not expose the fault, but it suggests that late Holocene terrace deposits there may be folded into a syncline parallel to fault strike. The fold axis of the syncline continues into bedrock to the west. Earthquakes in 1905, 1803, or perhaps earlier may have been the source of folding of the fine-grained sediments within this terrace deposit. The Trans-Yamuna active fault system is a secondary hangingwall fault that may accommodate some strain release above the decollement during large-magnitude earthquakes. Strike-slip motion may be related to the lateral translation of the Karakoram fault block and east-west extension of the southern Tibet block as a result of oblique convergence between the Indian and Eurasian plates in the northwest Himalaya. / Graduation date: 1999
28

Shoreline Dynamics and Environmental Change Under the Modern Marine Transgression: St. Catherines Island, Georgia

Meyer, Brian K. 01 August 2013 (has links)
The current study has evaluated shoreline dynamics and environmental change at St. Catherines Island, Georgia, with attention to the two major controls of barrier island formation and modification processes. These major controls include the increase in accommodation space, or the rate of sea level rise for the Georgia Bight which has remained constant in 20th and 21st century tide gauge data and dynamically changing rates of sediment supply based on anthropogenic modifications to land cover (Trimble, 1974) that are reflected in sediment transport (McCarney-Castle et al., 2010). Vibracoring and radiocarbon data provided valuable insights into the stratigraphy and development of St. Catherines Island. A stratigraphic model has been developed for the sediments associated with the Late Holocene accretional terrains where multiple small scale fluctuations in sea level have resulted in the formation of a sedimentary veneer punctuated with transgressive surfaces and regressive sequences. A working model for an interpolated Late Holocene sea level curve has been constructed using direct evidence from vibracore data as constraining points and indirect evidence from other regional sea level studies to provide additional structure. The relationship between the timing of the regressions versus periods of beach ridge formation and implications from the current shoreline dynamics study regarding the role of sediment supply complement each other. The ages of beach ridge formation strongly correlate to periods that are associated with regressions in sea level based on the sedimentary record and an evaluation of Late Holocene sea level conditions. The evaluation of anthropogenic modifications to the rate of sediment supply performed under the current study indicates that in spite of significant changes in sediment flux rates of +300% (pre-dam era) and -20% (post-dam era), shoreline retreat was continuous during the study period with an acceleration noted in the rates of shoreline retreat associated with spit and berm landforms during the post-dam or modern era. The two associations indicate strongly that the rate of sediment supply plays a secondary role to the major control of the rate of sea level rise in the formation and modification processes at St. Catherines Island.
29

Biomarker based holocene climatic reconstruction in Northwestern China

He, Yuxin, 何毓新 January 2014 (has links)
Holocene hydrological changes in regions influenced by the mid-latitude westerly and the tropical/subtropical Asian monsoon differ from each other. The arid/semi-arid northeastern Tibetan Plateau, lying in between, is very sensitive to climatic changes. It thus becomes a climatologically important region to disentangle the interactions between the two circulations. Yet, limited high-quality Holocene paleoclimatic reconstructions are available in this region. This thesis presents multi-biomarker proxy records from lakes in the Qaidam Basin on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau to investigate the nature of Holocene climate variability. Firstly, late-Holocene paired alkenone-based temperature (U_37^K' ) and moisture (%C37:4) records from Lake Gahai and Lake Sugan were reconstructed. Paired temperature and moisture records confirm the warm-dry (e.g. Medieval Warm Period) and cold-wet (e.g. Little Ice Age) periods on the arid northeastern Tibetan Plateau over the late Holocene, opposite to the warm-wet and cold-dry association in Asian monsoonal regions. The records also suggest substantially warmer and drier conditions during the Medieval Warm Period than the current warm period. Further, a possible link between solar forcing and natural climate variability (both temperature and moisture) during the late Holocene is found on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau. This thesis also studied the late-Holocene grain size-based dust storm history from Lake Gahai to encode possible mechanism of dust storm interacting with hydrological parameters. Intensified dust storm events were identified in periods of 500 BC to 250 BC, 50 BC to AD 250 and AD 1100 to present. In multi-centennial to millennial scales, dust storm events might be caused by the intensified wind induced by strong westerlies or/and Asian winter monsoon. In multi-decadal to centennial scales, moisture and vegetation coverage might have impacted on the dust storm intensity and frequency. Further, Holocene lake level history of Lake Gahai was reconstructed by multiple n-alkane and alkenone proxies. Combined biomarker results provide unambiguous evidence of relatively low lake level at 7-2 ka, probably lowest at ~6 ka. Considering the chronological uncertainty, Holocene lake level changes in this marginal region thus display a different pattern from either of the core regions dominated by the westerlies (anti-phase) and the Asian summer monsoon (out-of-phase). The temperature-induced evaporation in the arid marginal region could significantly affect regional hydrological balance, resulting in the discrepancy with the long-term decreasing trend in precipitation in Asian monsoon-dominated regions. Lastly, n-fatty acid δD variation from Lake Hurleg over the past 10.5 ka was investigated. The C26 δD and C16 δD values can indicate water δD changes in terrestrial and aquatic sources, respectively. The heavier C26 δD values during cold and wet conditions suggest that terrestrial water δD changes might be caused by factors other than temperature and moisture, such as glacial melted water input and vegetation type change. The difference between C16 δD and C26 δD was used as an indicator of evaporation at the lake surface. At millennial timescale, less evaporation occurred during cold-wet periods in this region. / published_or_final_version / Earth Sciences / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
30

Optical dating of young lacustrine sediment from Manas Lake in northwestern China

Wang, Ruochen, 王若辰 January 2014 (has links)
abstract / Earth Sciences / Master / Master of Philosophy

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