• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 246
  • 125
  • 69
  • 28
  • 9
  • 6
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 595
  • 113
  • 100
  • 88
  • 66
  • 65
  • 63
  • 63
  • 62
  • 61
  • 61
  • 53
  • 49
  • 48
  • 46
  • 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.
111

Héritages holocènes et dynamiques morphologiques du bassin versant de l’oued Massengh et ses confluences avec les oueds Sbiba et el Hathob (Dorsale Tunisienne-Tunisie du centre ouest) / Holocene inheritances and morphological dynamics of the watershed of the Massengh wadi and its confluences with wadis Sbiba and el Hathob (Tunisian Dorsal-Tunisia of the west center)

Fadhlaoui, Sahbi 15 December 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse porte sur l’étude des paléoenvironnements et des dynamiques morphologiques holocènes dans le bassin versant du Massengh et de ses confluences avec les oueds Sbiba et el Hathob (Tunisie du centre-ouest). Après l’étude du cadre physique de l’évolution des environnements holocènes et actuels, la thèse se concentre dans un premier temps, sur la chronostratigraphie des héritages et des archives sédimentaires. La reconstitution des paléoenvironnements et de la morphogenèse Holocène est tentée, dans un deuxième temps. En dernier lieu, la thèse fait porter l’analyse sur l’évolution morphodynamique actuelle du milieu fluvial à l’échelle de l’espace de confluences. / This thesis focuses on the study of paleoenvironmental and Holocene morphological dynamics in the watershed Massengh and its confluence with the wadis and Sbiba el Hathob (Tunisia's center-west). After studying the physical part of the evolution of Holocene and current environments, the thesis focusesinitiallyon chronostratigraphy inheritances and sedimentary archives. The reconstruction of paleoenvironmentaland morphogenesis Holocene is attempted, in a second step. To summarize, the thesis studies in depth the currentmorphodynamic evolution of the fluvial environment across the space of confluences.
112

Holocene ecosystem dynamics of a central Vancouver Island wetland: development, vegetation change, and carbon accumulation

Beer, Kyle 10 May 2018 (has links)
A multi-proxy paleoecological study that included pollen, microfossil, carbon (C), and nitrogen (N) analyses was conducted at a central Vancouver Island wetland near Courtenay British Columbia to reconstruct the site’s history, C and N accumulation rates, and surrounding vegetation over the last 14,000 years. The paleoecological record shows that the lake that occupies the southeast corner of the wetland today was much larger during the late glacial period. Peat accumulation began through terrestrialization of the site, leading to vegetation and edaphic conditions characteristic of a bog or fen with variable water table depth inferred from testate amoebae and other microfossil remains. C accumulated with maximum and time-weighted mean accumulation rates of 81 and 19 g C/m2/cal yr, respectively. The highest C accumulation occurred during the accumulation of herbaceous peat in the early Holocene, which, given the similarity to other Northern Hemisphere peatlands, suggests a strong climate forcing of C accumulation. N accumulated with a time-weighted mean of 0.55 g N/m2/cal yr. Forest community composition was also affected by the changing climate. Pinus contorta dominated open forests near the site between at least 13,900 and 11,200 cal yr BP. Picea and Abies increased during Younger Dryas cooling (12,900-11,700 cal yr BP). Pseudotsuga menziesii was the most abundant tree species in the area during the early Holocene (11,200-7500 cal yr BP). Around 7000 cal yr BP there was a shift to Tsuga heterophylla dominated forest, which continues to the present. This multi-proxy 14,000-year record provides evidence of the importance of climate and local factors in bog development, C and N accumulation, and vegetation history since the last glaciation. / Graduate / 2019-04-12
113

Forest Dynamics in Relation to Late-Holocene Climatic Variability, Eastern Ontario, Canada

Keizer, Peter S. January 2013 (has links)
Pollen profiles from two lakes, Tawny Pond (44°48’59”N, 77°10’54”W, 276m) and Stoll Lake (44°58’16”N, 77°17’22”W,303m) in Addington Highlands, eastern Ontario, Canada were analyzed to understand the effects of late-Holocene climate change and European settlement on eastern Ontario’s forests. Both lakes were analyzed at high temporal resolution and record vegetation dynamics over the last 1000 years. Throughout the past 1000 years, Pinus, Tsuga, Betula, Quercus, Acer and Fagus were the dominant taxa in the pollen record. The pollen records show vegetation response in relation to the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice Age. From 970-1200 AD the forest was dominated by hemlock, beech and maple trees. From 1200-1870 AD the forest composition changed as pine and boreal trees became more abundant and/or had increased relative pollen production. Most recently, since 1870 AD, herbaceous plants (weeds) increased, whereas softwoods decreased and hardwoods increased, due to landscape changes associated with European settlement. These results show that high resolution studies of unvarved lakes, with an appropriate chronology, can detect multi-decadal climate variability. This thesis was also concerned with making management suggestions to the forestry community. Future climate change will likely create a forest composition more similar to that of the Medieval Warm Period than the time of European colonization, and thus should be the basis for forest planning.
114

Retrogressive Thaw Slumps: Indicators of Holocene Climate Changes in the Richardson Mountains-Peel Plateau, Northwestern Canada

Frappier, Roxanne January 2017 (has links)
The ongoing climate warming is expected to increase thermokarst activity and their impacts by inducing permafrost degradation and active layer deepening. A retrogressive thaw slump, which represents the most dynamic thermokarst landform, was investigated in the Richardson Mountains-Peel Plateau region. The exposed material at the thaw slump represents an opportunity to characterize the cryostratigraphy of the uppermost 5 m of permafrost. Analyses of the stratigraphy, sedimentology, isotope geochemistry and radiocarbon dating is presented. Six sites were also identified on an elevation-vegetation gradient to provide complementary data on thaw layer thickness. Summer air temperatures, vegetation cover type, mesoscale conditions modifying the snowpack, timing of the snow accumulation and winter air temperature inversions are identified as the main drivers of thaw layer thickness in the region. The physical and chemical parameters of the massive ground ice exposed at the thaw slump are characteristic of buried glacier ice that experienced water infiltration and partial refreezing. The layer between the massive ground ice units and the thaw layer in the thaw slump is identified as a relict thaw layer and represents the period of maximum active layer deepening. It dates to the Holocene thermal maximum, which represents a period of important thermokarst activity that resulted in widespread paleo-thaw unconformities across northwestern Canada. Association of the region’s thaw slump activity with paleoclimatic parameters provide indication that the combination of formerly glaciated continuous permafrost, hummocky rolling moraine terrain, stream-incised relief, and massive ground ice, coupled with major rainfall events, represents a set of condition that is favourable to thaw slump activity.
115

Arctic Loess as an Environmental Archive : Identifying Weathering with XRF Analysis in West Greenland / Arktiska lössjordar som miljöarkiv : Identifiering av vittring med XRF-analys på västra Grönland

Karnik, Isabelle January 2019 (has links)
Loess from west Greenland was studied to evaluate Holocene paleoclimate in the Arctic region. Deposits of loess are formed over long time scales through deposition of fine aeolian sediment and they exist in several places in the world. The main aeolian dust source in the study area is glaciofluvial material derived from the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS). Studying and understanding paleoclimate can help to make better predictions about the future in this sensitive region. Apart from sea level rise, melting of the GrIS also leads to an increase of aeolian dust as it gets released from the ice, which influences atmospheric and metrological phenomenon as well as the ice sheet’s albedo. This creates negative feedback mechanisms through increasing melting rates of glaciers and warming of the Arctic. Loess samples from two sites in the Kangerlussuaq area were analyzed and the mineral composition was measured with X-Ray Florescence Spectroscopy (XRF). With the measured mineral content, weathering indices were calculated to identify rates of weathering during the Holocene. Increased weathering intensities indicate warmer and more humid climate. The deposits in Greenland are relatively thin. Radiocarbon dating of the sediment suggests that the oldest parts of the profiles are about 4000 cal. yr B.P. (calibrated years before present). Arctic loess has not been studied very extensively. Weathering indices and ratios developed for classical loess, that had not been tested on Arctic loess, was used. The results were plotted by depth and age to visually identify changes over time. By considering the geology, climate and local conditions of the study area, some weathering indices seemed to be suitable, generating matching trends between the two sites. Compared with results from previous studies, the results also seemed credible. / Löss från västra Grönland studerades för att utvärdera holocent paleoklimat i Arktis. Lössjordar bildas över långa tidsskalor genom avsättning av fint vindburet sediment och de finns på flera platser i världen. Den huvudsakliga källan till det vindburna sedimentet i studieområdet är glaciofluvialt material härstammande från Grönlandsisen (GrIS). Att studera och förstå paleoklimat kan underlätta skapandet av bättre prognoser om framtiden i denna känsliga region. Bortsett från höjning av de globala havsnivåerna leder smältningen av GrIS också till en ökning av vindburet sediment då det frigörs från isen, vilket påverkar atmosfäriska och metrologiska fenomen samt isens albedo. Detta skapar negativa återkopplingsmekanismer genom ökande smälthastighet av glaciärer och uppvärmning av Arktis. Lössprover från två ställen i Kangerlussuaq-området analyserades och mineralsammansättningen mättes med röntgenstrålningsspektroskopi (XRF). Med det uppmätta mineralinnehållet beräknades vittringssindex för att identifiera vittringshastigheter under Holocen. Ökad vittringsintesitet indikerar varmare och fuktigare klimat. Avlagringarna på Grönland är relativt tunna. Kol-14-datering av sedimentet antyder att de äldsta delarna är cirka 4000 cal. yr B.P. (kalibrerade år före nutid). Arktisk löss är relativt ostuderad. Vittringsindex som har utvecklats för klassisk löss i tempererade regioner, och tidigare inte testats på arktisk löss, användes. Resultaten ritades i grafer efter djup och ålder för att visuellt identifiera förändringar över tid. Genom att ta hänsyn till geologin, klimatet och lokala förhållanden i studieområdet, verkade några av vittringsindexen ge trovärdiga resultat då matchande trender mellan bägge profiler kunde utläsas. I jämförelse med resultat från tidigare studier verkade resultaten också trovärdiga.
116

The precise timing and character of glaciations in Patagonia from MIS 6 to the Little Ice Age

Peltier, Carly January 2021 (has links)
By only considering records of climate and glaciers over the period that humans have been monitoring them, one might think that climate normally changes quite rapidly, and that glaciers have always been small. But in the not-so-distant past, an ice sheet covered the Southern Andes, flowing across the southern tip of the continent, and in some places, even terminating into the Atlantic Ocean. Glaciers rewrite the surfaces they inhabit, leaving behind indicators of their past behavior. By studying the landforms they create, we can reconstruct climates of the past. Here I present unique and novel glacier-climate reconstructions over southern and central Patagonia using a state-of-the-art dating approach tied to high resolution spatial mapping and glaciological modeling. The main goal of this thesis is to constrain the precise timing and character of the past advances of three glaciers in Patagonia. To this end, I present new precise 10Be surface exposure datasets from two paleo outlet glacier lobes (at 45°S and 53°S), totaling 71 new moraine boulder ages. In these two valleys, I am able to reconstruct the last three major glaciations (MIS 6, 4, 2), as well as provide a constraint for the last two terminations (T1, T2). At a third site, I create a novel dataset to reconstruct the behavior of the Calluqueo glacier (48°S) from ~7,000 years ago to the present. All three sites are eastwards of the main Andes mountain range, spanning from southernmost Patagonia (53°S) to central Patagonia (45°S). To achieve my thesis objectives, I employed recent improvements in the 10Be exposure dating method, and tied the geochronological studies to new, high resolution maps of the glacial geomorphology created by the former glaciers and associated processes. We find in central Patagonia, the Ñirehuao glacier lobe was most extensive potentially during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 8, but certainly prior to MIS 6, followed by a major advance during MIS 6. This study presents one of the first directly dated records of a MIS 6 glacier expansion in Patagonia at 153±5.1 ka, where the glacier may have been in retreat at 137±4.2 ka. During the last glacial cycle, the glacier was most extensive during the middle of MIS 2, at 23.6±0.9 ka. The southernmost section of the Ice Sheet, at Estrecho de Magallanes, was more extensive during Marine Isotope Stage 4 (MIS 4) than during MIS 2, representing the first direct dating of the MIS 4 glacier culmination in South America. Similar to the MIS 2 glacial maximum, within MIS 4 there were multiple advances that we date (6 samples) to between 67.5±2.1 and 62.1±2.0 ka. Inboard of the MIS 4 moraine complex, we date a sequence of geomorphically distinct MIS 2 moraines that represent separate major periods of glacial stability. The MIS 2 maximum extent occurred by 27.4±0.8 ka and was followed by at least four more full glacial culminations over a hundred miles beyond the Andes mountains. About 18 km inboard of the main MIS 2 landforms, the sequence is followed by smaller-scale recessional moraine crests that we date to 18.0±0.8 ka, indicating the glacier was in net retreat at this time. In order to estimate the climate conditions necessary to drive the glacier advances that we date and map, we apply the University of Maine Ice Sheet Model to the Estrecho de Magallanes and Ñirehuao records. Tentative results suggest that the Magallanes lobe may have reached mapped inner and outer MIS 2 moraines with a climate that had approximately 4.5°C and 5.5°C cooler summers, respectively, assuming about 25% less annual precipitation relative to modern conditions. A new record at Calluqueo, in central Patagonia, allows us to reconstruct Holocene (interglacial) glacier changes. Using 33 new 10Be ages with unprecedented precision, geomorphic mapping and historical imagery, we find that the Calluqueo glacier sat at its mid-Holocene maximum extent from ~6,900 until ~6,700 years before the present. Major moraine forming advances subsequently culminated at least seven more times, averaging every 500±31 years, between 5,620±203 and 3,120±106 years ago. A hiatus in moraine formation occurred from 3,120±106 until 1,160±50 years ago (860 CE). Major retreat occurred between 1600-1800 CE, followed by stability from 1800-1940 CE, and pronounced ongoing retreat since after 1940 CE. For the Holocene period, this record represents one of the first precise, directly-dated glacier histories from central Patagonia, and one of the few available for all of Patagonia. The timing of advances of the Calluqueo glacier has little in common with the glacial histories from the Northern Hemisphere, suggesting an inter-hemispheric asynchronicity. All together, we reconstruct the timing of glacial maxima at three sites in terrestrial Patagonia from 53°S to 45°S, with unprecedented precision, from pre-MIS 6 to the present day.
117

Recent Tropical Andes Glacier Retreat Unprecedented in the Holocene:

Gorin, Andrew Louis January 2021 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Jeremy D. Shakun / Glaciers in the tropics have retreated over recent decades, but whether the magnitude of this retreat has exceeded the bounds of past Holocene fluctuations is unclear. In this study, we measure cosmogenic 10Be and 14C concentrations from recently exposed bedrock at the margin of five glaciers in the tropical Andes, including four small glaciers and the Quelccaya Ice Cap, the world’s largest tropical ice mass. Concentrations at the Quelccaya Ice Cap margin suggest there was extended exposure during the first half of the Holocene, but that the site was covered by ice for the last 5 kyr. In contrast, nuclide concentrations are strikingly low in all samples at the margins of the four small glaciers, equivalent to ~200 years of 14C and 50 years of 10Be accumulation at surface production rates. These data suggest that the small tropical glaciers are now smaller than they have been at any point during the Holocene, whereas the Quelccaya Ice Cap has not yet retreated to its smallest extent of the Holocene, likely due to its larger size and slower response time. / Thesis (MS) — Boston College, 2021. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Earth and Environmental Sciences.
118

Ice Wedge Activity in the Eureka Sound Lowlands, Canadian High Arctic

Campbell-Heaton, Kethra 21 September 2020 (has links)
Polygonal terrain underlain by ice wedges (IWs) are a widespread feature in continuous permafrost and make up 20-35%vol of the ground ice in the upper few meters of permafrost. Despite the numerous contemporary studies examining factors that control ice wedge cracking, development and degradation, relatively few have explored ice wedge activity in relation with past climate and vegetation conditions. In the Eureka Sound region, ice wedge polygons dominate the permafrost terrain. Their degradation has started to occur, leading to growth of thaw slumps. The objective of this study is twofold, the principal objective is to investigate the timing of ice wedge activity in the Eureka Sound region using the ¹⁴CDOC dates. The second objective is to evaluate the use of ice wedges as paleotemperature proxies. In July 2018, four ice wedges were sampled at 3-4 depths with each core sample being ~1m in length. In the following summer, eight ice wedges were sampled from the surface, 3-5 core samples were extracted per wedge. Active layer and snow samples were also recovered. Laboratory analyses on the ice wedge samples includes dissolved organic carbon content (DOC) and δ¹³CDOC, radiocarbon dating of DOC, geochemical concentration, and stable water isotopes. The DOC and geochemical results show that snowmelt is the main moisture source for ice wedges in the Eureka Sound region with a minor contribution of leached surface organics. The age (¹⁴CDOC) and size of the studied ice wedges were compared against a cracking occurrence model developed by Mackay (1974), these ice wedges align well with this model and suggest that ice wedge growth is non-linear. Ice wedges in the Eureka Sound region were active during the early to late Holocene (9-2.5 ka). The majority of the activity occurred in the later stage of the early Holocene following regional deglaciation and marine regression. ¹⁴CDOC, high resolution δ¹⁸O and D-excess suggests the occurrence of peripheral cracking in both large and small ice wedges. Rayleigh-type isotopic fractionation was found to occur with depth. As well, post depositional isotopic modification of snow and snowmelt accounts for up to a 4‰ difference of δ18O in surface ice wedge samples. δ¹³CDOC of surface ice wedge samples suggest a habitat transition during the late Holocene from dry meadows to polygonal terrain and the geochemical composition of ice wedges closely reflects that of glacial ice core records.
119

The Baker Cave Bison Remains: Bison Diminution and Late Holocene Subsistence on the Snake River Plain, Southern Idaho

Breslawski, Ryan P 01 May 2014 (has links)
The role of bison in the prehistoric subsistence in southern Idaho is not fully understood. Bison remains from Baker Cave, a late Holocene archaeological site dating to cal A.D. 1042-1265, however, provide evidence of pre-contact subsistence strategies in the region. This thesis focuses on the paleoecology of bison and their role in prehistoric subsistence on the Snake River Plain (SRP). The ecological study of bison focuses on the hypothesized trans-Holocene diminution in bison body size in southern Idaho, while a second study focuses on how these animals figured into prehistoric responses to seasonal fat scarcity. Although bison diminution and its ecological determinants are well understood on the Great Plains, the history of diminution west of the Rocky Mountains is less clear. Bison morphometrics from Baker Cave present the opportunity to assess bison diminution on the Snake River Plain. Bison morphometrics from Baker Cave are indistinguishable not only from other late Holocene bison on the Snake River Plain but iv also from late Holocene bison from the Great Plains. Further, the Baker Cave bison are smaller than early Holocene bison from the Great Plains and Snake River Plain. These results suggest morphological similarity between Snake River Plain bison and Great Plains bison through the Holocene, pointing to similar bottom up ecological constraints on body size. Although bison are common components of SRP archaeofaunas, their role in prehistoric subsistence is poorly understood. To shed light on this problem, I hypothesize that the Baker Cave bison assemblage resulted from hunters seeking skeletal fat. I test predictions drawn from this hypothesis with assemblage-level patterns in element representation, impact scar distribution, and fragmentation. These assemblage-level patterns track the skeletal fat utility of elements. These patterns, combined with winter procurement evidenced by fetal remains, support the hypothesis that fat-seeking behavior was a response to winter fat scarcity. A comparison with smaller bison assemblages from southern Idaho suggests that this fat-seeking behavior might have persisted as far back as the middle Holocene, although this requires confirmation from future studies.
120

Sedimentology and Community Structure of Reefs of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico

Novak, Matthew J. 01 May 1992 (has links)
Holocene carbonate sediments from Mexican reefs in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico display variations in constituent composition, texture and mineralogy which are related to their locations on the reefs. Samples were collected at barrier reef environments at Akumal and Chemuyil, on the northeast coast of the Yucatan Peninsula; at the oceanic atoll of Chinchorro, off the southeast coast of the peninsula; and at the shelf atoll of Alacranes, in the Gulf of Mexico. Samples were collected through a depth range of 0-40 m, which encompasses back reef, shallow fore reef, and deeper fore reef environments. Constituent-particle analysis of reef sediments indicates that lagoon facies are dominated by Halimeda with lesser amounts of coral and coralline algae. In contrast, fore reef facies are dominated by coral, with lesser amounts of Halimeda and coralline algae. Greater than 90% of the sediments (dry weight) occur in the interval 0.125-2.00 mm, with mean grain sizes (Mz) approaching 0.5 mm at most sites. Mz generally decreases with increasing depth at three of the four sites. Reef sediments are moderately to poorly sorted and typically become more poorly sorted with increasing depth. Sediments collected from reef channels (grooves) are consistently better sorted than those from the reef interstices (spurs). Mineralogically, the sediment is predominantly aragonite (63-93%) and high-Mg calcite (3-33%), with minor amounts of low-Mg calcite (3-9%). The sediment is chiefly composed of these three polymorphs of CaC03 (96.32- 99.83%) with only a small percentage of insoluble (non-carbonate) material. The non-carbonate fraction of the sediment is dominated by organics (0.14-3.16%) with lesser amounts of clay minerals and amorphous silica (0.00-0.66%). Quantitative analysis of Mexican reef sediments in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico allows the delineation of reef zonations based on constituent-particle composition. Q-mode cluster analysis of constituent-particle data from epireefal sediments enables the separation of lagoon, shallow fore reef (10-15 m) lithofacies. These groupings were maintained even when constituent-particle data from the barrier reefs were combined, and also when data from the atoll reefs were combined. Similar cluster groupings were obtained when constituent-particle data from a Jamaican fringing reef were combined with data from the Mexican barrier reefs. This indicates that coastal reef sediments from Jamaica and Mexico are surprisingly similar in constituent-particle composition and facies zonations. However, cluster analysis failed to produce clear associations when constituent-particle data from barrier reefs and atoll reefs were combined. The sedimentological zonations observed in the study reflect the community composition of the living reefs, and indicate that community composition, at least for calcifying organisms, is potentially preservable.

Page generated in 0.05 seconds