Pleistocene Climates in Central Europe: At least 17 Interglacials after the Olduvai Event

1977 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 363-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julius Fink ◽  
George J. Kukla

At least 17 times during the past 1.7 million years, the deposition of loess containing characteristic cold-resistant gastropods was interrupted by the development of temperate interglacial forests. This conclusion was reached in a study of paleomagnetically dated fossiliferous loess sequences in Krems, Austria and Brno, Czechoslovakia. Sequences of windblown loess interlayered with hillwash loams and steppe and forest soils exposed in brickyards around Brno and Praha, Czechoslovakia, revealed eight major depositional cycles within the Brunhes paleomagnetic epoch. We now report nine additional cycles of late and middle Matuyama age bringing the total number of glacial-interglacial cycles to 17, which occurred after the end of the Olduvai. The cycles are separated by marklines, levels of abrupt environmental change correlative with the terminations in deep-sea sediments. They are the boundaries between the windblown loess containing cold-resistant snail assemblages and between the clayey originally decalcified soils, accompanied by warmth loving Helix and Banatica snail faunas of hardwood forests. Because the presence of temperate forests in northwestern and central Europe is instrumental in the definition of an interglacial, each markline represents a glacial-interglacial boundary and each cycle is a glacial-interglacial cycle.

2015 ◽  
Vol 120 (11) ◽  
pp. 7253-7270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuta Isaji ◽  
Hodaka Kawahata ◽  
Naohiko Ohkouchi ◽  
Nanako O. Ogawa ◽  
Masafumi Murayama ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Deep Sea ◽  
The Past ◽  

Radiocarbon ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 31 (03) ◽  
pp. 481-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
T-H Peng

Changes in the ocean ventilation rate may be one of the causes for a net decrease of 100‰ Δ 14C in atmospheric CO2 over the last 8000 years. Ocean ventilation rates of the past can be derived from the 14C record preserved in planktonic and benthic foraminifera in deep-sea sediments. Results of 14C dating using accelerator mass spectrometry on deep sea sediments from the South China Sea show that the age differences between planktonic (G sacculifer) and benthic foraminifera increase from 1350 yr ca 7000 yr ago to 1590 yr at present. An 11-box geochemical model of global ocean circulation was used for this study. Both tree-ring-determined atmospheric 14C values and foraminifera 14C age differences are used as constraints to place limits on patterns of changes in ocean ventilation rates and in atmospheric 14C production rates. Results indicate: 1) 14C production rates in the atmosphere may have decreased by as much as 30% between 7000 and 3000 yr ago, and may have increased again by ca 15% in the past 2000 yr, and 2) the global ocean ventilation rate may not have been at steady state over the last 7000 yr, but may have slowed by as much as 35%.


2006 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 435-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yusuke Suganuma ◽  
Kaori Aoki ◽  
Toshiya Kanamatsu ◽  
Toshitsugu Yamazaki

Author(s):  
K. T. Tokuyasu

During the past investigations of immunoferritin localization of intracellular antigens in ultrathin frozen sections, we found that the degree of negative staining required to delineate u1trastructural details was often too dense for the recognition of ferritin particles. The quality of positive staining of ultrathin frozen sections, on the other hand, has generally been far inferior to that attainable in conventional plastic embedded sections, particularly in the definition of membranes. As we discussed before, a main cause of this difficulty seemed to be the vulnerability of frozen sections to the damaging effects of air-water surface tension at the time of drying of the sections.Indeed, we found that the quality of positive staining is greatly improved when positively stained frozen sections are protected against the effects of surface tension by embedding them in thin layers of mechanically stable materials at the time of drying (unpublished).


Corpora ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 327-349
Author(s):  
Craig Frayne

This study uses the two largest available American English language corpora, Google Books and the Corpus of Historical American English (coha), to investigate relations between ecology and language. The paper introduces ecolinguistics as a promising theme for corpus research. While some previous ecolinguistic research has used corpus approaches, there is a case to be made for quantitative methods that draw on larger datasets. Building on other corpus studies that have made connections between language use and environmental change, this paper investigates whether linguistic references to other species have changed in the past two centuries and, if so, how. The methodology consists of two main parts: an examination of the frequency of common names of species followed by aspect-level sentiment analysis of concordance lines. Results point to both opportunities and challenges associated with applying corpus methods to ecolinguistc research.


Derrida Today ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Morris

Over the past thirty years, academic debate over pornography in the discourses of feminism and cultural studies has foundered on questions of the performative and of the word's definition. In the polylogue of Droit de regards, pornography is defined as la mise en vente that is taking place in the act of exegesis in progress. (Wills's idiomatic English translation includes an ‘it’ that is absent in the French original). The definition in Droit de regards alludes to the word's etymology (writing by or about prostitutes) but leaves the referent of the ‘sale’ suspended. Pornography as la mise en vente boldly restates the necessary iterability of the sign and anticipates two of Derrida's late arguments: that there is no ‘the’ body and that performatives may be powerless. Deriving a definition of pornography from a truncated etymology exemplifies the prosthesis of origin and challenges other critical discourses to explain how pornography can be understood as anything more than ‘putting (it) up for sale’.


Author(s):  
Volker Scheid

This chapter explores the articulations that have emerged over the last half century between various types of holism, Chinese medicine and systems biology. Given the discipline’s historical attachments to a definition of ‘medicine’ that rather narrowly refers to biomedicine as developed in Europe and the US from the eighteenth century onwards, the medical humanities are not the most obvious starting point for such an inquiry. At the same time, they do offer one advantage over neighbouring disciplines like medical history, anthropology or science and technology studies for someone like myself, a clinician as well as a historian and anthropologist: their strong commitment to the objective of facilitating better medical practice. This promise furthermore links to the wider project of critique, which, in Max Horkheimer’s definition of the term, aims at change and emancipation in order ‘to liberate human beings from the circumstances that enslave them’. If we take the critical medical humanities as explicitly affirming this shared objective and responsibility, extending the discipline’s traditional gaze is not a burden but becomes, in fact, an obligation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document