New petrified calamitaleans from the Permian of the Parnaíba Basin, central-north Brazil. Part I

2015 ◽  
Vol 215 ◽  
pp. 23-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Neregato ◽  
Ronny Rößler ◽  
Rosemarie Rohn ◽  
Robert Noll
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 105924
Author(s):  
Monica Oliveira Manna ◽  
Claiton Marlon dos Santos Scherer ◽  
Manoela Bettarel Bállico ◽  
Adriano Domingos dos Reis ◽  
Lucas Vargas Moraes ◽  
...  

Land ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 432
Author(s):  
Robin Gutting ◽  
Ralf-Uwe Syrbe ◽  
Karsten Grunewald ◽  
Ulf Mehlig ◽  
Véronique Helfer ◽  
...  

Mangrove forests provide a large variety of ecosystem services (ES) to coastal societies. Using a case study focusing on the Ajuruteua peninsula in Northern Brazil and two ES, food provisioning (ES1) and global climate regulation (ES2), this paper proposes a new framework for quantifying and valuing mangrove ES and allow for their small-scale mapping. We modelled and spatialised the two ES from different perspectives, the demand (ES1) and the supply (ES2) side respectively. This was performed by combining worldwide databases related to the global human population (ES1) or mangrove distribution and canopy height (ES2) with locally derived parameters, such as crab catches (ES1) or species-specific allometric equations based on local estimates of tree structural parameters (ES2). Based on this approach, we could estimate that the area delivers the basic nutrition of about 1400 households, which equals 2.7 million USD, and that the mangrove biomass in the area contains 2.1 million Mg C, amounting to 50.9 million USD, if it were paid as certificates. In addition to those figures, we provide high-resolution maps showing which areas are more valuable for the two respective ES, information that could help inform management strategies in the future.


Author(s):  
Juliana L. dos Santos ◽  
Renato A. Sarmento ◽  
Poliana P. Silvestre ◽  
Luciane R. Noleto ◽  
Kayo H. B. Reis ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helge W. Arz ◽  
Jürgen Pätzold ◽  
Gerold Wefer

The stable isotope composition of planktonic foraminifera correlates with evidence for pulses of terrigenous sediment in a sediment core from the upper continental slope off northeastern Brazil. Stable oxygen isotope records of the planktonic foraminiferal species Globigerinoides sacculiferand Globigerinoides ruber(pink) reveal sub-Milankovitch changes in sea-surface hydrography during the last 85,000 yr. Warming of the surface water coincided with terrigenous sedimentation pulses that are inferred from high XRF intensities of Ti and Fe, and which suggest humid conditions in northeast Brazil. These tropical signals correlate with climatic oscillations recorded in Greenland ice cores (Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles) and in sediment cores from the North Atlantic (Heinrich events). Trade winds may have caused changes in the North Brazil Current that altered heat and salt flux into the North Atlantic, thus affecting the growth and decay of the large glacial ice sheets.


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