Dear Colleagues, We would like to invite you to submit manuscripts to a special issue entitled "Current Research on Atmospheric Aerosols and Trace Gases over the Polar Regions" of the Journal Advances in Polar Scie...Dear Colleagues, We would like to invite you to submit manuscripts to a special issue entitled "Current Research on Atmospheric Aerosols and Trace Gases over the Polar Regions" of the Journal Advances in Polar Science (APS). APS is an international, peer-reviewed journal jointly sponsored by the Polar Research Institute of China (PRIC) and the Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration (CAA). It is a quarterly journal published in March, June, September and December by Science Press of China and circulated internationally (ISSN 1674-9928, CN 31-2050/P). Articles published in APS are free of charge with generous funding from PRIC. For more details, please visit the APS's websites. Thank you in advance for your consideration to submit manuscripts to this special issue, and we encourage you to share this announcement broadly with interested colleagues.展开更多
Due to the unique geographical location and sensitive response to global climate changes,the Antarctic region plays an important role in paleoclimate researches,and attracts great attentions from various scholars.One ...Due to the unique geographical location and sensitive response to global climate changes,the Antarctic region plays an important role in paleoclimate researches,and attracts great attentions from various scholars.One 324 cm long sediment core(ANT29-P7-09)was obtained from Prydz Bay,Antarctica,during the 29th Chinese National Antarctic Research Expedition.Based on sediment particle size,TOC,δ13C analyses and magnetism data,the authors show that the dominant magnetic minerals are ferrimagnetic pseudo single domain(PSD)-multi domain(MD)magnetite.Variations in the paleoenvironmental records allow us to define 4 zones in the core.These zones outline the climatic variations in the region since the late Early Pleistocene,including a warm period,a transitional period,and a cold period.The magnetic particle assemblage varies with glacial-interglacial cycles.Abrupt changes in particle size,TOC content,and geomagnetism occur at 102–90 cm deep in the core,indicating a sudden warming in the Antarctic region,signaling the onset of the Holocene.The authors identified 3 additional climatic signals in the middle part of the core(232–162 cm)that show unexpected cooling events during the warm period in Prydz Bay,Antarctica.展开更多
文摘Dear Colleagues, We would like to invite you to submit manuscripts to a special issue entitled "Current Research on Atmospheric Aerosols and Trace Gases over the Polar Regions" of the Journal Advances in Polar Science (APS). APS is an international, peer-reviewed journal jointly sponsored by the Polar Research Institute of China (PRIC) and the Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration (CAA). It is a quarterly journal published in March, June, September and December by Science Press of China and circulated internationally (ISSN 1674-9928, CN 31-2050/P). Articles published in APS are free of charge with generous funding from PRIC. For more details, please visit the APS's websites. Thank you in advance for your consideration to submit manuscripts to this special issue, and we encourage you to share this announcement broadly with interested colleagues.
基金This work was financially supported by“Global change and air-sea interaction”(GASI-GEOGE-05,GASI-04-01-02,GASI-02-PAC-CJ07,GAST-GEOGE-03)National Natural Science Foundation of China(41576069,41576063)Zhejiang Qingshan Lake Innovation Platform for Marine Science and Technology(2017E80001).
文摘Due to the unique geographical location and sensitive response to global climate changes,the Antarctic region plays an important role in paleoclimate researches,and attracts great attentions from various scholars.One 324 cm long sediment core(ANT29-P7-09)was obtained from Prydz Bay,Antarctica,during the 29th Chinese National Antarctic Research Expedition.Based on sediment particle size,TOC,δ13C analyses and magnetism data,the authors show that the dominant magnetic minerals are ferrimagnetic pseudo single domain(PSD)-multi domain(MD)magnetite.Variations in the paleoenvironmental records allow us to define 4 zones in the core.These zones outline the climatic variations in the region since the late Early Pleistocene,including a warm period,a transitional period,and a cold period.The magnetic particle assemblage varies with glacial-interglacial cycles.Abrupt changes in particle size,TOC content,and geomagnetism occur at 102–90 cm deep in the core,indicating a sudden warming in the Antarctic region,signaling the onset of the Holocene.The authors identified 3 additional climatic signals in the middle part of the core(232–162 cm)that show unexpected cooling events during the warm period in Prydz Bay,Antarctica.