Search Results - "Austin, W. E. N."

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  1. 1

    Quality Not Quantity: Prioritizing the Management of Sedimentary Organic Matter Across Continental Shelf Seas by Smeaton, C., Austin, W. E. N.

    Published in Geophysical research letters (16-03-2022)
    “…Disturbance of marine sediments results in the remineralization of sedimentary organic matter (OM) and impacts upon natural burial processes. Management…”
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  2. 2

    Understanding the Role of Terrestrial and Marine Carbon in the Mid‐Latitude Fjords of Scotland by Smeaton, C., Austin, W. E. N.

    Published in Global biogeochemical cycles (01-11-2022)
    “…The sediments within fjords are critical components of the mid‐ to high‐latitude coastal carbon (C) cycle, trapping and storing more organic carbon (OC) per…”
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  3. 3

    Evolution of seasonal stratification in the Celtic Sea during the Holocene by Austin, W. E. N, Scourse, J. D

    Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-03-1997)
    “…Seasonal thermocline development in the shelf seas of NW Europe results in the formation of pronounced frontal regions which separate stratified from…”
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  4. 4

    Century- to millennial-scale sedimentological-geochemical records of glacial-Holocene sediment variations from the Barra Fan (NE Atlantic) by Kroon, D, Shimmield, G, Austin, W. E. N, Derrick, S, Knutz, P, Shimmield, T

    Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-05-2000)
    “…The Barra Fan, located at the continental margin of NW Scotland, offers a unique possibility to retrieve records of exceptional high resolution to obtain…”
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  5. 5

    NE Atlantic benthic foraminifera; modern distribution patterns and palaeoecological significance by Austin, W. E. N, Evans, J. R

    Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-05-2000)
    “…Microfaunal evidence is presented from a region in the NE Atlantic Ocean characterized by well-constrained and very uniform physiochemical water mass…”
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  6. 6

    Mid-latitude shelf seas: a NW European perspective on the seasonal dynamics of temperature, salinity and oxygen isotopes by Austin, W. E. N., Cage, A. G., Scourse, J. D.

    Published in Holocene (Sevenoaks) (01-11-2006)
    “…Pronounced seasonal variability, particularly in the surface ocean heat flux, imparts an important control that drives thermal stratification of the…”
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  7. 7

    Stable isotopic analyses of modern benthic foraminifera from seasonally stratified shelf seas: disequilibria and the 'seasonal effect' by Scourse, J. D., Kennedy, H., Scott, G. A., Austin, W. E.N.

    Published in Holocene (Sevenoaks) (01-09-2004)
    “…Previously published stable isotopic data on benthic foraminiferal species from a Holocene sequence in the Celtic Sea have been interpreted in terms of the…”
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  8. 8

    Clarifying the role of inorganic carbon in blue carbon policy and practice by Turrell, W.R., Austin, W.E.N., Philbrick, S.P., Tilbrook, C., Kennedy, H.

    Published in Marine policy (01-11-2023)
    “…Since the term “blue carbon” was coined by the report of Nellerman et al. (2009) the marine carbon cycle has firmly entered the realm of marine policy…”
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  9. 9

    UAV approaches for improved mapping of vegetation cover and estimation of carbon storage of small saltmarshes: examples from Loch Fleet, northeast Scotland by Hiles, William, Miller, Lucy C, Smeaton, Craig, Austin, William E. N

    Published in Biogeosciences (20-02-2024)
    “…Saltmarsh environments are recognised as key components of many biophysical and biochemical processes at the local and global scale. Accurately mapping these…”
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  11. 11

    Preliminary Investigations of the Recent Foraminifera of Baiona Bay, N.W. Spain by I. Alejo, Austin, W. E. N., G. Francés, Villas, E.

    Published in Journal of coastal research (1999)
    “…Foraminiferal studies provide a key to understanding the dynamics of a shallow marine environment from Baiona Bay, N.W. Spain. Preliminary data describing the…”
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  12. 12

    Organic-carbon-rich sediments: benthic foraminifera as bio-indicators of depositional environments by Lo Giudice Cappelli, Elena, Clarke, Jessica Louise, Smeaton, Craig, Davidson, Keith, Austin, William Edward Newns

    Published in Biogeosciences (06-11-2019)
    “…Fjords have been described as hotspots for carbon burial, potentially playing a key role within the carbon cycle as climate regulators over multiple…”
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  13. 13

    The decomposition of the Faroe-Shetland Channel water masses using Parametric Optimum Multi-Parameter analysis by McKenna, C., Berx, B., Austin, W.E.N.

    “…The Faroe-Shetland Channel (FSC) is an important conduit for the poleward flow of Atlantic water towards the Nordic Seas and, as such, it plays an integral…”
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  14. 14

    Scotland's forgotten carbon: a national assessment of mid-latitude fjord sedimentary carbon stocks by Smeaton, Craig, Austin, William E. N, Davies, Althea L, Baltzer, Agnes, Howe, John A, Baxter, John M

    Published in Biogeosciences (15-12-2017)
    “…Fjords are recognised as hotspots for the burial and long-term storage of carbon (C) and potentially provide a significant climate regulation service over…”
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  15. 15

    Marine climate variability during the last millennium: The Loch Sunart record, Scotland, UK by Cage, A.G., Austin, W.E.N.

    Published in Quaternary science reviews (01-06-2010)
    “…The first decadal-scale reconstruction of British coastal temperature anomalies spanning the last millennium is presented from a sea loch (fjord) basin, Loch…”
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  16. 16

    Substantial stores of sedimentary carbon held in mid-latitude fjords by Smeaton, Craig, Austin, William E. N, Davies, Althea L, Baltzer, Agnès, Abell, Richard E, Howe, John A

    Published in Biogeosciences (19-10-2016)
    “…Quantifying marine sedimentary carbon stocks is key to improving our understanding of long-term storage of carbon in the coastal ocean and to further…”
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  17. 17

    A multiproxy reconstruction of Hebridean (NW Scotland) spring sea surface temperatures between AD 1805 and 2010 by Reynolds, D.J., Butler, P.G., Williams, S.M., Scourse, J.D., Richardson, C.A., Wanamaker, A.D., Austin, W.E.N., Cage, A.G., Sayer, M.D.J.

    “…There is currently a deficiency of annually-resolved temperature series from the marine environment. We present a multiproxy reconstruction of Hebridean shelf…”
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  18. 18

    The synchronization of palaeoclimatic events in the North Atlantic region during Greenland Stadial 3 (ca 27.5 to 23.3kyr b2k) by Austin, W.E.N., Hibbert, F.D., Rasmussen, S.O., Peters, C., Abbott, P.M., Bryant, C.L.

    Published in Quaternary science reviews (12-03-2012)
    “…Two high resolution marine sediment cores located 83 km apart in the NE Atlantic have been studied: MD95-2006 (Barra Fan; 57°01.82 N, 10°03.48 W; 2120 m water…”
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  19. 19

    Re-evaluation and extension of the Marine Isotope Stage 5 tephrostratigraphy of the Faroe Islands region: The cryptotephra record by Abbott, P.M., Austin, W.E.N., Davies, S.M., Pearce, N.J.G., Rasmussen, T.L., Wastegård, S., Brendryen, J.

    “…Previous studies of marine sequences from the Faroe Islands region have identified a series of coarse-grained tephra horizons deposited during Marine Isotope…”
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  20. 20

    The potential of Arctica islandica growth records to reconstruct coastal climate in north west Scotland, UK by Stott, K.J., Austin, W.E.N., Sayer, M.D.J., Weidman, C.R., Cage, A.G., Wilson, R.J.S.

    Published in Quaternary science reviews (01-06-2010)
    “…This paper describes potential methods for reconstructing past marine environmental and climatic variability in Scottish coastal waters through the…”
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