http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset/771658
eng; USA
utf8
dataset
Highest level of data collection, from a common set of sensors or instrumentation, usually within the same research project
Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO)
Unavailable
508-289-2009
WHOI MS#36
Woods Hole
MA
02543
USA
info@bco-dmo.org
http://www.bco-dmo.org
Monday - Friday 8:00am - 5:00pm
For questions regarding this resource, please contact BCO-DMO via the email address provided.
pointOfContact
2019-06-21
ISO 19115-2 Geographic Information - Metadata - Part 2: Extensions for Imagery and Gridded Data
ISO 19115-2:2009(E)
14C dates from core PC1 collected from T Lake, Palau in September 2013
2019-06-21
publication
2019-06-21
revision
Marine Biological Laboratory/Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Library (MBLWHOI DLA)
2019-06-26
publication
https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/bco-dmo.771658.1
Julian P. Sachs
University of Washington
principalInvestigator
Michael N. Dawson
University of California-Merced
principalInvestigator
Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO)
Unavailable
508-289-2009
WHOI MS#36
Woods Hole
MA
02543
USA
info@bco-dmo.org
http://www.bco-dmo.org
Monday - Friday 8:00am - 5:00pm
For questions regarding this resource, please contact BCO-DMO via the email address provided.
publisher
Cite this dataset as: Sachs, J., Dawson, M. (2019) 14C dates from core PC1 collected from T Lake, Palau in September 2013. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2019-06-21 [if applicable, indicate subset used]. doi:10.1575/1912/bco-dmo.771658.1 [access date]
14C Dates from core PC1, T Lake, Palau Dataset Description: Methods and Sampling: <p>Sediment core PTLN‐PC1 was collected September 2013 in sequential 1‐m sections using a 5‐cm‐diameter Colinvaux‐Vohnout Livingstone‐type rod‐operated piston corer (Geocore, Columbus, Ohio). Each section was sealed in the field and refrigerated at 4 °C until core splitting and subsampling.</p>
<p>Thirteen macrofossils were pulled from the core and were pretreated with an acid‐base‐acid procedure according to the protocol in Brock et al. (2010) to remove extraneous organic materials. Accelerator mass spectrometry 14C dating was performed by DirectAMS in Bothell, WA, United States.</p>
Funding provided by NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) Award Number: OCE-1241247 Award URL: http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward.do?AwardNumber=1241247
completed
Julian P. Sachs
University of Washington
206-221-5630
School of Oceanography Box 357940
Seattle
WA
357940
United States
jsachs@washington.edu
pointOfContact
Michael N. Dawson
University of California-Merced
209-228-4056
School of Natural Sciences 5200 North Lake Road
Merced
CA
95343
United States
mdawson@ucmerced.edu
pointOfContact
asNeeded
Dataset Version: 1
Unknown
Labcode
depth_top
mat_dated
raw_14C
raw_14C_err
calib_14C_95_lo
calib_14C_95_up
Colinvaux‐Vohnout Livingstone‐type rod‐operated piston corer
Accelerator mass spectrometry
theme
None, User defined
sample identification
depth core
sample description
carbon-14 age dating
featureType
BCO-DMO Standard Parameters
Piston Corer
Accelerator Mass Spectrometer
instrument
BCO-DMO Standard Instruments
Palau_lakes
service
Deployment Activity
NW Pacific
place
Locations
otherRestrictions
otherRestrictions
Access Constraints: none. Use Constraints: Please follow guidelines at: http://www.bco-dmo.org/terms-use Distribution liability: Under no circumstances shall BCO-DMO be liable for any direct, incidental, special, consequential, indirect, or punitive damages that result from the use of, or the inability to use, the materials in this data submission. If you are dissatisfied with any materials in this data submission your sole and exclusive remedy is to discontinue use.
Dimensions of Biodiversity
http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=503446
Dimensions of Biodiversity
(adapted from the NSF Synopsis of Program)
Dimensions of Biodiversity is a program solicitation from the NSF Directorate for Biological Sciences. FY 2010 was year one of the program. [MORE from NSF]
The NSF Dimensions of Biodiversity program seeks to characterize biodiversity on Earth by using integrative, innovative approaches to fill rapidly the most substantial gaps in our understanding. The program will take a broad view of biodiversity, and in its initial phase will focus on the integration of genetic, taxonomic, and functional dimensions of biodiversity. Project investigators are encouraged to integrate these three dimensions to understand the interactions and feedbacks among them. While this focus complements several core NSF programs, it differs by requiring that multiple dimensions of biodiversity be addressed simultaneously, to understand the roles of biodiversity in critical ecological and evolutionary processes.
Dimensions of Biodiversity
largerWorkCitation
program
Do Parallel Patterns Arise from Parallel Processes?
http://marinelakes.ucmerced.edu/
Do Parallel Patterns Arise from Parallel Processes?
<p>This project will survey the taxonomic, genetic, and functional diversity of the organisms found in marine lakes, and investigate the processes that cause gains and losses in this biodiversity. Marine lakes formed as melting ice sheets raised sea level after the last glacial maximum and flooded hundreds of inland valleys around the world. Inoculated with marine life from the surrounding sea and then isolated to varying degrees for the next 6,000 to 15,000 years, these marine lakes provide multiple, independent examples of how environments and interactions between species can drive extinction and speciation. Researchers will survey the microbes, algae, invertebrates, and fishes present in 40 marine lakes in Palau and Papua, and study how diversity has changed over time by retrieving the remains of organisms preserved in sediments on the lake bottoms. The project will test whether the number of species, the diversity of functional roles played by organisms, and the genetic diversity within species increase and decrease in parallel; whether certain species can greatly curtail diversity by changing the environment; whether the size of a lake determines its biodiversity; and whether the processes that control diversity in marine organisms are similar to those that operate on land.</p>
<p>Because biodiversity underlies the ecosystem services on which society depends, society has a great interest in understanding the processes that generate and retain biodiversity in nature. This project will also help conserve areas of economic importance. Marine lakes in the study region are important for tourism, and researchers will work closely with governmental and non-governmental conservation and education groups and with diving and tourism businesses to raise awareness of the value and threats to marine lakes in Indonesia and Palau.</p>
PaPaPro
largerWorkCitation
project
eng; USA
oceans
NW Pacific
134.4385
134.4385
7.3045
7.3045
2013-09-01
2013-09-30
Western Pacific; Palau; Indonesia (West Papua)
0
BCO-DMO catalogue of parameters from 14C dates from core PC1 collected from T Lake, Palau in September 2013
Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO)
Unavailable
508-289-2009
WHOI MS#36
Woods Hole
MA
02543
USA
info@bco-dmo.org
http://www.bco-dmo.org
Monday - Friday 8:00am - 5:00pm
For questions regarding this resource, please contact BCO-DMO via the email address provided.
pointOfContact
http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset-parameter/771680.rdf
Name: Labcode
Units: unitless
Description: sample identification used by 14C laboratory
http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset-parameter/771681.rdf
Name: depth_top
Units: centimeters (cm)
Description: composite depth, top of 1 cm interval associated with fossil
http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset-parameter/771682.rdf
Name: mat_dated
Units: unitless
Description: material dated
http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset-parameter/771683.rdf
Name: raw_14C
Units: years
Description: conventional radiocarbon age, relative to 1950
http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset-parameter/771684.rdf
Name: raw_14C_err
Units: years
Description: standard error, radiocarbon age
http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset-parameter/771685.rdf
Name: calib_14C_95_lo
Units: years
Description: calibrated age, 95% confidence interval lower bound
http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset-parameter/771686.rdf
Name: calib_14C_95_up
Units: years
Description: calibrated age, 95% confidence interval upper bound
GB/NERC/BODC > British Oceanographic Data Centre, Natural Environment Research Council, United Kingdom
Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO)
Unavailable
508-289-2009
WHOI MS#36
Woods Hole
MA
02543
USA
info@bco-dmo.org
http://www.bco-dmo.org
Monday - Friday 8:00am - 5:00pm
For questions regarding this resource, please contact BCO-DMO via the email address provided.
pointOfContact
710
https://darchive.mblwhoilibrary.org/bitstream/1912/24287/1/dataset-771658_t-lake-pc1-chronology__v1.tsv
download
https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/bco-dmo.771658.1
download
onLine
dataset
<p>Sediment core PTLN‐PC1 was collected September 2013 in sequential 1‐m sections using a 5‐cm‐diameter Colinvaux‐Vohnout Livingstone‐type rod‐operated piston corer (Geocore, Columbus, Ohio). Each section was sealed in the field and refrigerated at 4 °C until core splitting and subsampling.</p>
<p>Thirteen macrofossils were pulled from the core and were pretreated with an acid‐base‐acid procedure according to the protocol in Brock et al. (2010) to remove extraneous organic materials. Accelerator mass spectrometry 14C dating was performed by DirectAMS in Bothell, WA, United States.</p>
Specified by the Principal Investigator(s)
<p>The modern age control (youngest age, at depth = 81 cm) was converted from fraction modern to 14C years using the pMC.age() function in the Bacon age‐modeling software package (Blaauw and Christen, 2011). This produced a 90.3% confidence interval for the calibrated age estimate of −0.04611 to −0.05081 ka BP, or CE 1996–2001 (plus a small chance (4.6%) of −0.00831 to −0.00808 ka BP, or CE 1958); this age is anomalously young and clearly an outlier based on comparison with a nearby universal core, prompting its removal. All other dates were calibrated using IntCal2013 (Reimer et al., 2013) and the Clam 2.2 software package (Blaauw, 2010).</p>
<p>BCO-DMO Processing: modified parameter names (replaced "." with underscores; changed "14C_raw" to "raw_14C" because column names cannot start with&nbsp;numbers)</p>
Specified by the Principal Investigator(s)
asNeeded
7.x-1.1
Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO)
Unavailable
508-289-2009
WHOI MS#36
Woods Hole
MA
02543
USA
info@bco-dmo.org
http://www.bco-dmo.org
Monday - Friday 8:00am - 5:00pm
For questions regarding this resource, please contact BCO-DMO via the email address provided.
pointOfContact
Colinvaux‐Vohnout Livingstone‐type rod‐operated piston corer
Colinvaux‐Vohnout Livingstone‐type rod‐operated piston corer
PI Supplied Instrument Name: Colinvaux‐Vohnout Livingstone‐type rod‐operated piston corer PI Supplied Instrument Description:Colinvaux‐Vohnout Livingstone‐type rod‐operated piston corer (Geocore, Columbus, Ohio). Hand-operated sediment coring device. Instrument Name: Piston Corer Instrument Short Name:Piston Corer Instrument Description: The piston corer is a type of bottom sediment sampling device. A long, heavy tube is plunged into the seafloor to extract samples of mud sediment. A piston corer uses a "free fall" of the coring rig to achieve a greater initial force on impact than gravity coring. A sliding piston inside the core barrel reduces inside wall friction with the sediment and helps to evacuate displaced water from the top of the corer. A piston corer is capable of extracting core samples up to 90 feet in length. Community Standard Description: http://vocab.nerc.ac.uk/collection/L05/current/51/
Accelerator mass spectrometry
Accelerator mass spectrometry
PI Supplied Instrument Name: Accelerator mass spectrometry PI Supplied Instrument Description:Accelerator mass spectrometry 14C dating was performed by DirectAMS in Bothell, WA, United States. Instrument Name: Accelerator Mass Spectrometer Instrument Short Name:AMS Instrument Description: An AMS measures "long-lived radionuclides that occur naturally in our environment. AMS uses a particle accelerator in conjunction with ion sources, large magnets, and detectors to separate out interferences and count single atoms in the presence of 1x1015 (a thousand million million) stable atoms, measuring the mass-to-charge ratio of the products of sample molecule disassociation, atom ionization and ion acceleration." AMS permits ultra low-level measurement of compound concentrations and isotope ratios that traditional alpha-spectrometry cannot provide. More from Purdue University: http://www.physics.purdue.edu/primelab/introduction/ams.html Community Standard Description: http://vocab.nerc.ac.uk/collection/L05/current/LAB17/
Cruise: Palau_lakes
Palau_lakes
Small boats - CRRF
vessel
Palau_lakes
Michael N. Dawson
University of California-Merced
Small boats - CRRF
vessel