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Automated Author Profile

Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee

Current S-Index

29.8

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

1.7

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

18

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

77.2%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

7

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Omnipresent authigenic carbonates distort Arctic radiocarbon chronology

The dataset submitted provides a photo documentation on the preservation status of Neogloboquadrina pachyderma shells in sediments of two Arctic sediment cores (PS72/413-3 and PS2185-6). In the accompanying paper different preservation indices (PI_1-3) were introduced to describe the progressive diagenetic alteration from 1 to 3, and the documentation helps to understand how the shells were assigned to the different categories. The data set also serves as a guide for future shell-based work, showing differences between biologically precipitated shell and authigenic overgrowth. This dataset is the first comprehensive documentation that illustrates diagenitic calcite on N. pachyderma shells and as isolated sedimentary crystals at none-seepage sites in the Arctic. Furthermore, the shells and crystals that were used for radiocarbon dating and isotope analyses as shown in the accompanying paper are illustrated in respective documentary files.

Authors

  • Wollenburg, Jutta Erika ;
  • Matthiessen, Jens ;
  • Vogt, Christoph ;
  • Nehrke, Gernot ;
  • Grotheer, Hendrik ;
  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee ;
  • Mollenhauer, Gesine
2 Citations0 Mentions96% FAIR1.7 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.938246January 2023

Dissolved organic matter and trace metals in solid-phase extracts of water samples from the Elbe-Weser estuary

Water samples were either acidified to pH 2 or processed without acidification (pH 8) prior solid-phase extraction (SPE). SPE was performed in quadruplicates. Thus, the given concentrations and elemental ratios of solid-phase extracts are average values of quadruplicate measurements (+/- standard deviation).Some values for SPE-V and SPE-As were below limit of detection (LOD).

Authors

  • Ksionzek, Kerstin B ;
  • Zhang, Jing ;
  • Ludwichowski, Kai-Uwe ;
  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee ;
  • Trimborn, Scarlett ;
  • Jendrossek, Thomas ;
  • Kattner, Gerhard ;
  • Koch, Boris P
0 Citations0 Mentions96% FAIR2.1 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.895909January 2018

Iron assimilation by the clam Laternula elliptica from Potter Cove, King Georg Island, Antarctica

Iron stable isotope signatures (d56Fe) in hemolymph (bivalve blood) of the Antarctic bivalve Laternula elliptica were analyzed by Multiple Collector-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (MC-ICP-MS) to test whether the isotopic fingerprint can be tracked back to the predominant sources of the assimilated Fe. An earlier investigation of Fe concentrations in L. elliptica hemolymph suggested that an assimilation of reactive and bioavailable Fe (oxyhydr)oxide particles (i.e. ferrihydrite), precipitated from pore water Fe around the benthic boundary, is responsible for the high Fe concentration in L. elliptica (Poigner et al., 2013, doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2013.10.027).At two stations in Potter Cove (King George Island, Antarctica) bivalve hemolymph showed mean d56Fe values of -1.19 ± 0.34 per mil and -1.04 ± 0.39 per mil, respectively, which is between 0.5 per mil and 0.85 per mil lighter than the pool of easily reducible Fe (oxyhydr)oxides of the surface sediments (-0.3 per mil to -0.6 per mil). This is in agreement with the enrichment of lighter Fe isotopes at higher trophic levels, resulting from the preferential assimilation of light isotopes from nutrition. Nevertheless, d56Fe hemolymph values from both stations showed a high variability, ranging between -0.21 per mil (value close to unaltered/primary Fe(oxyhydr)oxide minerals) and -1.91 per mil (typical for pore water Fe or diagenetic Fe precipitates), which we interpret as a "mixed" d56Fe signature caused by Fe assimilation from different sources with varying Fe contents and d56Fe values. Furthermore, mass dependent Fe fractionation related to physiological processes within the bivalve cannot be ruled out.This is the first study addressing the potential of Fe isotopes for tracing back food sources of bivalves.

Authors

  • Poigner, Harald ;
  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee ;
  • Abele, Doris ;
  • Staubwasser, Michael ;
  • Henkel, Susann
1 Citation0 Mentions96% FAIR2.4 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.846456January 2015

EPICA Dronning Maud Land EDML ice core drilling protocol

We report on the EPICA Dronning Maud Land (East Antarctica) deep drilling operation. Starting with the scientific questions that led to the outline of the EPICA project, we introduce the setting of sister drillings at NorthGRIP and EPICA Dome C within the European ice-coring community. The progress of the drilling operation is described within the context of three parallel, deep-drilling operations, the problems that occurred and the solutions we developed. Modified procedures are described, such as the monitoring of penetration rate via cable weight rather than motor torque, and modifications to the system (e.g. closing the openings at the lower end of the outer barrel to reduce the risk of immersing the drill in highly concentrated chip suspension). Parameters of the drilling (e.g. core-break force, cutter pitch, chips balance, liquid level, core production rate and piece number) are discussed. We also review the operational mode, particularly in the context of achieved core length and piece length, which have to be optimized for drilling efficiency and core quality respectively. We conclude with recommendations addressing the design of the chip-collection openings and strictly limiting the cable-load drop with respect to the load at the start of the run.

Authors

  • Wilhelms, Frank ;
  • Miller, Heinrich ;
  • Gerasimoff, Michael D ;
  • Drücker, Cord ;
  • Frenzel, Andreas ;
  • Fritzsche, Diedrich ;
  • Grobe, Hannes ;
  • Hansen, Steffen Bo ;
  • Hilmarsson, Sverrir Æ ;
  • Hoffmann, Georg ;
  • Hörnby, Kerstin ;
  • Jaeschke, Andrea ;
  • Jakobsdottir, Steinunn S ;
  • Juckschat, Paul ;
  • Karsten, Achim ;
  • Karsten, Lorenz ;
  • Kaufmann, Patrik R ;
  • Karlin, Torbjörn ;
  • Kohlberg, Eberhard ;
  • Kleffel, Guido ;
  • Lambrecht, Anja ;
  • Lambrecht, Astrid ;
  • Lawer, Gunther ;
  • Schärmeli, Ivan ;
  • Schmitt, Jochen ;
  • Sheldon, Simon G ;
  • Takata, Morimasa ;
  • Trenke, Marcus ;
  • Twarloh, Birthe ;
  • Valero Delgado, Fernando ;
  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee
1 Citation0 Mentions92% FAIR2.8 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.841035January 2014

Porewater analysis of sediment core GeoB12309-5 (20 cm resolution)

No description available

Authors

  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee ;
  • Hanebuth, Till J J ;
  • Zonneveld, Karin A F ;
  • Röhl, Ursula ;
  • Kuhn, Gerhard ;
  • Kriews, Michael ;
  • Gerstmann, Udo ;
  • Kasten, Sabine
0 Citations0 Mentions85% FAIR0.9 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.808700January 2013

Characterication of metals in hemolymph and tissues of the Antarctic bivalve Laternula elliptica

A high input of lithogenic sediment from glaciers was assumed to be responsible for high Fe and Mn contents in the Antarctic soft shell clam Laternula elliptica at King George Island. Indeed, withdrawal experiments indicated a strong influence of environmental Fe concentrations on Fe contents in bivalve hemolymph, but no significant differences in hemolymph and tissue concentrations were found among two sites of high and lower input of lithogenic debris. Comparing Fe and Mn concentrations of porewater, bottom water, and hemolymph from sampling sites, Mn appears to be assimilated as dissolved species, whereas Fe apparently precipitates as ferrihydrite within the oxic sediment or bottom water layer prior to assimilation by the bivalve. Hence, we attribute the high variability of Fe and Mn accumulation in tissues of L. elliptica around Antarctica to differences in the geochemical environment of the sediment and the resulting Fe and Mn flux across the benthic boundary.

Authors

  • Poigner, Harald ;
  • Monien, Patrick ;
  • Monien, Donata ;
  • Kriews, Michael ;
  • Brumsack, Hans-Jürgen ;
  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee ;
  • Abele, Doris
3 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR1.5 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.776600January 2013

Carbon14 and Pb210 ages of sediment core GeoB12309-5

No description available

Authors

  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee ;
  • Hanebuth, Till J J ;
  • Zonneveld, Karin A F ;
  • Röhl, Ursula ;
  • Kuhn, Gerhard ;
  • Kriews, Michael ;
  • Gerstmann, Udo ;
  • Kasten, Sabine
0 Citations0 Mentions85% FAIR1.8 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.808699January 2013

Chemical anorganic composition and TOC and N concentrations of core GeoB12309-5 (5 cm resolution)

No description available

Authors

  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee ;
  • Hanebuth, Till J J ;
  • Zonneveld, Karin A F ;
  • Röhl, Ursula ;
  • Kuhn, Gerhard ;
  • Kriews, Michael ;
  • Gerstmann, Udo ;
  • Kasten, Sabine
0 Citations0 Mentions13% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.808708January 2013

Mineralogical assemblage in sediment core GeoB12309-5 (laminae resolution)

No description available

Authors

  • Vogt, Christoph ;
  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee
0 Citations0 Mentions88% FAIR2.2 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.805706January 2013

Mineralogical assemblage in sediment core GeoB12309-5 (5cm resolution)

No description available

Authors

  • Vogt, Christoph ;
  • Wilhelms-Dick, Dorothee
0 Citations0 Mentions88% FAIR2.2 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.805718January 2013