A new wave-breaking parametrization for Boussinesq-type equations
(pp. 53, 08/04/2026)
LEGI, UJF, Grenoble INP, CNRS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS
Facteurs de contrôle de la sédimentation organique profonde associée au système d'upwelling du courant du Benguela durant le pleistocène.
La marge Sud-Est Atlantique a été le siège d'une accumulation très importante de carbone organique durant les derniers cycles climatiques : les teneurs y sont parmi les plus élevées du monde pour des sédiments océaniques (de 5 à 18-20% à 1000 m de profondeur, de 0,5% à 8% à 3500 m). Ces accumulations sont liées à l'intense activité des cellules d'upwelling associées au système du Courant du Benguela, elles-mêmes fonctions de l'intensité des alizés circulant le long de la côte. Nous avons, pour ce travail, étudié une section du forage ODP 175-1084A prélevée à bord du DV JOIDES Resolution entre août et octobre 1997 au large de la Namibie. L'objectif de cette étude est de comprendre le fonctionnement du site de haute productivité de Lüderitz durant le Pléistocène (autour de 1,1 Ma). La période étudiée correspond à un stade où le courant du Benguela est passé d'un système frontalier à un système d'upwelling côtier intense, tel qu'il existe aujourd'hui. Le site de Lüderitz a été choisi car il est associé aux taux d'accumulation organique les plus importants, et permet donc une étude globale des processus sédimentaires associés aux différents contextes atmosphériques et océanographiques existant à cette époque. Nous avons réalisé cette étude en déterminant, entre autres, les concentrations en COT, carbonates et silice biogène, dans le but d'estimer les variations de paléoproductivité, les concentrations en quartz, kaolinite et smectite pour estimer les variations des flux détritiques éoliens. Ce travail a été complétée par une étude de biomarqueurs spécifiques des producteurs siliceux (stérols), carbonatés (alcénones) et des végétaux supérieurs (n-alcanes).
(pp. 7p., 08/04/2026)
MNHN, UPMC, CNRS, ISTO, INSU - CNRS, UO, CNRS, LOCEAN, IPSL, ENS-PSL, PSL, UVSQ, UPMC, CEA, INSU - CNRS, X, IP Paris, CNES, CNRS, MNHN, IRD, UPMC, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, UMich
Les dépôts de lobes turbiditiques du lac du Lauzanier (Ubaye, France)
(08/04/2026)
GR, UR, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS
Lower Devonian vertebrates, arthropods and brachiopods from northern Vietnam
Additional vertebrates and ostracods from the bituminous shale of the Khao Loc Formation at Tong Vai, Ha Giang Province, northern Vietnam, corroborate its correlation with the upper part of the Xishancun (Xiaxishancun) Formation and the lower part of the Xitun and Lianhuashan formations of South China, and its Middle to Late Lochkovian age. The variations in morphology and ornamentation of the galeaspid Polybranchiaspis liaojaoshanensis from Tong Vai are discussed and regarded as possibly size and growth-related. A new acanthothoracid placoderm with a very deep dorsal process is described from Tong Vai and the specific distinction between the antiarchs Minicrania lissa from TongVai and M. lirouyii fromYunnan is supported by additional characters. Petalichthyid placoderms are recorded from this locality for the first time, and the skull of a juvenile youngolepidid sarcopterygian is described. Eurypterid fragments and a phyllocarid crustacean are also recorded from the Khao Loc Formation. A new species of the chonetid brachiopod genus Tulynetes, endemic to northern Vietnam, is described from the Pragian Mia Le Formation at Cu Le, Bac Kan Province, a new locality which yields a large diversity of taxa with outstanding preservation.
(Geobios. vol. 38, n° 0016-6995, pp. 533-551, 08/04/2026)
LDO, INSU - CNRS, UBO EPE, CNRS, MNHN, UPMC, CNRS, NHM, VNU, PEPS, UCBL, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, CAS
Deglaciation and volcano-seismic activity in Northern Iceland : Holocene and Early Eemian
(Geodinamica Acta. vol. 18 (1), n° 0985-3111, pp. 81-100, 08/04/2026)
PBDS, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, LPGN, UN, CNRS, GR, UR, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, MNHN, UPMC, CNRS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, LSCE, UVSQ, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, DRF (CEA), CEA, PALEOCEAN, LSCE, UVSQ, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, DRF (CEA), CEA
Turbulence measurements in fluid mud layers of a macrotidal estuary
(08/04/2026)
EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, LEGI, UJF, Grenoble INP, CNRS, LTHE, OSUG, UJF, Grenoble INP, INSU - CNRS, IRSTEA, USMB [Université de Savoie] [Université de Chambéry], CNRS, IRD, INSU - CNRS, INPG, CNRS
A slab-on-slab model for the Flims rockslide (Swiss Alps)
(Canadian Geotechnical Journal, n° 0008-3674, pp. 587-600, 08/04/2026)
GEOSCIENCES, PSL, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, UP1, LGP, UP1, UPEC UP12, CNRS
The biogeography of major diatom taxa in Southern Ocean sediments
Diatoms from 228 Southern Ocean core-top sediment samples were examined to determine the geographic distributions of 32 major diatom species/taxa preserved in the sediments of three zonally-distinct regions; Sea Ice, Open Ocean and the Tropical/Subtropical. In the first of three papers, 14 species/taxa occurring in the region where sea ice covers the ocean surface on an annual basis are geographically documented. Comparisons are drawn between the diatom abundances on the sea floor, sea ice parameters (annual duration and concentration in February and September) and February sea-surface temperature. Such parameters are commonly used in reconstructing past oceanographic conditions in the Sea Ice and Open Ocean zones. Analysis of the geographic patterns and sea-surface parameter correlations reveals species-specific distributions regulated primarily by sea ice coverage and sea-surface temperature, which support the use of diatom remains for the estimation of these past sea-surface environmental parameters. Comparison with reliable accounts of the 14 species from the sediments or plankton also provides the first glimpses into species-specific ecology and habitat linkages.
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. vol. 223, n° 0031-0182, pp. 93-126, 08/04/2026)
UTAS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS
Carbon dioxide and methane emissions and the carbon budget of a 10-year old tropical reservoir (Petit Saut, French Guiana)
The emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) from the Petit Saut hydroelectric reservoir (Sinnamary River, French Guiana) to the atmosphere were quantified for 10 years since impounding in 1994. Diffusive emissions from the reservoir surface were computed from direct flux measurements in 1994, 1995, and 2003 and from surface concentrations monitoring. Bubbling emissions, which occur only at water depths lower than 10 m, were interpolated from funnel measurements in 1994, 1997, and 2003. Degassing at the outlet of the dam downstream of the turbines was calculated from the difference in gas concentrations upstream and downstream of the dam and the turbined discharge. Diffusive emissions from the Sinnamary tidal river and estuary were quantified from direct flux measurements in 2003 and concentrations monitoring. Total carbon emissions were 0.37 ± 0.01 Mt yr-1 C (CO2 emissions, 0.30 ± 0.02; CH4 emissions, 0.07 ± 0.01) the first 3 years after impounding (1994-1996) and then decreased to 0.12 ± 0.01 Mt yr-1 C (CO2, 0.10 ± 0.01; CH4, 0.016 ± 0.006) since 2000. On average over the 10 years, 61% of the CO2 emissions occurred by diffusion from the reservoir surface, 31% from the estuary, 7% by degassing at the outlet of the dam, and a negligible fraction by bubbling. CH4 diffusion and bubbling from the reservoir surface were predominant (40% and 44%, respectively) only the first year after impounding. Since 1995, degassing at an aerating weir downstream of the turbines has become the major pathway for CH4 emissions, reaching 70% of the total CH4 flux. In 2003, river carbon inputs were balanced by carbon outputs to the ocean and were about 3 times lower than the atmospheric flux, which suggests that 10 years after impounding, the flooded terrestrial carbon is still the predominant contributor to the gaseous emissions. In 10 years, about 22% of the 10 Mt C flooded was lost to the atmosphere. Our results confirm the significance of greenhouse gas emissions from tropical reservoir but stress the importance of: (1) considering all the gas pathways upstream and downstream of the dams and (2) taking into account the reservoir age when upscaling emissions rates at the global scale.
(Global Biogeochemical Cycles. vol. 19, n° 0886-6236, pp. GB4007, 08/04/2026)
EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, LAERO, IRD, UT3, Comue de Toulouse, INSU - CNRS, CNRS, EDF R&D, EDF [E.D.F.], UFF, USP
The biogeography of major diatom taxa in Southern Ocean surface sediments: 3. Tropical/Subtropical species
This paper gives a modern circumscription of Tropical/Subtropical diatoms regarding their relationship with sea-surface temperatures (SST) and sea ice cover. Diatoms from 228 core-top sediment samples collected from the Southern Ocean were studied to determine the geographic distribution of eight major diatom species/taxa preserved in surface sediments generally located north of the Subantarctic Front. The comparison of the relative contribution of diatom species with modern February SST and sea-ice cover reveals species-specific sedimentary distributions regulated both by water temperatures and sea ice conditions. Although selective preservation might have played some role, their presence in surface and downcore sediments from the Southern Ocean are reliable indicators of high SST and poleward transport of waters from the Tropical/Subtropical Atlantic. Our work supports the use of diatom remains to reconstruct past variations of these environmental parameters via qualitative and transfer function approaches. D
(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. vol. 223, n° 0031-0182, pp. 49-65, 08/04/2026)
UTAS, EPOC, EPHE, PSL, UB, INSU - CNRS, CNRS