Gisela Winckler spends much of her time researching Oceanography, Glacial period, Climatology, Mineral dust and Interglacial. Her research integrates issues of Ice age and Aeolian processes in her study of Oceanography. Her Aeolian processes research incorporates themes from Deposition, Younger Dryas, Deglaciation, Physical geography and Stadial.
Her Glacial period research focuses on subjects like Climate change, which are linked to Quaternary and Biogeochemical cycle. The study incorporates disciplines such as Paleoclimatology and Holocene in addition to Climatology. Her research in Mineral dust intersects with topics in Ice core and Last Glacial Maximum.
Gisela Winckler focuses on Oceanography, Glacial period, Sediment core, Geochemistry and Mineralogy. The concepts of her Oceanography study are interwoven with issues in Ice age, Aeolian processes and Pleistocene. Her Glacial period study incorporates themes from Climatology and Holocene.
Her Climatology study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Mineral dust and Climate change, Paleoclimatology. Her Sediment core study combines topics in areas such as Environmental chemistry, Grain size and Hydrology. Her Deglaciation research incorporates elements of Atmospheric circulation and Ice sheet.
Her primary areas of investigation include Oceanography, Glacial period, Holocene, Physical geography and Geochemistry. Her Oceanography research includes themes of Ice age and Pleistocene. The Glacial period study combines topics in areas such as Westerlies, Climatology, Paleoclimatology, Mineral dust and Ice sheet.
Her study looks at the intersection of Ice sheet and topics like Deglaciation with Interglacial. Her study in Holocene is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Eemian, Ice core, Quaternary and Greenland ice sheet. Gisela Winckler combines subjects such as Plio-Pleistocene and Structural basin with her study of Physical geography.
Her primary areas of study are Glacial period, Oceanography, Holocene, Pleistocene and Deglaciation. The various areas that Gisela Winckler examines in her Glacial period study include Mineral dust, Monsoon and Paleoclimatology. When carried out as part of a general Oceanography research project, her work on Benthic zone is frequently linked to work in Human fertilization, therefore connecting diverse disciplines of study.
Her Pleistocene research integrates issues from Nepheloid layer, Sedimentary rock, Quaternary, Continental margin and Last Glacial Maximum. Her Deglaciation research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Eemian, Interglacial, Physical geography and Greenland ice sheet, Ice sheet. Gisela Winckler interconnects Westerlies, Sea ice and Ice core in the investigation of issues within Physical geography.
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Gas hydrate destabilization: enhanced dewatering, benthic material turnover and large methane plumes at the Cascadia convergent margin
Erwin Suess;M. Torres;Gerhard Bohrmann;R. W. Collier.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters (1999)
Covariant glacial-interglacial dust fluxes in the equatorial Pacific and Antarctica.
Gisela Winckler;Robert F. Anderson;Robert F. Anderson;Martin Q. Fleisher;David McGee;David McGee.
Science (2008)
Fluid venting in the eastern Aleutian Subduction Zone
Erwin Suess;Gerhard Bohrmann;Roland von Huene;Peter Linke.
Journal of Geophysical Research (1998)
Increased Dust Deposition in the Pacific Southern Ocean During Glacial Periods
Frank Lamy;Rainer Gersonde;Gisela Winckler;Gisela Winckler;Oliver Esper.
Science (2014)
The magnitude, timing and abruptness of changes in North African dust deposition over the last 20,000 yr
D. McGee;Peter B. deMenocal;Peter B. deMenocal;Gisela Winckler;Gisela Winckler;J. B. W. Stuut.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters (2013)
Gustiness: The driver of glacial dustiness?
David McGee;David McGee;Wallace S. Broecker;Wallace S. Broecker;Gisela Winckler;Gisela Winckler.
Quaternary Science Reviews (2010)
Twelve thousand years of dust: the Holocene global dust cycle constrained by natural archives
S. Albani;S. Albani;N. M. Mahowald;G. Winckler;R. F. Anderson.
Climate of The Past (2015)
Modern CaCO3 preservation in equatorial Pacific sediments in the context of late-Pleistocene glacial cycles
R.F. Anderson;R.F. Anderson;M.Q. Fleisher;Y. Lao;G. Winckler.
Marine Chemistry (2008)
Comparing modeled and observed changes in mineral dust transport and deposition to Antarctica between the Last Glacial Maximum and current climates
Samuel Albani;Samuel Albani;Samuel Albani;Natalie M. Mahowald;Barbara Delmonte;Valter Maggi.
Climate Dynamics (2012)
Salty brines on the Mediterranean sea floor
Klaus Wallmann;Erwin Suess;Graham H. Westbrook;Gisela Winckler.
Nature (1997)
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