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Cornelia M Köhler

Researcher at University of Aberdeen

Publications -  5
Citations -  248

Cornelia M Köhler is an academic researcher from University of Aberdeen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Monsoon & Holocene. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 218 citations.

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Deep sea records of the continental weathering and erosion response to East Asian monsoon intensification since 14 ka in the South China Sea

TL;DR: This article analyzed sediment from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1144 in the northern South China Sea to examine the weathering response of SE Asia to the strengthening of the East Asian Monsoon (EAM) since 14 ka.
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Geochemical record of Holocene to Recent sedimentation on the Western Indus continental shelf, Arabian Sea

TL;DR: In this paper, a multiproxy geochemical analysis of two cores recovered from the Indus Shelf spanning the Early Holocene to Recent (<14 ka) is presented, indicating some sediment supply from the Makran coast, either during the deposition or via reworking of older sediments outcropping on the shelf.
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Chemical weathering and provenance evolution of Holocene–Recent sediments from the Western Indus Shelf, Northern Arabian Sea inferred from physical and mineralogical properties

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a multi-proxy mineral record based on X-ray diffraction and diffuse reflectance spectrophotometry analysis for two cores from the western Indus Shelf in order to reconstruct changing weathering intensities, sediment transport, and provenance variations since 13-ka.
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Late Miocene paleoenvironmental changes in North Africa and the Mediterranean recorded by geochemical proxies (Monte Gibliscemi section, Sicily)

TL;DR: In this article, carbonate content and Al-normalised geochemical proxies were used to trace changes in terrigenous source area and bottom-water ventilation in North Africa.
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Concurrent tectonic and climatic changes recorded in upper Tortonian sediments from the Eastern Mediterranean

TL;DR: In this article, a fuzzy-cluster analysis on the multiproxy geochemical and rock magnetic dataset of the astronomically tuned sedimentary succession shows a dramatic shift in the dominance of "Aegean tectonic" clusters to "North African climate" clusters.