Institution
University of Bremen
Education•Bremen, Germany•
About: University of Bremen is a education organization based out in Bremen, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 14563 authors who have published 37279 publications receiving 970381 citations. The organization is also known as: Universität Bremen.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The Methane Index (MI) as mentioned in this paper is a molecular fossil proxy to detect and document the destabilization and dissociation of marine gas hydrates, which is useful for studies of global carbon cycling and paleoclimate change.
230 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a review of recent publications dealing with relationships between Collembola, carbon and nitrogen turnover is presented, and a tentative conceptual model for arable soils is given, explaining the differing effects of Collembergola on C and N turnover by switching feeding strategies according to environmental conditions.
230 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present geochemical data from a total of 23 gravity cores and present first order estimates of the dating of sedimentary events for an area where conventional stratigraphic methods failed to this day.
230 citations
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01 Dec 2003TL;DR: A new efficient algorithm for detecting layered space-time architectures with respect to the MMSE criterion is presented, which utilizes a sorted QR decomposition of the channel matrix and leads to a simple successive detection structure.
Abstract: Theoretical and experimental studies have shown that layered space-time architectures like the BLAST system can exploit the capacity advantage of multiple antenna systems in rich-scattering environments. We present a new efficient algorithm for detecting such architectures with respect to the MMSE criterion. This algorithm utilizes a sorted QR decomposition of the channel matrix and leads to a simple successive detection structure. The algorithm needs only a fraction of the computational effort compared to the standard V-BLAST algorithm and achieves the same bit error performance.
230 citations
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TL;DR: There is no evidence for a post-1980s return to well-oxygenated lacustrine conditions in industrialized countries despite the implementation of restoration programs, and it is shown that the increase of human activities and nutrient release is leading to hypoxia onset.
Abstract: The spread of hypoxia is a threat to aquatic ecosystem functions and services as well as to biodiversity. However, sparse long-term monitoring of lake ecosystems has prevented reconstruction of global hypoxia dynamics while inhibiting investigations into its causes and assessing the resilience capacity of these systems. This study compiles the onset and duration of hypoxia recorded in sediments of 365 lakes worldwide since AD 1700, showing that lacustrine hypoxia started spreading before AD 1900, 70 years prior to hypoxia in coastal zones. This study also shows that the increase of human activities and nutrient release is leading to hypoxia onset. No correlations were found with changes in precipitation or temperature. There is no evidence for a post-1980s return to well-oxygenated lacustrine conditions in industrialized countries despite the implementation of restoration programs. The apparent establishment of stable hypoxic conditions prior to AD 1900 highlights the challenges of a growing nutrient demand, accompanied by increasing global nutrient emissions of our industrialized societies, and climate change.
230 citations
Authors
Showing all 14961 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Roger Y. Tsien | 163 | 441 | 138267 |
Klaus-Robert Müller | 129 | 764 | 79391 |
Ron Kikinis | 126 | 684 | 63398 |
Ulrich S. Schubert | 122 | 2229 | 85604 |
Andreas Richter | 110 | 769 | 48262 |
Michael Böhm | 108 | 755 | 66103 |
Juan Bisquert | 107 | 450 | 46267 |
John P. Sumpter | 101 | 266 | 46184 |
Jos Lelieveld | 100 | 570 | 37657 |
Michael Schulz | 100 | 759 | 50719 |
Peter Singer | 94 | 702 | 37128 |
Charles R. Tyler | 92 | 325 | 31724 |
John P. Burrows | 90 | 815 | 36169 |
Hans-Peter Kriegel | 89 | 444 | 73932 |
Harald Haas | 85 | 750 | 34927 |