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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-02-14
    Description: Despite many of years of mapping effort, only a small fraction of the world ocean’s seafloor has been sampled for depth, greatly limiting our ability to explore and understand critical ocean and seafloor processes. Recognizing this poor state of our knowledge of ocean depths and the critical role such knowledge plays in understanding and maintaining our planet, GEBCO and the Nippon Foundation have joined forces to establish the Nippon Foundation GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project, an international effort with the objective of facilitating the complete mapping of the world ocean by 2030. The Seabed 2030 Project will establish globally distributed regional data assembly and coordination centers (RDACCs) that will identify existing data from their assigned regions that are not currently in publicly available databases and seek to make these data available. They will develop protocols for data collection (including resolution goals) and common software and other tools to assemble and attribute appropriate metadata as they assimilate regional grids using standardized techniques. A Global Data Assembly and Coordination Center (GDACC) will integrate the regional grids into a global grid and distribute to users world-wide. The GDACC will also act as the central focal point for the coordination of common data standards and processing tools as well as the outreach coordinator for Seabed 2030 efforts. The GDACC and RDACCs will collaborate with existing data centers and bathymetric compilation efforts. Finally, the Nippon Foundation GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project will encourage and help coordinate and track new survey efforts and facilitate the development of new and innovative technologies that can increase the efficiency of seafloor mapping and thus make the ambitious goals of Seabed 2030 more likely to be achieved.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: The Arctic Ocean has maintained a geographic position around the North Pole throughout Cenozoic times. The 405 m thick Paleogene and Neogene sediment section recovered by IODP Expedition 302 (aka ACEX) from the Lomonosov Ridge at near 88°N and 1288 m present water depth thus represents deposition in a genuinely northern polar setting (Backman et al., 2006; Moran et al., 2006). Synthetic seismic modelling of physical properties of the ACEX sediment cores permitted integration to previous seismic studies from the Arctic Ocean. An analysis of physical oceanographic parameters, using fjord circulation theory, has been performed to determine the minimum width of the Fram Strait needed to generate ventilated conditions in the central Arctic Ocean. The late Paleocene to middle Eocene Arctic Ocean paleoenvironments were shaped by the basin's polar, land-locked position, its lack of deep water connection to the World Ocean, and its reduced surface water salinities. The ACEX sediments witness about a persistent shallow-marine depositional environment during late Paleocene through middle Eocene times, and that the Paleogene Arctic Ocean was characterized by limited commotion and oxygen-deficit conditions below the stably stratified, low-salinity surface waters. The late middle Eocene through early early Miocene interval is obscured by a hiatus. A 5.8 m thick transition interval of early Miocene age rests on the hiatus. This transition interval is characterized by distinct cm-thick layers alternating between poorly and well oxygenated sediments (Stein et al., in press) which possibly were influenced by wave action in a near surface setting on the rapidly subsiding ridge (O'Regan et al., 2006). A paleogeographic and paleobathymetric reconstruction suggests that the Fram Strait became sufficiently wide and deep in the late early Miocene to permit an inflow of saline and ventilated North Atlantic waters. Neogene sediments younger than the late early Miocene are consistently deposited in ventilated waters. This early Neogene widening and deepening of the Fram Strait is consistent with a new tectonic model of the strait and its neighbouring Nansen Basin (Jokat et al., 2006).
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , peerRev
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  • 4
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 455-473.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-27
    Description: Six sediment cores from the Eurasian Basin were studied to determine and understand climatically driven changes of Arctic Ocean basins. Detailed time control of sediments for the last 45 kyr is based on accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) C14-dating of biogenic carbonate (N. pachyderma, left coiling). The most important results from our study are summarized as follows. From 45 to 13.5 ka low sedimentation rates prevailed (0.35 cm/kyr). They increased drastically at the transition from the last glacial to interglacial (Termination Ia, 13.5 ka) leading into high Holocene sedimentation rates (1.06 cm/kyr). Low carbonate concentrations (〈 4%) prevailed from 13.5 to 9 ka at Termination I. Decreased salinities can be expected for Termination la (Zahn et al., 1985, Jones & Keigwin, 1988, Mienert et al., 1989) due to glacial meltwater influence possibly accompanied by sea ice melting. As a result of the freshwater influence, productivity of planktic foraminifers decreased and this, in turn, resulted in a drastic decrease in carbonate concentration during Termination Ia. Although carbonate concentration varies only between 0 and 9%, it distinctly changes both the compressional-wave velocity (from 1485 to 1510 m/s) and the wave attenuation (from 0.1 to 0.45 dB/m/kHz) in the sediment. Climatically driven changes in magnetic susceptibility have proved to be a valuable paleoclimatic tool for intercore correlations. Our results indicate that the same general conclusions are valid for pelagic environments of both Atlantic and Arctic Ocean basins.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: Atlas of submarine glacial landforms. , ed. by Dowdeswell, J. A., Canals, M., Jakobsson, M., Todd, B. J., Dowdeswell, E. K. and Hogan, K. A. Geological Society London Memoirs, 46 . Geological Society, London, pp. 17-40.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-14
    Description: The mapping of submarine glacial landforms is largely dependent on marine geophysical survey methods capable of imaging the seafloor and sub-bottom through the water column. Full global coverage of seafloor mapping, equivalent to that which exists for the Earth's land surface, has, to date, only been achieved by deriving bathymetry from radar altimeters on satellites such as GeoSat and ERS-1 (Smith & Sandwell 1997). The horizontal resolution is limited by the footprint of the satellite sensors and the need to average out local wave and wind effects, resulting in a cell size of about 15 km (Sandwell et al. 2001). A further problem in high latitudes is that the altimeter data are extensively contaminated by the presence of sea ice, which degrades the derived bathymetry (McAdoo & Laxon 1997). Consequently, the satellite altimeter method alone is not suitable for mapping submarine glacial landforms, given that their morphological characterization usually requires a much finer level of detail. Acoustic mapping methods based on marine echo-sounding principles are currently the most widely used techniques for mapping submarine glacial landforms because they are capable of mapping at a much higher resolution.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2015-01-29
    Description: The Chukchi Borderland, a prominent bathymetric feature within the Arctic Ocean, has been interpreted as a fragment of an undeformed continental platform sequence rifted from the passive margin of Arctic Canada. Dredges collected for the U.S. Extended Continental Shelf project aboard the icebreaker U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy (cruise number HLY0905) recovered hundreds of kilograms of broken crystalline basement lithologies consisting of mylonitically deformed biotite-bearing amphibolite, garnet-bearing feldspathic gneiss, and augen-bearing orthogneiss from the Chukchi Borderland. Metamorphic zircon within the amphibolite and associated leucogranitic seams within these rocks yielded U-Pb zircon ages between ca. 480 and 530 Ma. Garnet-bearing feldspathic gneisses contain variably discordant Mesoproterozoic zircon, ca. 600 Ma igneous zircon, and ca. 485–505 Ma metamorphic overgrowths. While we interpret these gneisses as deformed and metamorphosed granitoids, they could, instead, have a very immature sedimentary protolith. The youngest rocks sampled were K-feldspar augen orthogneisses that yield ca. 430 Ma zircon crystallization ages. Whole-rock geochemistry and Sr-Nd isotopic data indicate that the orthogneisses are I-type calc-alkaline granitoids. All of the basement rocks including the orthogneisses are variably metamorphosed and mylonitized. Collectively, the U-Pb age, geochemistry, and fabric of the dredged Chukchi Borderland basement samples indicate that they represent Neoproterozoic–Ordovician orogenic crust and Silurian arc batholithic rocks. This geologic origin is inconsistent with the Neoproterozoic to early Paleozoic passive margin history of western Arctic Canada to which the Chukchi Borderland has been previously correlated. We alternatively propose that the basement of the Chukchi Borderland is related to the peri-Laurentian composite terranes of Pearya and western Svalbard that have similar geologic histories.
    Electronic ISSN: 1553-040X
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2012-12-12
    Description: As part of the government response to the Deepwater Horizon blowout, a Well Integrity Team evaluated the geologic hazards of shutting in the Macondo Well at the seafloor and determined the conditions under which it could safely be undertaken. Of particular concern was the possibility that, under the anticipated high...
    Keywords: Science Applications in the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Special Feature
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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