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  • 3D seismic data  (1)
  • Azimuth; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CT; DATE/TIME; Distance; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Magnitude; MARUM; NEPTUNE; off west coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia; Time delay; Underway cruise track measurements
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Mega‐scale glacial lineations formed by the raking of ice shelves across the seafloor have been reported from multiple polar regions. Here, we present the first evidence of continental slope situated buried lineations in the southern Canadian Beaufort Sea in present‐day water depths of 220 to 800 m. Three separate surfaces with lineations are defined at sub‐seafloor depths of 40 m to 390 m. All lineations are mostly parallel to the general trend of slope contours. The uppermost surface is recognized over a distance of 56 km. In water depths 〉 500 m the lineations are parallel to each other at a consistent direction (43°–44°). The second lineated surface is a regionally occurring erosional unconformity. This event has two sub‐sets of lineations: mid‐slope situated lineations oriented at 42°–48°, and lineations closer to the continental shelf break at 55°–59°. The third lineated surface is an unconformable horizon buried up to 390 m below seafloor with lineaments oriented between 30° and 55°. All three sets of lineations are interpreted to have been produced by ice‐ploughing on the paleo‐seafloor through the grounding of an ice shelf. Our observations are similar to those documented along the slope off northern Alaska, Chukchi Rise, and Lomonosov Ridge. Collectively, these observations support the concept of an extensive ice shelf across the Arctic Ocean that grounded locally along its margins during multiple glaciations, including during the penultimate (or an earlier) glaciation. The youngest set of lineations indicates ice movement to the southwest with a suggested source in Amundsen Gulf and/or M'Clure Strait. Tentative age considerations for these youngest lineations indicate the first evidence for an analogous extensive ice shelf configuration for the Last Glacial Maximum.
    Description: We present the first evidence of continental slope situated buried lineations in the southern Canadian Beaufort Sea in present‐day water depths of 220 to 800 m. Three stratigraphically separate surfaces with lineations have been defined from three‐dimensional seismic data. All three sets of lineations are interpreted to have originated from interactions of an ice‐shelf that locally grounded with soft sediments at the paleo‐seafloor.
    Description: Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, Korea http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003566
    Description: Geological Survey of Canada‐Pacific
    Description: British Petroleum Canada
    Description: Imperial Oil Resources Canada Ltd
    Keywords: 551.3 ; 3D seismic data ; Canadian Beaufort Sea ; ice shelf grounding ; Last Glacial Maximum ; mega‐scale glacial lineations
    Type: article
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Römer, Miriam; Riedel, Michael; Scherwath, Martin; Heesemann, Martin; Spence, George D (2016): Tidally controlled gas bubble emissions: A comprehensive study using long-term monitoring data from the NEPTUNE cabled observatory offshore Vancouver Island. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 17(9), 3797-3814, https://doi.org/10.1002/2016GC006528
    Publication Date: 2023-11-25
    Description: Long-term monitoring over 1 year revealed high temporal variability of gas emissions at a cold seep in 1250 m water depth offshore Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Data from the North East Pacific Time series Underwater Networked Experiment observatory operated by Ocean Networks Canada were used. The site is equipped with a 260 kHz Imagenex sonar collecting hourly data, conductivity-temperature-depth sensors, bottom pressure recorders, current meter, and an ocean bottom seismograph. This enables correlation of the data and analyzing trigger mechanisms and regulating criteria of gas discharge activity. Three periods of gas emission activity were observed: (a) short activity phases of few hours lasting several months, (b) alternating activity and inactivity of up to several day-long phases each, and (c) a period of several weeks of permanent activity. These periods can neither be explained by oceanographic conditions nor initiated by earthquakes. However, we found a clear correlation of gas emission with bottom pressure changes controlled by tides. Gas bubbles start emanating during decreasing tidal pressure. Tidally induced pressure changes also influence the subbottom fluid system by shifting the methane solubility resulting in exsolution of gas during falling tides. These pressure changes affect the equilibrium of forces allowing free gas in sediments to emanate into the water column at decreased hydrostatic load. We propose a model for the fluid system at the seep, fueled by a constant subsurface methane flux and a frequent tidally controlled discharge of gas bubbles into the ocean, transferable to other gas emission sites in the world's oceans.
    Keywords: Azimuth; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CT; DATE/TIME; Distance; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Magnitude; MARUM; NEPTUNE; off west coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia; Time delay; Underway cruise track measurements
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1075 data points
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