GLORIA

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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-01-31
    Description: Long-range side-scan sonar (GLORIA) imagery of over 600,000 km² of the Polar North Atlantic provides a large-scale view of sedimentation patterns on this glacier-influenced continental margin. High-latitude margins are influenced strongly by glacial history and ice dynamics and, linked to this, the rate of sediment supply. Extensive glacial fans (up to 350,000 km³) were built up from stacked series of large debris flows transferring sediment down the continental slope. The fans were linked with high debris inputs from Quaternary glaciers at the mouths of cross-shelf troughs and deep fjords. Where ice was slower-moving, but still extended to the shelf break, large-scale slide deposits are observed. Where ice failed to cross the continental shelf during full glacials, the continental slope was sediment starved and submarine channels and smaller slides developed. A simple model for large-scale sedimentation on the glaciated continental margins of the Polar North Atlantic is presented.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 74 (20). pp. 225-229.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-04
    Description: The passive continental margin off east Greenland has been shaped by tectonic and sedimentary processes, and typical physiographic patterns have evolved over the past few million years under the influence of the late Cenozoic Northern Hemisphere glaciations. The Greenland ice shield has been particularly affected. GLORIA (Geological Long Range Inclined Asdic), the Institute of Oceanographic Sciences' (IOS) long-range, side-scan sonar, was used on a 1992 RV Livonia cruise to map large-scale changes in sedimentary patterns along the east Greenland continental margin. The overall objective of this research program was to determine the variety of large-scale seafloor processes to improve our understanding of the interaction between ice sheets, current regimes, and sedimentary processes. In cooperation with IOS and the RV Livonia, a high-quality set of seafloor data has been produced. GLORIA'S first survey of east Greenland's continental margin covered several 1000- × 50-km-wide swaths (Figure 1) and yielded an impressive sidescan sonar image of the complete Greenland Basin and margin (about 250,000 km2). A mosaic of the data was made at a scale of 1:375,000. The base map was prepared with a polar stereographic projection having a standard parallel of 71°.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2017-07-27
    Description: Long-range, low-resolution and deep-towed, high-resolution side-scan sonar records, high-resolution seismic profiles and core samples were used to study the relatively small canyon fed turbidite systems west of Corsica and Sardinia. The margin west of Corsica is dissected by deep (up to 1500 m), straight canyons that have steep axial gradients (10° slopes are common) and that extend from land to sea without a break in gradient. The submarine canyon axes are readily mapped by their stronger acoustic backscatter. The axes have scour holes and trains of gravel or pebble waves. Canyoned slopes have widespread, shallow sediment failures. Five separate depositional lobes are recognised, extending beyond the canyon mouths. Deep-towed, high-resolution seismic profiles across part of one lobe show stacked sedimentary sheets, a few tens of kilometres wide. Cores from these sheets contain coarse to medium sand beds that are up to 3 m thick, with some mud clasts in the middle of the beds and up to 3% clay in the sand matrix. A drape of nannofossil ooze on top of cores indicates that the main activity through the canyons is at times of low sea level. The lobes tend to appear as weak backscatter, with fringes of a braid-like pattern of stronger backscatter. The reasons for this acoustic pattern are not fully understood, though in general the sand bodies are found where backscatter is relatively weak. The size of the canyon-mouth lobes is proportional to the size of the subaerial drainage basins. The limited sediment supply accounts for the absence of a well-developed submarine ramp despite the sand-dominated input from multiple sources.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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