EGLACOM Cruise July-august 2008 on the Storfjorden Fan: A Quasi Real-time Presentation Of Preliminary Results On board participants: M. Rebesco, F. Zgur,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Christian Berndt oceansurv, Cowes, Isle of Wight
Advertisements

Participants: Gian Pietro Gasparini: scientist (contact person) Stefania Sparnocchia: scientist Pierluigi Traverso: scientst Anna Vetrano: scientist Bacciola.
ANTARCTIC CLIMATE EVOLUTION (ACE) An international research initiative to study the climate and glacial history of Antarctica through palaeoclimate and.
STAFF 27 Permanent Researchers; 7 Fixed-time Researchers 10 Technicians & Administration; 34 Under contract and training personnel Director: Fabio Trincardi.
Biological pump Low latitude versus high latitudes.
JCR 269A: Arctic hydrate dissociation as a consequence of climate change: determining the vulnerable methane reservoir and gas escape mechanisms Follow-up.
Changes in POC Concentration and  13 C during Mesoscale Iron Fertilization in the Southern Ocean 1 Mark A. Altabet, David Timothy, Matt McIlvin, and Peng.
Cruise JR175 West Greenland and Baffin Bay “Marine geophysical and geological investigations of past flow and stability of a major Greenland ice stream.
Mars’ North and South Polar Hood Clouds Jennifer L. Benson Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology July 22, 2010 Copyright 2010 California.
Global POC Synthesis from Beam Attenuation Data collected during JGOFS, WOCE and other programs A.V. Mishonov, W.D. Gardner, & M.J. Richardson Department.
Near-Bottom Sedimentation Offshore Southwestern Taiwan from Echo Character Study Jui-kun Chiu, Cher-Shine Liu Institute of Oceanography National Taiwan.
Climate through Earth history
Report on National activities, 2012 Poland Waldemar Walczowski SAON Board Meeting, 1-2 October 2012 Potsdam.
“The efficient use of ships and technology in applying policy at sea, some real examples and suggestions” Gregory Darling Chairman – Gardline Group
Physical Oceanography UNIT 8 STANDARDS: NCES 2.1.1, 2.1.3, LESSON 1.
Geography (from Greek geographia, lit
NABOS: observational program in the high Arctic Vladimir Ivanov IARC UAF, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA AARI, St. Petersburg, Russia Summer school onboard R/V.
“ NUTRIENTS ANALYSIS IN MARINE AND LAGOON ECOSYSTEMS LABORATORY” EQUIPMENT.
OEAS 604 Introduction to Physical Oceanography Eileen Hofmann John Klinck Chet Grosch.
Plate Tectonics and Global Glaciation Tectonic plate motions move the continents and determine the form of the ocean basins. Paleoclimatologists have suggested.
PROMESS 1 PARTNERS 1- Institut Français de Recherche pour l’Exploitation de la Mer (Ifremer)France 2- Istituto di Geologia Marina – CNR-IGMItaly 3- British.
History Of Oceanography
Antarctic Glaciology Julie Palais Program Manager NSF/Office of Polar Programs Antarctic Sciences Section.
A WAIS Analog Found on Mars Polar Cap Weili Wang 1, Jun Li 1 and Jay Zwally 2 1. Raytheon ITSS, NASA/GSFC, Code 971, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA. 2. Ocean.
Ice sheets viewed from the ocean: the contribution of marine science to understanding modern and past ice sheets by Colm Ó Cofaigh Philosophical Transactions.
U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey ARCTIC RESEARCH AND MONITORING WORKSHOP- JANUARY 23 RD, 2009 Mark Shasby USGS- Alaska Regional Office.
RA-228 AND RA-226 FROFILES FROM THE NORTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA Hsiu-Chuan Lin, Yu-Chia Chung and Chi-Ju Lin Institute of Marine Geology and Chemistry, National.
PARAGLACIAL SEDIMENTATION IN VANCOUVER’S NEIGHBOURING FIORD, HOWE SOUND, AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR EVALUATING FIORD TSUNAMI HAZARD Lionel E. Jackson, Jr.
IPY STG SAR Workshop Day 1 Summary GIIPSY thematic science objectives presented along with a strawman acquisition strategy Agency representatives from.
The Large Lakes Observatory and The Science of Freshwater Inland Seas Steve Colman Large Lakes Observatory University of Minnesota Duluth.
Submesoscale NCP and GPP rates from Underway O 2 /Ar and Triple Oxygen Isotope Measurements Rachel H. R. Stanley Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
The hydrographic research during NABOS 2013 expedition Sergey Kirillov Andrey Pniushkov Ilona Goszczko Ekaterina Bloshkina John Guthrie and Igor Ashik.
Prospects for Using Historical Transmissometer Data in Large-Scale Assessment of Particular Organic Carbon A.V. Mishonov, W.D. Gardner, & M.J. Richardson.
Research area: Bell Island Tickle and Southern Conception Bay (map on next slide) Work accomplished: Ship based electronic surveys and sampling: bathymetrical.
A 500- YR RECORD OF N ORTHERN P ATAGONIAN ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES : L AGO P LOMO AND L AGO B ERTRAND N. Fagel 1,2, J. Brix 1, M. El Ouahabi 1, G. Lepoint.
Fe, Zn, and Cd stable isotopes from the eastern tropical South Pacific from GEOTRACES cruise GP16 – Methods and data Josh Helgoe, Emily Townsend, & Seth.
Reconstruction of the Ice sheet volume and the last deglaciation on Svalbard – constrained by surface Exposure and radiocarbon dating Participant of Kinnvika.
Amanda Mosola and Dr. John Anderson Funding: NSF Office of Polar Programs WAIS 2003 Evidence for Evacuation of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet before the.
Ice Sheet Extent, Paleo-Ice Streams and Glacial Retreat History of Antarctic Peninsula during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) David C. Heroy and John B.
Or, the Brooklyn version: What? You kiddin’ me? It’s been >30 years! – Wadd’ya mean we still don’t know for sure if WAIS collapsed during MIS 5e?! John.
Physical Oceanography Unit II. Physical Oceanography Physical oceanography is the study of the properties of seawater. There are 4 main topics: 1.Temperature.
Marine Instruments Measuring and collecting tools, nets and sieves, and ROVS, AUVs, and manned submersibles; Edited from: Kellam High School Oceanography.
Hydrosphere – Physical basis of climate spring 2011
Evaluation of the Real-Time Ocean Forecast System in Florida Atlantic Coastal Waters June 3 to 8, 2007 Matthew D. Grossi Department of Marine & Environmental.
SIPEX II AUV MERTZ GLACIER CALVING SEAL OCEANOGRAPHY Update from Guy Williams AUV/Sea Ice Specialist Sea Ice Program Cryosphere.
The Global Ocean The Vast World Ocean.
Mixing and Entrainment in the Orkney Passage Judy Twedt University of Washington Dept. of Physics NOAA, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Lab Dr. Sonya Legg Dr.
Glacial Landscapes.
SIOExplorer Stephen Miller Scripps Institution of Oceanography USA International Data Exchange Workshop Building a Global Data Network for Studies of Earth.
The Surface of the Ice-Age Earth
UNIT 8 Surface processes Biology and Geology 3. Secondary Education TYPES OF GLACIERS.
2008 Canadian Cruise Plan Pacific Arctic Region Robert Fudge March 26, 2008.
Operations Address: Marine Operations and Engineering 2A Nivensknowe Road Loanhead Midlothian EH20 9AU Scotland, UK Background Information.
AGOR 27 Science Mission Equipment
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Marine Provinces Chapter 1 Clickers Essentials of Oceanography Eleventh Edition Alan P. Trujillo Harold V. Thurman © 2014.
High Resolution Marine Geophysical Services
Branches of Oceanography
LA UNIDAD DE TECNOLOGÍA MARINA DEL CSIC:
High-Resolution Marine Geophysical Surveys
Biogeochemical Processes at Mississippi Canyon 118
MORPHOLOGICAL AND SEDIMENTARY CHARACTERIZATION THROUGH ANALYSIS OF MULTIBEAM DATA AT DECEPTION ISLAND, ANTARCTIC Filipe Japiassu Leitão, Arthur Ayres.
UNDERWATER CURRENTS OF THE COAST OF SAN DIEGO, CA
Andreas Münchow, College of Marine Studies, University of Delaware
Antarctic Ice Sheet variability across the Eocene-Oligocene boundary climate transition by Simone Galeotti, Robert DeConto, Timothy Naish, Paolo Stocchi,
Mapping submarine glacial landforms using acoustic methods
Geological Society, London, Memoirs
Introduction: an Atlas of Submarine Glacial Landforms
Relationship Between NO3 and Salinity:
CANADA.
in situ or Altimetry ? Arctic – Subarctic Ocean Fluxes focus topics:
Presentation transcript:

EGLACOM Cruise July-august 2008 on the Storfjorden Fan: A Quasi Real-time Presentation Of Preliminary Results On board participants: M. Rebesco, F. Zgur, A. Caburlotto, C. De Vittor, L. Facchin, D. Deponte, C. Pelos, I. Tomini, R. De Vittor Onshore participants: L. Petronio, M. Lipizer, P. Del Negro, A. Crise, G. Rossi, G. Madrussani, D. Praeg, S. Ceramicola, F. Donda, L. De Santis Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale (OGS)

EGLACOM = Evolution of a GLacial Arctic COntinental Margin: the southern Svalbard ice stream-dominated sedimentary system International Polar Year : 66 proposals submitted to CSNA in November : 11 nations, 14 research stations in the Polar Regions. 15 expeditions (12 Arctic, 3 Antarctic) : 40 nations, 114 research stations across the Arctic : 61 nations, 45 research stations across the Antarctic and sub- Antarctic islands. EGLACOM project belongs to the IPY Activity N. 367 (Neogene ice streams and sedimentary processes on high- latitude continental margins – NICE STREAMS). EGLACOM cruise (08 July –04 August ‘08) was funded by OGS with funds provided by MIUR and derived from service for private companies R/V OGS-Explora

Acknowledgments We also acknowledge the logistic support given by the Data Acquisition and Technologic Development group (coordinated by Giorgio Gelsi), by the Seismic Data Processing group (coordinated by Nigel Wardell), by the Environmental Geophysics group (Diego Cotterle for the GIS database), by the Administrative Support group (coordinated by Mauro Jerman) and by the many other colleagues from OGS, including Daniela Accettella and Andrea Cova for the suggestions on the swath bathymetry data. The realization of this cruise was made possible by the support of the Head of the RIMA Department (Riccardo Ramella), that we acknowledge. We wish to thank the captains Franco Sedmak and Carmine Teta and the crew of R/V OGS-Explora for their collaborative and effective assistance throughout the cruise.

SVAIS Cruise Bio Hesperides, July-August ‘07

EGLACOM: Objectives: 1) Geophysical study of an ice stream-dominated marine depositional system of the Arctic margin (the Storfjiorden Fan) in order to reconstruct the margin evolution from the Pliocene. 2) Study of oceanographic processes connected to the Polar front by means of seismic oceanography methodologies. 5) Detailed analysis of sound velocity and of the variation of the wavelet close to the area of the EU HYDRATECH project. 6) Geological characterization of fluid flow systems in the area. 3) Study of the organic carbon cycle to estimate the efficiency of biological pumps in the sequestration and export of CO2.

Instruments: Multibeam: Reson SeaBat 8111 (100 kHz); + SeaBat 8150 (12 kHz); Echosounder: Simrad Kongsberg EA600 (18 kHz); Sub-bottom profiler: Benthos CAP-6600 CHIRP II (2-7 kHz); MultiChannel Seismics:4 Sleeve Airguns (160 cubic inches) m (96 channels) Sercel digital streamer; ADCP (Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler): RDI Ocean surveyor (75 KHz); Thermosalinograph: seabird SBE 21 with sea-water intake for sampling; XBT (expendable bathythermograph): Sippican MK21; CTD: SBE911plus + Carousel sampler: SBE32 with litre Niskin bottles; Gravity corer ( 183 cm pipe length).

Data in numbers 1,071 km of MultiChannel Seismic profiles 16,744 kmq of Multibeam bathymetry 4,079 km of SubBottom Profiles >4,000 nm (>500 hours) of ADCP data >4,000 nm of Thermosalinograph data 60 XBT launched 6 CTD casts 17 water samples in 3 casts 18 samplings of surface water 4 Gravity cores

Northern Storfjorden Fan: debris flow deposits

SE Storfjorden Fan: large slides

Kveithola Trough

Conclusions 1)occurrence of slides in the Storfjorden Fan is not evenly distributed in space and time (only debris flow deposits in the north; large slides in the south; no visible slides beneath a giant paleo-slide) Rebesco M., Camerlenghi, A., Geletti, R., Canals, M., Margin architecture reveals the transition to the modern Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) at about 3 Ma, Geology, 34, 301–304. Rebesco M., A. Camerlenghi, 2008, Late Pliocene margin development and mega debris flow deposits on the Antarctic continental margins: Evidence of the onset of the modern Antarctic Ice Sheet?, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 260, )By comparison with Antarctic margins (Rebesco et al 2007; Rebesco and Camerlenghi, 2008), we infer that the first giant paleo-slide was produced by the mid-Pliocene initial growth of the ice sheet up to the shelf edge and the subsequent slides by cyclic late Pliocene-Pleistocene ice sheets advances. 2)Slides appear to be somehow related to recentmost glacial activity (Kveithola trough) and/or inter TMF areas (subgalcial water occurrence?)