id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::700236
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic geoscientificInformation
OXIDATION/REDUCTION
EARTH SCIENCE
SOLID EARTH
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
% BLANK LOSS
ANTARCTIC
BLANK LOSS (G)
COLD CLIMATE
CORROSIVITY
DAYS EXPOSED
DISTANCE FROM SEA (KM)
MASS LOSS (G)
SALT DEPOSITION
SUBANTARCTIC
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
Marion Island
Signy
ISTHMUS
GEOMORPHIC LANDFORMS/PROCESSES
COASTAL LANDFORMS
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Rothera
Mawson
Vanda
Robertskollen
LGB00
LGB10
LGB35
Vostok
South Pole
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
spellingShingle geoscientificInformation
OXIDATION/REDUCTION
EARTH SCIENCE
SOLID EARTH
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
% BLANK LOSS
ANTARCTIC
BLANK LOSS (G)
COLD CLIMATE
CORROSIVITY
DAYS EXPOSED
DISTANCE FROM SEA (KM)
MASS LOSS (G)
SALT DEPOSITION
SUBANTARCTIC
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
Marion Island
Signy
ISTHMUS
GEOMORPHIC LANDFORMS/PROCESSES
COASTAL LANDFORMS
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Rothera
Mawson
Vanda
Robertskollen
LGB00
LGB10
LGB35
Vostok
South Pole
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
Corrosivity Mapping of Antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons
topic_facet geoscientificInformation
OXIDATION/REDUCTION
EARTH SCIENCE
SOLID EARTH
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
% BLANK LOSS
ANTARCTIC
BLANK LOSS (G)
COLD CLIMATE
CORROSIVITY
DAYS EXPOSED
DISTANCE FROM SEA (KM)
MASS LOSS (G)
SALT DEPOSITION
SUBANTARCTIC
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
Marion Island
Signy
ISTHMUS
GEOMORPHIC LANDFORMS/PROCESSES
COASTAL LANDFORMS
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Rothera
Mawson
Vanda
Robertskollen
LGB00
LGB10
LGB35
Vostok
South Pole
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
description Antarctica is the world's coldest, driest, highest and least polluted continent. Accepted wisdom is that atmospheric corrosion rates in Antarctica should be low because of the extreme dry cold. Russian research suggested that temperatures below 0 degrees C alone are insufficient to eliminate corrosion although temperatures consistently below -25 degrees C will markedly decrease corrosivity. The severe and unfamiliar Antarctic conditions challenge assumptions about the behaviour of materials. In the 1960's, snow and ice was removed from Captain Scott's hut at Cape Evens revealing buried artefacts in excellent condition. The excavation changed the microclimate radically and significant deterioration of several materials, especially metals, has since occurred. The need to objectively measure corrosivity arose from the unexpectedly severe corrosion problems at several historic sites and the need to develop treatment and preventative conservation strategies. Significant corrosion problems also affect old sealing and whaling stations and artefacts on subantarctic islands. International cooperation has been sought to enable the exposure of standard steel coupons and measurement of atmospheric corrosivity rates in different climate zones in Antarctica. Ten locations on the continent and various sites on four subantarctic islands have been monitored, chosen because of the potential to access the site and availability of meteorological data from research bases and automatic weather stations. Observations are that the method is sufficiently sensitive to measure low rates of corrosion. The results are consistent with the Russian hyopothesis that temperatures below 0 degrees C alone will not significantly reduce corrosion. Steel corrosion rates range by a factor of more than 500 in Antarctica from the coast to far inland. Temperatures at coastal sites rarely exceed freezing and never at inland sites. A highly significant factor is atmospheric salt deposition since rain is rare. This project has determined that the lowest corrosivity rate ever measured is at Vostok, the coldest place on earth, which is 1200 km from the sea. The Heard Island document available in pdf form at the provided URL is reproduced with the permission of the Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania. The paper was published in the Heard Island volume by the Royal Society of Tasmania (GPO Box 1166M, Hobart 7001, Tasmania, Australia) from whom the entire volume is available for A$22; plus postage (A$2;.45) for orders from within Australia and A$20; plus postage (A$6; in Asia and the Pacific and A$9; elsewhere; payment in Australian currency) for orders from beyond Australia. The fields for this dataset are: distance from sea (km) days exposed corrosivity mass loss (g) Blank loss (g) % blank loss
author2 PEARSON, COLIN (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
PEARSON, COLIN (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Corrosivity Mapping of Antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons
title_short Corrosivity Mapping of Antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons
title_full Corrosivity Mapping of Antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons
title_fullStr Corrosivity Mapping of Antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons
title_full_unstemmed Corrosivity Mapping of Antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons
title_sort corrosivity mapping of antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/corrosivity-mapping-antarctica-alloy-coupons/700236
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_537
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-44.0; southlimit=-45.0; westlimit=38.0; eastLimit=39.0; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-53.1; southlimit=-53.2; westlimit=73.5; eastLimit=73.6; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-54.0; southlimit=-54.0; westlimit=158.0; eastLimit=159.0; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-61.0; southlimit=-62.0; westlimit=54.0; eastLimit=55.0; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-61.0; southlimit=-90.0; westlimit=-180.0; eastLimit=180.0; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 1991-09-30 to 1996-03-31
long_lat ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117)
ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117)
ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.033,-53.033)
ENVELOPE(-3.217,-3.217,-71.450,-71.450)
ENVELOPE(-68.130,-68.130,-67.568,-67.568)
ENVELOPE(161.550,161.550,-77.533,-77.533)
ENVELOPE(38.0,39.0,-44.0,-45.0)
ENVELOPE(73.5,73.6,-53.1,-53.2)
ENVELOPE(158.0,159.0,-54.0,-54.0)
ENVELOPE(54.0,55.0,-61.0,-62.0)
ENVELOPE(-180.0,180.0,-61.0,-90.0)
geographic Antarctic
Heard
Heard Island
Heard Island
McDonald Islands
Pacific
Robertskollen
Rothera
South Pole
Southern Ocean
Vanda
geographic_facet Antarctic
Heard
Heard Island
Heard Island
McDonald Islands
Pacific
Robertskollen
Rothera
South Pole
Southern Ocean
Vanda
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Heard Island
Marion Island
McDonald Islands
Scott's Hut
South pole
South pole
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Heard Island
Marion Island
McDonald Islands
Scott's Hut
South pole
South pole
Southern Ocean
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/corrosivity-mapping-antarctica-alloy-coupons/700236
17d8b4d4-21ca-4921-b770-6e6f908fc747
ASAC_537
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_537
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
_version_ 1766245903769796608
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::700236 2023-05-15T13:46:58+02:00 Corrosivity Mapping of Antarctica utilising exposure of standard alloy coupons PEARSON, COLIN (hasPrincipalInvestigator) PEARSON, COLIN (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-44.0; southlimit=-45.0; westlimit=38.0; eastLimit=39.0; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-53.1; southlimit=-53.2; westlimit=73.5; eastLimit=73.6; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-54.0; southlimit=-54.0; westlimit=158.0; eastLimit=159.0; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-61.0; southlimit=-62.0; westlimit=54.0; eastLimit=55.0; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-61.0; southlimit=-90.0; westlimit=-180.0; eastLimit=180.0; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 1991-09-30 to 1996-03-31 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/corrosivity-mapping-antarctica-alloy-coupons/700236 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_537 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.ands.org.au/corrosivity-mapping-antarctica-alloy-coupons/700236 17d8b4d4-21ca-4921-b770-6e6f908fc747 ASAC_537 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_537 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre geoscientificInformation OXIDATION/REDUCTION EARTH SCIENCE SOLID EARTH GEOCHEMISTRY GEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES % BLANK LOSS ANTARCTIC BLANK LOSS (G) COLD CLIMATE CORROSIVITY DAYS EXPOSED DISTANCE FROM SEA (KM) MASS LOSS (G) SALT DEPOSITION SUBANTARCTIC OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt Marion Island Signy ISTHMUS GEOMORPHIC LANDFORMS/PROCESSES COASTAL LANDFORMS CONTINENT &gt ANTARCTICA &gt Rothera Mawson Vanda Robertskollen LGB00 LGB10 LGB35 Vostok South Pole GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS dataset ftands 2020-01-05T21:17:19Z Antarctica is the world's coldest, driest, highest and least polluted continent. Accepted wisdom is that atmospheric corrosion rates in Antarctica should be low because of the extreme dry cold. Russian research suggested that temperatures below 0 degrees C alone are insufficient to eliminate corrosion although temperatures consistently below -25 degrees C will markedly decrease corrosivity. The severe and unfamiliar Antarctic conditions challenge assumptions about the behaviour of materials. In the 1960's, snow and ice was removed from Captain Scott's hut at Cape Evens revealing buried artefacts in excellent condition. The excavation changed the microclimate radically and significant deterioration of several materials, especially metals, has since occurred. The need to objectively measure corrosivity arose from the unexpectedly severe corrosion problems at several historic sites and the need to develop treatment and preventative conservation strategies. Significant corrosion problems also affect old sealing and whaling stations and artefacts on subantarctic islands. International cooperation has been sought to enable the exposure of standard steel coupons and measurement of atmospheric corrosivity rates in different climate zones in Antarctica. Ten locations on the continent and various sites on four subantarctic islands have been monitored, chosen because of the potential to access the site and availability of meteorological data from research bases and automatic weather stations. Observations are that the method is sufficiently sensitive to measure low rates of corrosion. The results are consistent with the Russian hyopothesis that temperatures below 0 degrees C alone will not significantly reduce corrosion. Steel corrosion rates range by a factor of more than 500 in Antarctica from the coast to far inland. Temperatures at coastal sites rarely exceed freezing and never at inland sites. A highly significant factor is atmospheric salt deposition since rain is rare. This project has determined that the lowest corrosivity rate ever measured is at Vostok, the coldest place on earth, which is 1200 km from the sea. The Heard Island document available in pdf form at the provided URL is reproduced with the permission of the Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania. The paper was published in the Heard Island volume by the Royal Society of Tasmania (GPO Box 1166M, Hobart 7001, Tasmania, Australia) from whom the entire volume is available for A$22; plus postage (A$2;.45) for orders from within Australia and A$20; plus postage (A$6; in Asia and the Pacific and A$9; elsewhere; payment in Australian currency) for orders from beyond Australia. The fields for this dataset are: distance from sea (km) days exposed corrosivity mass loss (g) Blank loss (g) % blank loss Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Heard Island Marion Island McDonald Islands Scott's Hut South pole South pole Southern Ocean Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Heard ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117) Heard Island Heard Island ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117) McDonald Islands ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.033,-53.033) Pacific Robertskollen ENVELOPE(-3.217,-3.217,-71.450,-71.450) Rothera ENVELOPE(-68.130,-68.130,-67.568,-67.568) South Pole Southern Ocean Vanda ENVELOPE(161.550,161.550,-77.533,-77.533) ENVELOPE(38.0,39.0,-44.0,-45.0) ENVELOPE(73.5,73.6,-53.1,-53.2) ENVELOPE(158.0,159.0,-54.0,-54.0) ENVELOPE(54.0,55.0,-61.0,-62.0) ENVELOPE(-180.0,180.0,-61.0,-90.0)