RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015

The main purpose of cruise JR298 was to collect marine geological and geophysical samples and data to support International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) proposal 732- Full2, “Sediment drifts off the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctica” (Channell, Larter, Hillenbrand et al.). The ship time was...

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Main Authors: Larter, R. D., Channell, J.E.T., Cook, C., Gowland, E.J., Graham, A.G.J., Gunn, K.J., Hernández-Molina, F. J., Hillenbrand, C.-D., Hogan, K.A., Horrocks, J., Jordan, T.A.R.M., Pérez, L., Pietsch, R., Piotrowski, A.M., Williams, T.J., Xuan, C., England, A., Morgan, P.E., Polfrey, S.D., Preston, M.O., Hancock, J.C., Miller, I., Paterson, S.G.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: British Antarctic Survey 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/41877/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.48703
id ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:41877
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description The main purpose of cruise JR298 was to collect marine geological and geophysical samples and data to support International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) proposal 732- Full2, “Sediment drifts off the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctica” (Channell, Larter, Hillenbrand et al.). The ship time was allocated for this purpose on the basis of a Site Survey Investigation grant from the NERC UK-IODP Programme (NE/J006548/1: Depositional patterns and records in sediment drifts off the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctica) to R.D. Larter, C.-D. Hillenbrand (both BAS), D.A. Hodell (University of Cambridge) and A.G.C. Graham (University of Exeter). The data and samples collected will also be used in two Collaborative Gearing Scheme projects, an Antarctic Science Bursary project, a University of Cambridge PhD studentship, and within the National Capability remit of the BAS Science Teams in “Geology and Geophysics” and “Palaeoenvironments and Climate Change”. These projects are: • Tracing and reconstructing the neodymium and carbon isotopic composition of circum-Antarctic waters (CGS-100, PI: A.M. Piotrowski, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge; cruise participants: A.M. Piotrowski and T.J. Williams). • Structural characterisation of Late Quaternary sediments from West Antarctic contourite drifts using three dimensional X-ray imaging (CT-scanning) (CGS-98, PI: C. Ó Cofaigh, Department of Geography, Durham University; cruise participant: J. Horrocks) • Tracing the Quaternary evolution of the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctic Ice Sheets using lead isotopes in ice-rafted feldspar mineral grains (Antarctic Science Bursary awarded to C. Cook). • Seismic imaging of oceanographic structures and processes in the Southern Ocean south of the Polar Front (component of University of Cambridge/BP Institute PhD studentship; primary supervisor: N.J. White, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge; PhD student and cruise participant: K.L. Gunn). • Modelling crustal structure across the Bellingshausen Gravity Anomaly and oceanic fracture zones formed at the Antarctic-Phoenix Ridge through integration of marine potential field and seismic data (Collaboration between two BAS Science Teams; cruise participant: T.A.R.M. Jordan). 2 The cruise also provided support for physical oceanography projects by deploying six Argo floats and rescuing a malfunctioning sea glider. Towards the end of the cruise, RRS James Clark Ross was diverted to Rothera to uplift 16 personnel who had been flown across from Halley in two ALCI Basler aircraft because the sea ice situation in the Weddell Sea was considered to pose a significant risk to the scheduled last call of the season at Halley by RRS Ernest Shackleton. This uplift resulted in a two-day delay to arrival at Punta Arenas at the end of the cruise, which was in addition to a two-day extension already agreed as a result of departure from Punta Arenas having been delayed by slow refuelling. Adverse weather conditions, particularly during the first half of the cruise, resulted in more downtime than the amount of contingency time that had been allowed in the proposal. As a result, one less piston core and about 20% fewer line-km of seismic data were collected than had been planned. Nevertheless, the key objectives were achieved and the cores and data that were collected are of very good quality. The data and cores collected on cruise JR298, combined with existing data and cores, should satisfy all of the requirements of the Site Characterisation Panel and the Environmental Protection and Safety Panel of IODP. They will also provide a good basis for addressing the science objectives set out in the UK-IODP Site Survey Investigation proposal and those of the ancillary projects listed above.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Larter, R. D.
Channell, J.E.T.
Cook, C.
Gowland, E.J.
Graham, A.G.J.
Gunn, K.J.
Hernández-Molina, F. J.
Hillenbrand, C.-D.
Hogan, K.A.
Horrocks, J.
Jordan, T.A.R.M.
Pérez, L.
Pietsch, R.
Piotrowski, A.M.
Williams, T.J.
Xuan, C.
England, A.
Morgan, P.E.
Polfrey, S.D.
Preston, M.O.
Hancock, J.C.
Miller, I.
Paterson, S.G.
spellingShingle Larter, R. D.
Channell, J.E.T.
Cook, C.
Gowland, E.J.
Graham, A.G.J.
Gunn, K.J.
Hernández-Molina, F. J.
Hillenbrand, C.-D.
Hogan, K.A.
Horrocks, J.
Jordan, T.A.R.M.
Pérez, L.
Pietsch, R.
Piotrowski, A.M.
Williams, T.J.
Xuan, C.
England, A.
Morgan, P.E.
Polfrey, S.D.
Preston, M.O.
Hancock, J.C.
Miller, I.
Paterson, S.G.
RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015
author_facet Larter, R. D.
Channell, J.E.T.
Cook, C.
Gowland, E.J.
Graham, A.G.J.
Gunn, K.J.
Hernández-Molina, F. J.
Hillenbrand, C.-D.
Hogan, K.A.
Horrocks, J.
Jordan, T.A.R.M.
Pérez, L.
Pietsch, R.
Piotrowski, A.M.
Williams, T.J.
Xuan, C.
England, A.
Morgan, P.E.
Polfrey, S.D.
Preston, M.O.
Hancock, J.C.
Miller, I.
Paterson, S.G.
author_sort Larter, R. D.
title RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015
title_short RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015
title_full RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015
title_fullStr RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015
title_full_unstemmed RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015
title_sort rrs james clark ross cruise jr298: marine geology and geophysics. antarctic peninsula pacific margin and southern bellingshausen sea. january - march 2015
publisher British Antarctic Survey
publishDate 2016
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/41877/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.48703
long_lat ENVELOPE(-68.130,-68.130,-67.568,-67.568)
ENVELOPE(160.700,160.700,-76.867,-76.867)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
Shackleton
Bellingshausen Sea
Pacific
Weddell
Rothera
Gunn
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
Shackleton
Bellingshausen Sea
Pacific
Weddell
Rothera
Gunn
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Bellingshausen Sea
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Bellingshausen Sea
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
op_source EPIC3RRS James Clark Ross cruise report, British Antarctic Survey, JR298, 146 p.
op_relation Larter, R. D. , Channell, J. , Cook, C. , Gowland, E. , Graham, A. , Gunn, K. , Hernández-Molina, F. J. , Hillenbrand, C. D. , Hogan, K. , Horrocks, J. , Jordan, T. , Pérez, L. , Pietsch, R. , Piotrowski, A. , Williams, T. , Xuan, C. , England, A. , Morgan, P. , Polfrey, S. , Preston, M. , Hancock, J. , Miller, I. and Paterson, S. (2016) RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015 , [Miscellaneous] hdl:10013/epic.48703
_version_ 1766135215503179776
spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:41877 2023-05-15T13:40:27+02:00 RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015 Larter, R. D. Channell, J.E.T. Cook, C. Gowland, E.J. Graham, A.G.J. Gunn, K.J. Hernández-Molina, F. J. Hillenbrand, C.-D. Hogan, K.A. Horrocks, J. Jordan, T.A.R.M. Pérez, L. Pietsch, R. Piotrowski, A.M. Williams, T.J. Xuan, C. England, A. Morgan, P.E. Polfrey, S.D. Preston, M.O. Hancock, J.C. Miller, I. Paterson, S.G. 2016-09 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/41877/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.48703 unknown British Antarctic Survey Larter, R. D. , Channell, J. , Cook, C. , Gowland, E. , Graham, A. , Gunn, K. , Hernández-Molina, F. J. , Hillenbrand, C. D. , Hogan, K. , Horrocks, J. , Jordan, T. , Pérez, L. , Pietsch, R. , Piotrowski, A. , Williams, T. , Xuan, C. , England, A. , Morgan, P. , Polfrey, S. , Preston, M. , Hancock, J. , Miller, I. and Paterson, S. (2016) RRS James Clark Ross Cruise JR298: Marine geology and geophysics. Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin and southern Bellingshausen Sea. January - March 2015 , [Miscellaneous] hdl:10013/epic.48703 EPIC3RRS James Clark Ross cruise report, British Antarctic Survey, JR298, 146 p. Miscellaneous notRev 2016 ftawi 2021-12-24T15:41:57Z The main purpose of cruise JR298 was to collect marine geological and geophysical samples and data to support International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) proposal 732- Full2, “Sediment drifts off the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctica” (Channell, Larter, Hillenbrand et al.). The ship time was allocated for this purpose on the basis of a Site Survey Investigation grant from the NERC UK-IODP Programme (NE/J006548/1: Depositional patterns and records in sediment drifts off the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctica) to R.D. Larter, C.-D. Hillenbrand (both BAS), D.A. Hodell (University of Cambridge) and A.G.C. Graham (University of Exeter). The data and samples collected will also be used in two Collaborative Gearing Scheme projects, an Antarctic Science Bursary project, a University of Cambridge PhD studentship, and within the National Capability remit of the BAS Science Teams in “Geology and Geophysics” and “Palaeoenvironments and Climate Change”. These projects are: • Tracing and reconstructing the neodymium and carbon isotopic composition of circum-Antarctic waters (CGS-100, PI: A.M. Piotrowski, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge; cruise participants: A.M. Piotrowski and T.J. Williams). • Structural characterisation of Late Quaternary sediments from West Antarctic contourite drifts using three dimensional X-ray imaging (CT-scanning) (CGS-98, PI: C. Ó Cofaigh, Department of Geography, Durham University; cruise participant: J. Horrocks) • Tracing the Quaternary evolution of the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctic Ice Sheets using lead isotopes in ice-rafted feldspar mineral grains (Antarctic Science Bursary awarded to C. Cook). • Seismic imaging of oceanographic structures and processes in the Southern Ocean south of the Polar Front (component of University of Cambridge/BP Institute PhD studentship; primary supervisor: N.J. White, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge; PhD student and cruise participant: K.L. Gunn). • Modelling crustal structure across the Bellingshausen Gravity Anomaly and oceanic fracture zones formed at the Antarctic-Phoenix Ridge through integration of marine potential field and seismic data (Collaboration between two BAS Science Teams; cruise participant: T.A.R.M. Jordan). 2 The cruise also provided support for physical oceanography projects by deploying six Argo floats and rescuing a malfunctioning sea glider. Towards the end of the cruise, RRS James Clark Ross was diverted to Rothera to uplift 16 personnel who had been flown across from Halley in two ALCI Basler aircraft because the sea ice situation in the Weddell Sea was considered to pose a significant risk to the scheduled last call of the season at Halley by RRS Ernest Shackleton. This uplift resulted in a two-day delay to arrival at Punta Arenas at the end of the cruise, which was in addition to a two-day extension already agreed as a result of departure from Punta Arenas having been delayed by slow refuelling. Adverse weather conditions, particularly during the first half of the cruise, resulted in more downtime than the amount of contingency time that had been allowed in the proposal. As a result, one less piston core and about 20% fewer line-km of seismic data were collected than had been planned. Nevertheless, the key objectives were achieved and the cores and data that were collected are of very good quality. The data and cores collected on cruise JR298, combined with existing data and cores, should satisfy all of the requirements of the Site Characterisation Panel and the Environmental Protection and Safety Panel of IODP. They will also provide a good basis for addressing the science objectives set out in the UK-IODP Site Survey Investigation proposal and those of the ancillary projects listed above. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica Bellingshausen Sea Sea ice Southern Ocean Weddell Sea West Antarctica Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Weddell Sea West Antarctica Shackleton Bellingshausen Sea Pacific Weddell Rothera ENVELOPE(-68.130,-68.130,-67.568,-67.568) Gunn ENVELOPE(160.700,160.700,-76.867,-76.867)