Ocean Dumping

Suppose that you set sail from Australia in a research vessel, the Eurostern, with the stated objective of dumping fertilizer across 320 square kilometers of the Mediterranean Sea. I expect that the Europeans may be outraged at such arrogance, and it is a fair guess that you will be in preventative...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: John Paull
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.547.6398
http://orgprints.org/15528/1/15528.pdf
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Summary:Suppose that you set sail from Australia in a research vessel, the Eurostern, with the stated objective of dumping fertilizer across 320 square kilometers of the Mediterranean Sea. I expect that the Europeans may be outraged at such arrogance, and it is a fair guess that you will be in preventative detention before you sail past Gibraltar. Yet, as I write (February 2009), a German research vessel, the Polarstern, is on a 70 day exercise of dumping 20 tonnes of ferrous sulphate (iron sulphate, FeSO4) in the Southern Ocean at a latitude of 46 ° south. That is a latitude just south of Tasmania, in line with Dunedin, New Zealand, and a few degrees north of Santa Cruz, Argentina. During the LOHAFEX experiment, the Alfred Wegner Institute for Polar & Marine Research project will increase the iron level of the treated ocean area by a factor of up to 24 times “the natural iron concentration ” (AWI, 2009, p. 7). The target area is 20 kilometres in diameter, i.e. approximately 320 square kilometres- that is an area of more than five times the size of Manhattan which is 59 square kilometres.