Geologic and Geophysical Observations in the Northern Labrador Sea

Reports and discusses the results of a 3500 mi magnetic, bathymetric and seismic reflection reconnaissance survey concentrated in the area 61 - 64 N in Aug-Sept 1967 by the USCGC Mariposa in cooperation with the US Naval Oceanographic Office and the Univ of Wisconsin. The continental shelf off West...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ARCTIC
Main Authors: Johnson, G. Leonard, Closuit, Al W., Pew, James A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1969
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/66243
Description
Summary:Reports and discusses the results of a 3500 mi magnetic, bathymetric and seismic reflection reconnaissance survey concentrated in the area 61 - 64 N in Aug-Sept 1967 by the USCGC Mariposa in cooperation with the US Naval Oceanographic Office and the Univ of Wisconsin. The continental shelf off West Greenland is ~100 fathoms shallower than that off the east coast; the continental slope is precipitous and the continental rise poorly developed and irregular. The origin of the marginal trench at the base of the slope seaward of Godthaab is either tectonism, bottom current erosion or a combination. Depths of the Labrador continental shelf break range 250-300 f; its slope gradients are 1:20-1:40 and there is a well developed continental rise. A number of canyons are noted in the sea floor of the area, and Northwest Atlantic Mid-Ocean Canyon is the dominent feature as far as 60 N. Seismic data suggest a continuous buried ridge near the geographic axis of the basin, the Mid-Labrador Sea Ridge, traced to the Davis Strait sill. It is suggested that this ridge is a relic of Mid-Oceanic Ridge which, as it developed, separated the continental blocks of Greenland and Canada. The bottom conditions of the sea indicate major sculpting by bottom currents. Observations géologiques et géophysiques dans le nord de la mer du Labrador. Des recherches récentes ont fourni de précieuses informations sur la morphologie, la structure et l'origine de la partie nord de la mer du Labrador. Des preuves indirectes indiquent que les régimes des courants de fond pourraient bien déterminer les processus dynamiques de sédimentation. La crête enfouie au milieu de la mer du Labrador a été retracée jusqu'au seuil du détroit de Davis. On peut considérer que cette crête représente les restes d'une crête médi-océanique dont la croissance axiale a séparé les blocs continentaux du Groenland et du Canada.