DocumentCode :
3307688
Title :
Arctic ice island coring facility
Author :
Gorveatt, Michael ; Yee, Mark Chin
Author_Institution :
Bedford Inst. of Oceanogr., Dartmouth, NS, Canada
fYear :
1988
fDate :
31 Oct-2 Nov 1988
Firstpage :
555
Abstract :
A three-by-seven-km iceberg that calved from the Ward Hunt ice shelf on northern Ellesmere Island in 1982 and began moving west into the Arctic Ocean was used by the Canadian Department of Energy, Mines, and Resources as an opportunity to take sediment samples and piston cores from this area of the Arctic Ocean and other areas as dictated by the track of the ice island. A substantial sediment sampling system was developed, built, and installed on the island. It consists of a winch, gantry, and ice melting system capable of taking piston cores to a water depth of 4000 m. Sampling is carried out through a 1.5-m-diameter hole melted through ice 44-m thick by a 249-kW melting system. The evolution, logistics, and capabilities of the sampling system are described
Keywords :
geology; geophysical equipment; geophysical techniques; oceanographic techniques; sea ice; sediments; Arctic Ocean; Canada; Ellesmere Island; Ward Hunt ice shelf; ice island; marine sediment; ocean; piston core sampling collection method; sea ice; seafloor; sediment sampling system; tabular iceberg; Arctic; Ice shelf; Ice thickness; Logistics; Oceanographic techniques; Oceans; Pistons; Sampling methods; Sediments; Winches;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS '88. A Partnership of Marine Interests. Proceedings
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.1988.23562
Filename :
23562
Link To Document :
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