Data Trawler - Project details

Information: - Our applications will be disrupted from 2024-05-03 16:30 AEST to 2024-05-03 18:00 AEST Friday due to infrastructure upgrades. We apologize for any inconvenience and appreciate your patience during this maintenance window.
Please login if you have access to particular applications.
Username:
Password:

Project details

Title: Australian Antarctic Program Partnership (AAPP) Ice Floats
Id: 2617
Acronym: AAPP floats
Investigator(s): Steve Rintoul
CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere - Hobart [details]

Esmee van Wijk
CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere - Hobart [details]

Description:
Years: 2023

List of surveys that this project was on.

Use [details] link to view survey details (map, reports, metadata etc) including links to download data.

Survey InvestigatorDescription
IN2023_V01

[details]
Alix Post (GA) This study has two main scientific objectives: i) to understand past changes in Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) production using long sediment cores from the continental slope over multiple warm periods during the Pleistocene; ii) develop an improved bathymetry model to support oceanographic modelling of AABW pathways. Sediment core records of previous warmer interglacials will provide an analogue for understanding the impact of any future changes in bottom water production associated with a warming climate. This project will recover long sediment cores from the shelf and slope off Cape Darnley to provide palaeoceanographic records over multiple glacial-interglacial cycles, including previous interglacials when Antarctic air temperatures were 2 to 4.5°C warmer than today. A multi-proxy approach, combining sedimentological, geochemical and biological proxies, will provide evidence of the nature and timing of past changes in AABW formation, and associated variations in meltwater input, and the extent of the Cape Darnley polynya. AABW has previously been associated with unique and diverse benthic ecosystems, including hydrocorals. We will investigate the presence and distribution of hydrocorals, and, if present, analyse their carbonate skeletons to understand past water mass variability over recent centuries, complementing the sediment core records.
NCMI Information and Data Centre  »  Applications  »  Data Trawler