| October 31, 2005
Scripps Scientists Participate in Historic
First
Surface Vessel Voyage across Canada Basin
By Mario Aguilera
Scientists
aboard pioneering icebreaking ships investigate ocean conditions
in unexplored region to better understand Arctic ’s role
in global climate change
Two ships taking part in a recently completed research
voyage investigating the oceanography, marine geology, geophysics
and ice cover of the Arctic Ocean have become the first surface
vessels to traverse the Canada Basin , the ice-covered sea between
Alaska and the North Pole.
The
Swedish vessel Oden and the United States Coast Guard’s
Healy, both icebreaking vessels outfitted for oceanographic
research, completed the historic south-to-north trek in September
as part of a recently concluded expedition to explore the marine
environment in this unknown region.
Although the same area
had been crossed by submarines, the central Arctic Ocean had
been Earth’s least explored ocean area by surface ships
due to its heavy concentration of floating sea ice, which in
some areas spans more than 10 feet in thickness.
Jim Swift, a
research oceanographer at UCSD’s Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, participated in the voyage as leader of a five-person
team on board Oden that analyzed ocean conditions in
an effort to better understand the Arctic ’s role in the
earth’s ocean and climate system. Other scientists on
board Oden and Healy hailed from Sweden ,
Finland , Canada , Germany , Norway and Denmark .

According to Swift, part of the reason the Canada Basin surface crossing could be attempted and achieved at this time is because the ice cover over much of the Arctic Ocean has thinned in recent decades, opening the door to surface ships.
“Some indications
have shown that the ice volume in the Arctic Ocean has reduced
nearly 40 percent since the time submarine transects began more
than 40 years ago,” said Swift, a scientist in the Physical
Oceanography Research Division at Scripps. “There is some
scientific debate about the actual percentage but there is no
doubt of the thinning in many areas of the region.”
Swift’s
investigations aboard Oden, research funded by the
U.S. National Science Foundation Office of Polar Programs, involved
examinations of ocean properties to help evaluate recent changes
in ocean climate and global change studies. Swift and his team
measured the seawater’s temperature, salinity and chemical
characteristics. Ultimately, the new data will aid assessments
of climate change and be used to improve and test scientific
models that describe the climate system.
In one example, the new information is already helping scientists decipher how warm water from the Gulf Stream and the Atlantic Ocean circulate in the Arctic Ocean basins. In a case of synergy between geological and oceanographic measurements, scientists using Healy’s multi-beam (wide scanning) sonar made maps of the ocean floor over a region of a central Arctic ocean ridge many expected to contain a gap enhancing interchange of deep waters between sub-basins of the Arctic Ocean . At the same time, the Oden science team determined which waters were actually being exchanged, thus partly settling a scientific debate about the deep circulation that underlies the other layers.
“The unique aspect of this cruise was the ability to capture first-time measurements of ocean water across a wide suite of parameters throughout the central Canada Basin ,” said Swift.
Among the research issues he is addressing, Swift is investigating an Arctic ocean warming signal that emerged in the 1990s in a layer of ocean water, roughly 650- to 2,625-feet deep (200 to 800 meters), and whether the warming is continuing in this decade. Early results from the Oden cruise indicate that the warming was a short-lived burst, or a “pulse,” though water temperatures at that depth have not fully receded to pre-1990s measurements.
“Our measurements
confirm other recent measurements in showing that the warming
was a pulse event rather than a shift,” said Swift. “All
of the results from the Oden cruise will help tie various
measurements together to help us see what the big picture looks
like in the Arctic .”
In
addition to Swift’s research in physical and chemical
oceanography, researchers from the international team onboard
Oden and Healy included biologists investigating
organic processes in snow and ice to help identify concentrations
of ozone-decomposing compounds in the atmosphere. Other researchers
obtained seafloor sediment cores for analysis while others used
instruments to survey ocean depths and seismic data.
While ice thinning allowed the historic Canada Basin passage, the two vessels still encountered areas of extremely thick ice, forcing the ships to work in tandem to cut through the ice and forge a passage to the North Pole. Strategic route planning using satellite ice images and frequent helicopter ice reconnaissance aided the navigation. The Oden and Healy reached the North Pole at 9 a.m. (Alaska time) on Sept. 12.
The cruise marked the concluding leg of the Swedish 2005 Beringia Expedition, supported by the Swedish Polar Secretariat. Healy was supported largely by the U.S. National Science Foundation.
Other members of Swift’s
team included Susan Becker (chemical specialist), Mary Johnson
(data processing specialist), Erik Quiroz (chemistry and deck
specialist), and Robert Palomares (electronics and deck specialist).
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624.
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