Arctic Gakkel Vents (AGAVE) 2007 - Meteorological, Oceanographic and Ship Data Collected Onboard Icebreaker Oden

SND-ID: ecds0207-1. Version: 1.0. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5879/ecds/2016-07-07.6/1

Is part of collection at SND: Icebreaker Oden

This data description and associated data have been migrated from the ECDS portal to SND's research data catalogue. The level of documentation may therefore differ from other data descriptions in the catalogue. For more information about the migration of data from ECDS to SND click here.

Citation

Creator/Principal investigator(s)

Swedish Polar Research Secretariat

Description

AGAVE was a US-financed project where scientists explored life in the hydrothermal vents from the core of the Earth, which has been found at the Gakkel Ridge, a mountain ridge below the Arctic Ocean.

The expedition was an International Polar Year (IPY) collaboration between scientists from the USA, Sweden, Germany and Japan.

The AGAVE expedition made a number of exciting discoveries on the Gakkel Ridge, and one of the most surprising was the fact that the axial valley at the 85°E segment is blanketed in pyroclastic deposits - the largest unconsolidated deposits ever found on the seafloor (picture 4). These deposits are caused by explosive volcanic eruptions, which many scientists had assumed were impossible in the deep ocean because of the great pressures at such depths. The AGAVE observations turn this idea upside down, and demonstrate that volcanic activity at the 85°E site has been accompanied by the catastrophic discharge of magmatic volatiles. These pyroclastic deposits are being analyzed to determine their age and composition in order to better understand this surprising result. The de

... Show more..
AGAVE was a US-financed project where scientists explored life in the hydrothermal vents from the core of the Earth, which has been found at the Gakkel Ridge, a mountain ridge below the Arctic Ocean.

The expedition was an International Polar Year (IPY) collaboration between scientists from the USA, Sweden, Germany and Japan.

The AGAVE expedition made a number of exciting discoveries on the Gakkel Ridge, and one of the most surprising was the fact that the axial valley at the 85°E segment is blanketed in pyroclastic deposits - the largest unconsolidated deposits ever found on the seafloor (picture 4). These deposits are caused by explosive volcanic eruptions, which many scientists had assumed were impossible in the deep ocean because of the great pressures at such depths. The AGAVE observations turn this idea upside down, and demonstrate that volcanic activity at the 85°E site has been accompanied by the catastrophic discharge of magmatic volatiles. These pyroclastic deposits are being analyzed to determine their age and composition in order to better understand this surprising result. The deposits were found around a previously unknown chain of volcanoes, which were named the Asgard Chain - Oden, Thor, and Loke, in honor of the outstanding scientific support provided by the officers and crew of IB Oden.

Purpose:

The AGAVE expedition had two sets of complimentary objectives. The scientific objective was to study the geological, chemical, and biological characteristics of volcanic activity and hydrothermal venting on the Gakkel Ridge. The engineering objective was to develop new technologies for deep-sea research in ice-covered oceans.

This data set contains meteorological, oceanographic and ship data collected during the US-Swedish expedition Arctic Gakkel Vents (AGAVE), which was an international research cruise using the icebreaker Oden in the Arctic Ocean.

Data includes:

meteorological variables: Air temperature, Humidity, Wind direction/speed, Atmospheric pressure.

Oceanographic variables: Sea water temperature, Conductivity, Salinity and Sound velocity.

Ship data: Position, Speed, Course, Water depth.

Further metadata on instrumentation and the individual variables can be found in the info file. Graphics and files describing the route are included in the package.

Quality Information:

Obviously erroneous data (e.g. negative air pressure) have been omitted. No other processing or quality check of the data has been undertaken. Users should be aware of this in further data handling and analysis. Show less..

Data contains personal data

No

Language

Method and outcome

Time period(s) investigated

2007-07-01 – 2007-08-09

Variables

15

Data format / data structure

Data collection
  • Mode of collection: Physical measurements and tests
  • Time period(s) for data collection: 2007-07-01 – 2007-08-09
Geographic coverage

Geographic spread

Geographic location: Arctic Ocean

Lowest geographic unit

Country

Administrative information
Topic and keywords

Research area

Engineering and technology (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)

Environmental sciences (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)

Meteorology and atmospheric sciences (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)

Oceanography, hydrology and water resources (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)

Climatology / meteorology / atmosphere (INSPIRE topic categories)

Oceans (INSPIRE topic categories)

Publications
Link to publication list:

If you have published anything based on these data, please notify us with a reference to your publication(s). If you are responsible for the catalogue entry, you can update the metadata/data description in DORIS.

Published: 2017-06-28
Last updated: 2022-12-05