A framework for Korea-Canada-USA Arctic Research using the Araon research vessel
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Title
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A framework for Korea-Canada-USA Arctic Research using the Araon research vessel
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Other Titles
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A framework for Korea-Canada-USA Arctic Research using the Araon research vessel
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Authors
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S. Dallimore
Hong, Jong Kuk
H. Melling
M. Riedel
T. Collett
C. Paull
Jin, Young Keun
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Keywords
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Araon; Arctic Beaurfort sea; Korea-Canada-USA; gas hydate; methane
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Issue Date
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2012
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Citation
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S. Dallimore, et al. 2012. A framework for Korea-Canada-USA Arctic Research using the Araon research vessel. 극지연구소. 극지연구소. 2012.11.22~.
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Abstract
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In December 2011 a new international collaboration was initiated to undertake geoscience and
oceanographic studies in the Canadian Arctic. The first of the research which would take place
from 2011 to 2015. We hope to conduct new geological, geophysical and oceanographic
investigations of the Beaufort Sea shelf to study the stability of decomposing permafrost and gas
hydrate and the mechanisms for gas migration and release at the sea floor. Our hypothesis is that
shelf areas of the Arctic less than 100m water depth, which make up ~32% of the area of the Arctic
Ocean, are underlain by permafrost and gas hydrate stability conditions that formed during past
glacial periods and are only now being altered by the thermal effects of marine transgression
which may promote their degradation. Our research will allow assessment of the importance of
Arctic shelves as past and present sources of methane for the atmosphere and will quantify a range
of geohazard/environmental processes associated with gas migration and release that have not been
documented to date.
The Beaufort Shelf is an ideal study area because: (1) significant amounts of thermally disturbed
permafrost gas hydrate are known to exist in the subsurface, (2) gas venting has been documented
in association with unique physical features on the sea floor (i.e. active submarine pingo like
features, pockmarks, sub-marine slope failuregical, geophysical and oceanographic
investigations of the Beaufort Sea shelf to study the stability of decomposing permafrost and gas
hydrate and the mechanisms for gas migration and release at the sea floor. Our hypothesis is that
shelf areas of the Arctic less than 100m water depth, which make up ~32% of the area of the Arctic
Ocean, are underlain by permafrost and gas hydrate stability conditions that formed during past
glacial periods and are only now being altered by the thermal effects of marine transgression
which may promote their
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URI
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https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/8224
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Conference Name
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극지연구소
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Conference Place
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극지연구소
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Conference Date
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2012.11.22~
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Type
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Proceeding
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Indexed
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Pro(초록)국외
- Appears in Collections
- 2011-2016, Korea Polar Ocean in Rapid Transition (K-PORT) / Kang, Sung-Ho (PM11080; PM12020; PM13020; PM14040; PM14040; PM15040)
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