New England
Seamounts
Expedition 7:
May 26-June 17, 2003
Mission & Objectives
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TODAY'S WEATHER
Sunny with some clouds
82.9°F (28.3°C)
Wind Direction: NW
Wind Speed: 4-6 Knots
Sea State: 0
Sea Temperature: 58°F
Swell(s) Height: 0 Foot
Barometric Pressure: 1015.1 MB
Visibility: Excellent

BREAKFAST
Fresh Fruits
Yogurt
Eggs
Pancakes
Oatmeal
Cereal
Juices
LUNCH
Fresh Salad
Cheeseburgers and Fries
Tuna Pockets
Shrimp Soup
DINNER
Fresh Salad
Tenderloin
Salmon with Tamari
Corn and Beans
Broccoli and Cauliflower
Roast Potatoes
Cheese Cake and Ice Cream
Mission
Collecting Deep-Sea Corals
Dive and Discovers 2003 expedition
will journey to the New England Seamounts ,
a chain of extinct, undersea volcanoes about 500 miles off the
east coast of North America.
The scientific treasures the expedition seeks are deep-sea corals ,
whose skeletons may reveal how Earths climate rapidly cooled or warmed
in the past. Learning how and why Earths climate shifted
in the past gives us an idea of how it might change in the future.
Scientists think
that abrupt climate changes may have been caused by changes in
the circulation of the deep ocean. In particular, they think that
a cold, salty, deep water
mass in
the North Atlantic stopped flowing and then started flowing again
several times in the past. Each time this flow has shut
down or turned on, Earths climate has
changed.
The New England Seamounts rise thousands of meters
up from the seafloor, right into the pathway of this deep, cold
water mass. On the seamounts grow large populations of deep-sea
corals. Throughout their lives, coral skeletons absorb chemicals
from the waters they are growing in. By analyzing the coral skeletons,
scientists can determine how old the corals are and whether the
cold, deep water was flowing when they lived. By sampling live
and fossil corals from the top to the bottom of the seamounts,
they hope to find out how and when this deep water mass grew
larger or smaller, became warmer or colder, and flowed higher
or lower in the depths-as far back as 70,000 years ago.
Expedition 7 travels to the New England Seamounts,
a chain of extinct, undersea volcanoes about 500 miles off the
east coast of North America. On the seamounts themselves grow
one of the chief targets of the cruise: deep-sea corals. These
are similar to corals found in shallow, tropical waters but they
dont have symbiotic algae that
require light. Instead, they rely on capturing food from the
water column. Therefore, they can grow in the darkest depths
of the ocean.
The corals skeletons can provide crucial
clues to the history of Earths climate ,
which is what the cruise is all about. We hope to find out how
and why the planets climate has rapidly shifted from cold
to warm periods, and to use that information to predict how it
might change in the future.
The corals skeletons are rich repositories
of environmental information. The biochemical composition of their
skeletons is different if they grow in different water conditions.
And water conditions change as Earths climate does. Like
undersea tape recorders, individual corals at different depths
in the ocean have recorded how Earths climate has changed
through time. But getting those corals back to the lab is not the
only goal of the expedition.
Our broader aim is to use the New England Seamounts as a test case: What
we learn about retrieving and studying corals here will show us the best
ways of getting other corals in the future, from the deep Pacific Ocean to
the waters off Antarctica.
The first day the vessel Atlantis arrives at a particular seamount,
it will go back and forth over an area with sonar equipment
to create detailed topographic maps of the sea floor below. We call this mowing
the lawn! Each map will contain all sorts of seafloor features such
as cliffs, flat areas, bowls, ridges, spires, and plains. With these maps
in hand, we will climb into the deep-diving submersible Alvin and
descend to explore the most scientifically promising underwater features.
Both Alvin and the unmanned
vehicle ABE, the Autonomous Benthic Explorer, will
collect overlapping photos of the seafloor that we will combine
to make photomosaics. We will also generate additional maps that
are focused on smaller areas but with much more detail. By putting
these maps together with the large-scale maps made by Atlantis, we
will come up with some general guidelines that scientists can use
to find information-rich corals anywhere. In the future, we hope
that scientists will look at topographic maps of the sea floor
and be able to determine the likeliest places to find corals.
Alvin will be doing the heavy lifting -- of both living
and fossil corals. The principal coral we expect to find is Desmophyllum
cristagali, which grows roughly one millimeter per year
for several decades, or sometimes up to 150 years. Other corals
on the seamounts are Enallopsamia rostrata and Lophelia
pertusa.
Once aboard, the corals will be documented,
photographed, cleaned (the dead ones) and tissue-sampled (the living
ones) for genetic and reproductive analysis to yield a sort of
detailed family tree. While all the physical evidence is being
processed, digital data will be assembled: maps, photo and video
documentation, and information about local environmental conditions
such as temperature, salinity, and current speed. This database
of coral habitats in different climates is another important goal
of the cruise.
The full scientific value of the corals will become apparent only partially
during Expedition 7. Atlantis has laboratory facilities that will
allow scientists to study the treasures theyve retrieved, but many
of the most perplexing problems will take months or more to solve, after
the corals have been brought back to more sophisticated labs on shore. There,
theyll undergo more sophisticated uranium-series and radiocarbon
dating and
chemical analysis. With this new chemical information in hand, we will be
able to plumb deeper into the mysteries of climate change.
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