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Publications

Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff

Filter Total Items: 1691

Physical property changes in hydrate-bearing sediment due to depressurization and subsequent repressurization

Physical property measurements of sediment cores containing natural gas hydrate are typically performed on material exposed, at least briefly, to non-in situ conditions during recovery. To examine the effects of a brief excursion from the gas-hydrate stability field, as can occur when pressure cores are transferred to pressurized storage vessels, we measured physical properties on laboratory-forme
Authors
W.F. Waite, T.J. Kneafsey, W.J. Winters, D.H. Mason

Site selection for DOE/JIP gas hydrate drilling in the northern Gulf of Mexico

n the late spring of 2008, the Chevron-led Gulf of Mexico Gas Hydrate Joint Industry Project (JIP) expects to conduct an exploratory drilling and logging campaign to better understand gas hydrate-bearing sands in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico. The JIP Site Selection team selected three areas to test alternative geological models and geophysical interpretations supporting the existence of potential
Authors
Deborah Hutchinson, Dianna Shelander, J. Dai, D. McConnell, William Shedd, Matthew Frye, Carolyn D. Ruppel, R. Boswell, Emrys Jones, Timothy S. Collett, Kelly K. Rose, Brandon Dugan, Warren T. Wood

Submarine landslide as the source for the October 11, 1918 Mona Passage tsunami: Observations and modeling

The October 11, 1918 ML 7.5 earthquake in the Mona Passage between Hispaniola and Puerto Rico generated a local tsunami that claimed approximately 100 lives along the western coast of Puerto Rico. The area affected by this tsunami is now significantly more populated. Newly acquired high-resolution bathymetry and seismic reflection lines in the Mona Passage show a fresh submarine landslide 15
Authors
A.M. López-Venegas, Uri S. ten Brink, Eric L. Geist

Enhanced Sidescan-Sonar Imagery Offshore of Southeastern Massachusetts

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) have been working cooperatively to map and study the coastal sea floor. The sidescan-sonar imagery collected during NOAA hydrographic surveys has been included as part of these studies. However, the original sonar imagery contains tonal artifacts from
Authors
Lawrence J. Poppe, Kate Y. McMullen, S. Jeffress Williams, Seth D. Ackerman, K.A. Glomb, N.A. Forfinski

Submarine Hydrogeological Data from Cape Cod National Seashore

In order to test hypotheses about ground water flow under and into estuaries and the Atlantic Ocean, geophysical surveys, geophysical probing, submarine ground-water sampling, and sediment coring were conducted by U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) scientists at Cape Cod National Seashore (CCNS) in Massachusetts from 2004 through 2006. This USGS Open-File Report presents the data collected as a result
Authors
VeeAnn A. Cross, John F. Bratton, John Crusius, John A. Colman, Timothy D. McCobb

Physical properties of repressurized samples recovered during the 2006 National Gas Hydrate Program expedition offshore India

As part of an international cooperative research program, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and researchers from the National Gas Hydrate Program (NGHP) of India are studying the physical properties of sediment recovered during the NGHP-01 cruise conducted offshore India during 2006. Here we report on index property, acoustic velocity, and triaxial shear test results for samples recovered from the
Authors
William J. Winters, William F. Waite, David H. Mason, P. Kumar

Sea-Floor Character and Sedimentary Processes in the Vicinity of Woods Hole, Massachusetts

Continuous-coverage multibeam bathymetric models and sidescan-sonar imagery have been verified with high-resolution seismic-reflection profiles, sediment sampling, and bottom photography. Together these data layers provide detailed base maps that yield topographic, compositional, and environmental perspectives of the sea floor in the vicinity of Woods Hole, an important harbor and major passage be
Authors
Lawrence J. Poppe, Katherine Y. McMullen, David S. Foster, Dann S. Blackwood, S. Jeffress Williams, Seth D. Ackerman, Steven R. Barnum, Rick T. Brennan

Sidescan-Sonar Imagery and Surficial Geologic Interpretations of the Sea Floor in Central Rhode Island Sound

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has been working with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to interpret the surficial geology of areas along the northeastern coast of the United States. During 2004, the NOAA Ship RUDE conducted Hydrographic Survey H11321 in Rhode Island Sound. This sidescan-sonar and bathymetry survey covers an area of 93 km? located 12 km southeast of Bren
Authors
K.Y. McMullen, L. J. Poppe, J. F. Denny, T.A. Haupt, J.M. Crocker

Time-series photographs of the sea floor in western Massachusetts Bay, 1996 - 2005

Time-series photographs of the sea floor were obtained from an instrumented tripod deployed in western Massachusetts Bay at LT-A (42? 22.6' N, 70? 47.0' W; 32 m water depth; fig. 1) from December 1989 through September 2005. The photographs provide time-series observations of physical changes of the sea floor, near-bottom water turbidity, and life on the sea floor. Two reports present these photog
Authors
Bradford Butman, P. Soupy Dalyander, Michael H. Bothner, William N. Lange

Collaboration tools and techniques for large model datasets

In MREA and many other marine applications, it is common to have multiple models running with different grids, run by different institutions. Techniques and tools are described for low-bandwidth delivery of data from large multidimensional datasets, such as those from meteorological and oceanographic models, directly into generic analysis and visualization tools. Output is stored using the NetCDF
Authors
R. P. Signell, S. Carniel, J. Chiggiato, I. Janekovic, J. Pullen, C. R. Sherwood

Workshop summary: Physical properties of gas hydrate-bearing sediment

A wide range of particle and pore scale phenomena, often coupled, determines the macro-scale response of gas-hydrate bearing sediment to changes in mechanical, thermal, or chemical conditions. Predicting this macro-scale response is critical for applications such as optimizing the production of methane from gas-hydrate deposits, or determining the role of gas hydrates in global carbon cycling and
Authors
William F. Waite, J.C. Santamarina

Investigating gas hydrate as a factor in accretionary margin frontal ridge slope failures and cold seep biogeochemistry

During August 2008, a research expedition (2008-007-PGC) was carried out offshore Vancouver Island on the northern Cascadia Margin (Figure 1) to study the role of gas hydrate in slope stability and cold seep biogeochemistry. The cruise was organized by the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC) as part of the Earth Science Sector, Natural Gas Hydrate Program, Natural Resources Canada (NRCan). This inte
Authors
R. Enkin, L. Esteban, R. Haacke, T.S. Hamilton, M. Hogg, L. Lapham, G. Middleton, P. Neelands, John W. Pohlman, M Riedel, K. Rose, A. Schlesinger, G. Standen, A. Stephenson, S. Taylor, W. Waite, X. Wang