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JOIDES Resolution Returns to Ocean Drilling in the Pacific Ocean

Posted by Will Ramos on Friday, May 1st, 2009 at 2:48 pm
Filed under: Discovery,News & Resources,Press Releases,Scientific Ocean Drilling
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The JOIDES Resolution

The JOIDES Resolution

Nearly 53 million years of climate & ocean acidification history found by following the paleo-equator

The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program drillship JOIDES Resolution left Honolulu in early March for a two month voyage with 29 scientists from seven nations, 25 technicians, and 66 crew from many more countries to chart the detailed climate history during the first of two voyages of the “Pacific Equatorial Age Transect”. This was the first international scientific drilling expedition after the JOIDES Resolution underwent a multi-year, more than $100 million U.S. dollar transformation into a 21st century floating science laboratory.

A second expedition to the equatorial Pacific will depart Honolulu, Hawaii, on 9 May, led by the Co-Chief Scientists Mitch Lyle and Isabella Raffi. The second scientific team will recover sediment cores from the sea floor at three more drilling locations. The entire scientific team is made up of 60 scientists from over 15 different countries and represents scientists at every stage of their career from graduate students to senior professors. Scientists, drillers, and technical staff participated in live interactive video conferences with enthused students and teachers who learned about the expedition’s discoveries, ocean drilling, and life at sea.

Scientists using mud and rocks from far below the equatorial Pacific ocean floor are uncovering details about the climate history on Earth. The sediment layers recovered from six drilling locations act like pages from a book, and record inch-by-inch Earth’s climate history. The two month long expedition succeeded in obtaining records ranging from the present to the warmest sustained “greenhouse” period on Earth around 53 million years ago. Then, alligators lived as far north as the Arctic, and palm trees existed in the Rocky Mountains. Reconstructions showed that there were no significant polar ice caps, and greenhouse gas concentrations were several times higher than today.

The super-greenhouse early Eocene was followed by gradual cooling and the sudden buildup of major ice caps on Antarctica around 34 million years ago, leaving its mark in the equatorial sediment cores the scientists are bringing back to Hawaii. The voyage discovered the effect of large-scale climatic changes on the oceans of the past. Fifty-three million years ago, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was much higher than today, and made the ocean much more acidic, such that only little carbonate is preserved in sediments recovered from those times. In contrast, during the buildup of ice on Antarctica, the ocean became less acidic very rapidly, and more carbonate was very suddenly preserved in the deep ocean. The transition from warm to cool climates took place in less than 100,000 years – well within the time span that humans have been living on our planet.

The onboard studies revealed that changes in ocean acidification, linked to climatic change, have a large and global impact on marine organisms. Co-Chief Scientist Heiko Pälike remarked, “It is truly awesome to see 53 million years of Earth’s history pulled up onto the drill ship’s deck, and then to pass through our hands and past our eyes. We saw the effects of Earth’s climate machine in action. Ocean drilling is the equivalent of the space program to the Earth Sciences, and this truly international exploration would not have been possible without more than 40 years of scientific drilling research so we can find the best places to drill.”

Because of the important role of the equatorial Pacific in climate processes, environmental changes are recorded by shells of microfossils the size of a pinhead that make up the sediments found, which the international group of scientists have now brought from more than three miles below the sea surface onboard the unique scientific drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution.

“We can use the microfossils and layers of this superb sediment archive as a ‘yardstick’ for measuring geological time. This will allow us to determine the rates of environmental change, such as the rapid first expansion of large ice-sheets in the Antarctic 33.8 million years ago,” said Expedition Co-Chief Scientist Hiroshi Nishi. “This polar process had a profound impact on phytoplankton even at the Equator. We managed to catch several records of this important climatic transition.”

The JOIDES Resolution is a research vessel with unique capabilities for exploring and monitoring the subseafloor; it operates as part of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP). IODP is supported by two lead agencies, the U.S. National Science Foundation and Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology. Additional program support comes from the European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling (ECORD), India (Ministry of Earth Sciences), the People’s Republic of China (Ministry of Science and Technology), the Republic of Korea (Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources), Australia and New Zealand (Australian-New Zealand IODP Consortium).  The U.S. Implementing Organization (USIO) for IODP is comprised of Texas A&M University, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, and the Consortium for Ocean Leadership. The JOIDES Resolution is now poised to help IODP continue to push the envelope of science by collecting unique subseafloor samples and data that would otherwise remain out of reach to researchers.

Related Websites:

  • IODP Expeditions 320 & 321: Pacific Equatorial Age Transect: http://iodp.tamu.edu/scienceops/expeditions/equatorial_pacific.html
  • Ocean Research Officials Hail Completion of Modernization for U.S. Scientific Ocean Drilling Vessel: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8yXzWJ5E6M&feature=channel_page
  • IODP website: http://www.iodp.org
  • Recent Transformation of the JOIDES Resolution: The Scientific Ocean Drilling Vessel Program (SODV): http://www.oceanleadership.org/programs-and-partnerships/scientific-ocean-drilling/ and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzvnYOBH3FQ&feature=channel_page
  • Explore the JOIDES Resolution on its expeditions: www.thejr.org

 


Related Posts:

  • Earth’s Climate And Ocean Acidification History
  • U.S. Research Vessel En Route to Bering Sea Climate Change Investigations
  • Dr. Nasseer Idrisi Selected As HBCU Educator at Sea
  • Teachers from Around the World Take Part in Hands-On School of Rock 2009 Workshop
  • Georgia Teacher Latest to Set Sail on the JOIDES Resolution

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