For eight weeks beginning in November 2009, off the coast of
New Zealand, an international team of 34 scientists and 92 support staff and
crew on board the scientific drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution (JR) were
at work investigating sea-level change in a region called the Canterbury Basin.
It proved to be a record-breaking trip for the research team.
The JR is one of the primary research vessels of the
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP). This research took place during IODP
Expedition 317. IODP is supported by two lead agencies – the U.S. National
Science Foundation (NSF) and Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports,
Science, and Technology.
At present, 10 percent of the world's population lives
within 32 feet of sea level. Current climate models predict a 19-inch to more
than 3-foot rise in sea level over the next 100 years.
To better understand what drives changes in sea level and
how humans are affecting this change, scientists are "looking to our past
for answers and digging back as far as 35 million years into the Earth's
history to understand these dynamic processes," says Rodey Batiza of the
NSF's division of ocean sciences.
From November 4, 2009 to January 4, 2010, the IODP research
team drilled four sites in the seafloor. One site marked the deepest hole
drilled by the JR on the continental shelf (1,030 meters, or 3,379
feet), and another was the deepest hole drilled on a single expedition in the
history of scientific ocean drilling (1,927 meters, or 6,322 feet).
Another record was broken for the deepest sample taken by
scientific ocean drilling for microbiological studies (1,925 meters, or 6,315
feet).
A fourth record was achieved when the team recovered
sediment from the shallowest water site (85 meters, or 278 feet) ever drilled
for science by the JR.
"This was one of only two JR expeditions that
have attempted to drill on a continental shelf--this was not a routine
operation for this ship," says co-chief scientist Craig Fulthorpe of the
University of Texas at Austin, who led the expedition with co-chief scientist
Koichi Hoyanagi of Shinshu University in Japan.
The unstable, sandy composition of the sediments and the
relatively shallow water of the shelf environment present unique challenges for
a floating drilling platform like the JR, which relies on thrusters to
maintain position and requires special technology to accommodate wave motion.
"We never expected we would be able to drill this deep
in such a difficult environment," says Fulthorpe.
Canterbury Basin is part of a worldwide array of IODP
drilling investigations designed to examine global sea level changes during
Earth's "Icehouse" period, when sea level was largely controlled by
changes in glaciation at the poles.
Before Canterbury, IODP sea level change studies included
sites near the New Jersey coast, the Bahamas, Tahiti and on the Marion Plateau
off northeastern Australia.
Canterbury Basin was selected as a premier site for further
sea level history investigations because it expanded the geographic coverage
needed to study a global process. It displays similar sequence patterns to New
Jersey studies.
Data from both the Canterbury Basin and the New Jersey shelf
IODP expeditions will be integrated to provide a better understanding of global
trends in sea level over time.
Global sea level has changed in the Earth's past; these
changes are influenced by the melting of polar ice caps, which increases the
volume of water in the ocean.
Locally, relative sea level also can change as a result of
tectonic activity, which causes vertical movement in the Earth's crust.
Together, glaciation and tectonic forces create a complex system that can be
difficult to simulate with climate models. This necessitates field studies like
the Canterbury Basin expedition, say geologists, to directly analyze samples.
The Canterbury Basin expedition set out to recover seafloor
sediments that would capture a detailed record of changes in sea level that
occurred during the last 10 million to 12 million years, a time when global sea
level change was largely controlled by glacial/interglacial ice volume changes.
The research team also recovered samples documenting changes
in ocean circulation that began when movements in Earth's tectonic plates
separated Antarctica from Australia, creating a new seaway between the two
continents about 34 million years ago.
Canterbury Basin is one of the best sites in the world for
this type of survey because it is located in a tectonically-active region, and
therefore has a relatively high rate of sedimentary deposition, which, like the
pages of a book, record detailed events in Earth's climate history.
Beyond breaking records, the IODP Canterbury Basin
expedition achieved its goal of recovering a 10-million-year record of sea
level fluctuations, with one drill hole extending back 35 million years.
Cores revealed cyclic changes in sediment type and physical
properties (such as magnetic susceptibility) that are believed to reflect
switches between glacial and interglacial time periods.
Even longer cycles originally were identified using seismic
images generated using sound waves.
Understanding the relationship between these seismic
"sequences" and global sea-level change is an important objective for
post-expedition research, say expedition geologists.