The Campbell Ferromanganese Nodule Field (SW Pacific Ocean) Formed Beneath The Deep Western Boundary Current: An Important Source Of Paleo-Environmental And Chronostratigraphic Information

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 579 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
An extensive ferromanganese nodule field south of New Zealand (Fig. 1) has existed beneath the flow of the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC) and Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) for at least the past 15 m.y. West of 174°E, between 59°S and 48°S, the field is 300-500 km wide, but east of 174°E, where current flow impinges on the eastern slope of the Campbell Plateau, the field narrows from ca. 200 km at 55°S to ca. 120 km at 51°S. This narrowing coincides with deflection of current flow eastwards, and consequent reduction in bottom-current velocity and eddy kinetic energy. Based on sea floor photographs, dredge samples and 3.5 kHz profile data, six distinct seafloor substrates are delineated, forming broadly parallel zones eastwards from the lowermost Campbell Slope (Fig. 2).
Citation
APA: (2003) The Campbell Ferromanganese Nodule Field (SW Pacific Ocean) Formed Beneath The Deep Western Boundary Current: An Important Source Of Paleo-Environmental And Chronostratigraphic Information
MLA: The Campbell Ferromanganese Nodule Field (SW Pacific Ocean) Formed Beneath The Deep Western Boundary Current: An Important Source Of Paleo-Environmental And Chronostratigraphic Information. International Marine Minerals Society, 2003.