Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Marie Tharp: the woman who mapped the ocean floor

The 1977 World Ocean Floor Panorama.
It was painted by Berann and based on the previous 25 years of Marie and Bruce's work.
Shortly after receiving printer's proofs of this map in the summer of 1977, Marie and Bruce set off for research expeditions in the North Atlantic, where they'd begun mapping the ocean floor in 1952. Marie set sail on a ship called the Discovery from Wales, Bruce out of Reykjavik on the NR-1, a nuclear research vessel.
Image courtesy of Marie Tharp Maps.

From HuffingtonPost

On February 2, 2009, thanks to Google Ocean, the ocean floor's topography was revealed for millions of people to see.
Before that day, the 70 percent of the Earth's surface covered by water had been filled in by a cold blank blue, essentially ignored by an interface meant to encourage armchair exploration.

One of Google Ocean's features is the Marie Tharp Historical Map, which allows users to see the Earth transformed. Google's satellite pixels replaced the brush strokes of the 1977 World Ocean Floor Panorama Marie produced with her partner Bruce Heezen and the artist Heinrich Berann.
Continents are rich ripe yellows, and the oceans are countless shades of blue; both land and sea darken as if bruised where mountains push through the skins of their plains.


In 1948 Marie moved to Manhattan in search of a more intellectually stimulating job.
She found one at Columbia University, where she met Maurice "Doc" Ewing, the director of a new geophysical program. Doc hired her to draft and do calculations for his male graduate students, including Bruce Heezen.
By 1952, Marie began working exclusively with Bruce to map the ocean floor; that same year, she discovered the Mid-Oceanic Rift Valley.
This photo, from the late 1950s, shows a posed Marie pretending to sketch the physiographic diagram of the North Atlantic Ocean.
Sounding records are visible to the left of the diagram, one of the globe prototypes that she and Bruce constructed sits in the middle, and an enlarged version of her six North Atlantic profiles (two dimensional outlines of the ocean floor's topography) is propped in the corner.
Photo courtesy of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

No one had undertaken a close examination of the ocean floor until 1952, when Marie (working at Columbia University's Lamont Geological Observatory) began the arduous task of processing thousands of feet of soundings (sonar pings used to collect depth measurements in bodies of water) from the North Atlantic.

When I first read about Marie in 2007, I was surprised to discover that no one had undertaken a close examination of her life.
That's when I began writing Soundings: The Story of the Remarkable Woman Who Mapped the Ocean Floor (Henry Holt, $30), a biography that brings this amazing woman and her pioneering scientific achievements to life--for the first time.



Close-up of Marie's 1961 South Atlantic physiographic diagram, showing the Equatorial Mid-Ocean canyon off the coast of Brazil.
On the full-size map, this portion would be just a few inches wide.
The "Fernando de Norondha Rocks" visible in the foreground are now know as the "Fernando de Norondha Ridge". 

Marie's research led to a revolutionary discovery: there was a rift valley running down the center of the Atlantic Ocean.
It began off the coast of Iceland and, she eventually realized, extended for more than 40,000 miles beneath the ocean's surface.
The existence of such a rift was nearly incontrovertible proof of continental drift--a hypothesis that was so unpopular in the United States at the time that belief in it was considered a form of scientific heresy.

Physiographic diagram of the northern part of the Atlantic Ocean.
This map was published in the September 1957 issue of the Bell System Technical Journal and accompanied the article "Oceanographic information for engineering submarine cable systems," written by Bruce Heezen and C.H. Elmendorf.
With the publication of this map, scientists could, for the first time, look at a wide swath of the ocean floor.
This allowed them to begin to formulate the theories which led to the Earth science revolution of the 1960s.
Note the legend at bottom center. Like sea monsters or mermaids on maps of old, this legend covers up a portion of the ocean floor for which Marie and Bruce had little data.

Many scientists remained unconvinced of the rift's existence until the 1959 International Oceanographic Congress in New York, where Jacques Cousteau screened a film of the rift valley he'd collected while crossing the Atlantic to attend the conference.

After seeing such concrete proof, using Marie's hand-drawn, bird's-eye-view physiographic diagrams as the foundation for their work, scientists began writing the papers that would cause a paradigm shift in Earth science.
These papers from the 1960s, mostly by scientists from the United States, Great Britain, and Canada, are now considered the seminal papers of plate tectonics.
The theories they espoused wouldn't have been possible without Marie's maps, a fact that was quickly forgotten in all of the revolutionary excitement.

The plate tectonics revolution was over by the 1970s, and the public interest that it had sparked fell off as a result.
National Geographic wasn't interested in the map that would bring all of Marie and Bruce's work from the 50s and 60s together on one sheet, so the team turned to the U.S. Office of Naval Research. And in the summer of 1977, just weeks after they received printer's proofs of the World Ocean Floor Panorama, Bruce Heezen died of a heart attack while on a research expedition in a submarine off the coast of Iceland.

Marie never completed another mapping project again, and even today, scientists estimate that only about 10-15 percent of the ocean has been mapped in any detail, making Marie and her maps as relevant today as they've ever been.

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