Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Big data maps world's ocean floor : geology of ocean floor revealed


www.portal.gplates.org/cesium/?view=seabed
First interactive map of seafloor geology : Seafloor Lithology allows you to explore seafloor lithologies based on nearly 14,500 samples taken from the world's seas and oceans.
The 3d globe view also allows you to explore the topography of the seafloor
(use ctrl & the left mouse button to rotate the camera view around a point).

From University of Sydney

Scientists from the University of Sydney’s School of Geosciences have led the creation of the world’s first digital map of the seafloor’s geology.
It is the first time the composition of the seafloor, covering 70 percent of the Earth’s surface, has been mapped in 40 years; the most recent map was hand drawn in the 1970s.
Published in the latest edition of Geology, the map will help scientists better understand how our oceans have responded, and will respond, to environmental change.
It also reveals the deep ocean basins to be much more complex than previously thought.
“In order to understand environmental change in the oceans we need to better understand what is preserved in the geological record in the seabed,” says lead researcher Dr Adriana Dutkiewicz from the University of Sydney.
“The deep ocean floor is a graveyard with much of it made up of the remains of microscopic sea creatures called phytoplankton, which thrive in sunlit surface waters. The composition of these remains can help decipher how oceans have responded in the past to climate change.”
A special group of phytoplankton called diatoms produce about a quarter of the oxygen we breathe and make a bigger contribution to fighting global warming than most plants on land. Their dead remains sink to the bottom of the ocean, locking away their carbon.
The new seafloor geology map demonstrates that diatom accumulations on the seafloor are nearly entirely independent of diatom blooms in surface waters in the Southern Ocean.
“This disconnect demonstrates that we understand the carbon source, but not the sink,” says co-author Professor Dietmar Muller from the University of Sydney.
More research is needed to better understand this relationship.

A still shot of the world's first digital map of the seafloor's geology.
The digital data and interactive map are freely available as open access resources.
"The map will help scientists better understand how our oceans have responded, and will respond to, climate change."

Dr Dutkiewicz said, “Our research opens the door to future marine research voyages aimed at better understanding the workings and history of the marine carbon cycle.
Australia’s new research vessel Investigator is ideally placed to further investigate the impact of environmental change on diatom productivity. We urgently need to understand how the ocean responds to climate change.”

The map key explains the colors used for the seafloor's different geologies.
The map key is a little small but if you click on the key it will open in a legible size in a separate window.

Some of the most significant changes to the seafloor map are in the oceans surrounding Australia.

“The old map suggests much of the Southern Ocean around Australia is mainly covered by clay blown off the continent, whereas our map shows this area is actually a complex patchwork of microfossil remains,” said Dr Dutkiewicz.
“Life in the Southern Ocean is much richer than previously thought.”

Dr Dutkiewicz and colleagues analysed and categorised around 15,000 seafloor samples – taken over half a century on research cruise ships to generate the data for the map.
She teamed with the National ICT Australia (NICTA) big data experts to find the best way to use algorithms to turn this multitude of point observations into a continuous digital map.

“Recent images of Pluto’s icy plains are spectacular, but the process of unveiling the hidden geological secrets of the abyssal plains of our own planet was equally full of surprises!” co-author Dr Simon O’Callaghan from NICTA said.

Links :
  • Phys : Big data maps world's ocean floor 
  • DailyMail : What the Earth would look like stripped of oceans: First ever digital map of the sea floor reveals our planet's 'alien' landscape

Monday, August 10, 2015

Sea Atlases project


Sea Atlases is a new interactive map showcasing some of the fabulous historical sea charts in the Harvard Map Collection.
Ten atlas volumes were digitized by the Harvard Map Collection, and then georeferenced in order to be able to place them on top of a modern day interactive map.
Being able to explore these fantastic vintage sea charts is of course the main attraction of Sea Atlases, but this is only made possible by the beautifully intuitive and well designed interface that allows you to explore the collection by date and by location.


As long as people have ventured out in ships and exposed themselves to the vagaries of wind and tide, they have endeavored as much as possible to minimize the risks of life at sea.
The earliest mariners, of course, relied upon the oral transmission of instructions about the hazards of navigation, methods of orientation, and anchorages along particular routes.
The ancient Greeks and Romans often codified those details in manuscript logs (peripli), which listed sequentially the distances between ports and landmarks along coastal routes.
With improvements in the technology of orientation and navigation in late medieval Europe, these textual guides evolved into portolan charts which offered graphic tools for laying down a course and following a coastal itinerary.
Beginning in the late 16th century, the nascent cartographic publishing industry found a receptive market for pilot books and sea atlases, which provided collections of detailed charts and sailing directions for the most frequently traversed routes.
In the website we will introduce some of the most influential of these early guides to the realms of Neptune.


Links :

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Yvan Bourgnon completes remarkable round-the-world challenge alone on a beach catamaran


He started his grueling journey in October 2013, he capsized in the Atlantic, crashed his boat on rocks in Sri Lanka and experienced a terrifying near-miss with a cargo ship, but Yvan Bourgnon finally completed his round-the-world solo effort.

Making his journey even more impressive is the fact that the Swiss sailor circumnavigated the globe in a tiny 6.2 metre, cabin-less beach catamaran that had no GPS and computer-aided navigation.

Using the stars, a sextant and maps the adventurer took 20 months to complete his 50 000 kilometre challenge which included multiple stop overs for rest and repairs.

Two days after his arrival, his brother Laurent Bourgnon has been lost in a diving accident in French Polynesia.
He was reported missing on the 25th June and despite a comprehensive search no trace has been found.
Laurent was best known for his victories in the 1994 and 1998 in the solo Route du Rhum onboard the ORMA trimaran Primagaz.

Links : 

Saturday, August 8, 2015

NOAA WeatherView


NOAA weatherView is a new tool designed by the NOAA Visualization Lab to provide an interactive experience with NOAA weather models : lets you display wind, temperature, precipitation and other models to see weather patterns around the globe.

 The NOAA gives us the example of Typhoon Soudelor, which passed over Taiwan yesterday.

All of these data are also available from the NOAA Operational Model Archive and Distribution System built by NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information - Climate.
http://go.usa.gov/3sKWz

 Example of  3-D animated image of downscaled Global Forecast System (GFS) model data showing Hurricane Katrina making landfall on August 29, 2005.
This image was generated with the Visualization and Analysis Platform for Ocean, Atmosphere, and Solar Researchers (VAPOR) tool and ImageMagick.

Links :

Friday, August 7, 2015

Image of the week : the dark side and the bright side of the moon


From NASA

A NASA camera aboard the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) has captured a unique view of the Moon as it passed between the spacecraft and Earth.
A series of test images shows the fully illuminated “dark side” of the Moon that is not visible from Earth.


The images were acquired by NASA’s Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC), a four megapixel CCD camera and telescope on the DSCOVR satellite, which orbits about 1.6 million kilometers (1 million miles) from Earth.
EPIC maintains a constant view of the fully illuminated Earth as it rotates, providing daily scientific observations of ozone, vegetation, cloud height, and airborne aerosols.
About twice a year the camera will capture images of the Moon and Earth together as the orbit of DSCOVR crosses the orbital plane of the Moon.
The images shown above and in the movie below were taken over the course of five hours on July 16, 2015.
The North Pole is toward the upper left, reflecting the orbital tilt of Earth from the vantage point of the spacecraft.


The far side of the Moon was first observed in 1959, when the Soviet Luna 3 spacecraft returned the first images.
Since then, several missions by NASA and other space agencies have imaged the lunar far side.
(For instance, NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft captured a similar view of Earth and the Moon from a distance of 31 million miles in 2008.)
The same side of the Moon always faces an earthbound observer because the Moon’s orbital period is the same as its rotation around its axis.
EPIC’s natural-color images of Earth are generated by combining three separate monochrome exposures taken by the camera in quick succession.
EPIC takes a series of 10 images using different spectral filters—from ultraviolet to near infrared—to produce a variety of science products.
The red, green, and blue channel images are used in these color images.
But combining three images that are taken about 30 seconds apart produces a slight but noticeable camera artifact on the edges of the Moon.
Because the Moon moved in relation to Earth between the time the first (red) and last (green) exposures were made, a thin green offset (about 7–8 pixels) appears on the right side when the three exposures are combined.
This movement also produces a slight red and blue offset on the left side of the unaltered images.

The lunar far side lacks the large, dark, basaltic plains, or maria, that are so prominent on the Earth-facing side.
The largest far side features are Mare Moscoviense (Sea of Moscow) in the upper left and Tsiolkovskiy crater in the lower left.
Situated at a stable orbit between the Sun and Earth, DSCOVR’s primary mission is to monitor the solar wind for space weather forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Its secondary mission is to provide daily color views of our planet as it rotates through the day.