Antarctic Peninsula Neotectonics and Volcanism ...

Example frontpage imageWelcome to NBP9507.  In October of 1995, researchers from University of Texas Institute for Geophysics and Oregon State University began a 44 day marine geophysical cruise on the R/V N.B. Palmer. The cruise left from Punta Arenas, Chile. The ship traveled to the Bransfield Strait, after an initial SEABEAM 2200 multibeam bathymetry and sidescan sonar survey of the King George Basin.  Ship time was devoted to a variety of areas of research including "vent sniffing" by Gary Klinkhammer of OSU. During the cruise a multibeam sidescan sonar survey of the Bransfield Strait was completed. Time was also devoted to a multibeam and sidescan sonar survey of the Southwest Scotia Sea in conjunction with many days of multichannel seismic work. The main goal of the cruise was to collect 5,000 km of multibeam and sidescan sonar data to map the structural character and tectonic fabric of the evolving plate boundary in the southwest Scotia Sea, Shackleton Ridge, and Bransfield Strait. 

Principal Investigators

Note:  The photos and journals contained in this website were prepared by Steven Stevenoski, science teacher at Lincoln High School in Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin