4 February, 2004
The sun is circling lower on the horizon each day. After midnight the
sun taunts us with a dusky display of deep blue and purple, the prelude
to the reds and oranges of a glorious sunset, but the sunset never
comes. We are destined to have twenty-four hours of light until the
cruise ends. The first sunset in this part of Antarctica will not be
until March. Our internal clocks strain to make sense of this night
less situation. We great each other throughout the day with a good
morning or a goodnight, with little regard for the clock that keeps
ship's time. All that matters is if we are getting up or going to bed.
Meals have become times to make human connections and gain nourishment.
One day soon the sun will serve as conductor to direct a symphony of
sleep and wake in harmony with light and dark on this cold continent.
Today was spent filling in the holes in the multibeam data. The ice is
constantly changing and the seafloor maps that we have made using the
multibeam sidescan sonar since the start of the cruise have missing
data because of this. The data "holes" are created when the ship had to
navigate around icebergs or large ice flows. The missing data appears
as white patches in the otherwise colorful contour maps that are
produced from the sonar data.
It took a cooperative effort between the ship's pilots and the
scientists to determine the day's impromptu away points that would
complete the coverage of all of the sonar map data. Using these maps
the geophysists will determine the best lines to transit to use the
seismic equipment to delve deeper than the contour maps take us, into
the upper layers of the Earth's crust.
The ship's course is constantly monitored using GPS (Global Positioning
Satellites). Every sidescan sonar pulse, and every seismic air gun shot
is recorded and stored aboard the ship's data acquisition system with a
precise location stamp given by the GPS. Using the GPS we can return to
within less than a meter of a location that had been mapped earlier. We
know exactly when the data was collected as well using precision clocks
that record the GMT, Greenwich Mean Time. The combination of time and
position stamps on each data set measured and collected by the
experimental equipment makes the data that is recorded during the
cruise very reliable and precise.
The preliminary data from the sidescan sonar is manually edited file by
file in a process called ping editing. The sonar works by producing a
sound pulse, a ping that is directed downward from the bottom of the
ship to the seafloor. The sound is reflected back up to the moving
ship. One hundred and ninety one (191) receivers on the bottom of the
ship detect the echoed sound. The scientists call the information that
the receivers record a beam. One ping produces 191 beams. Each beam
records information about distance to the seafloor that is then used to
create seafloor contour maps.
Ideally, each ping would produce a perfect data set of beams, but this
does not occur for a variety of reasons. The most common causes of
errant beams is rolling and pitching of the ship in rough seas, noise
caused by moving through the ice, and changing of the position of the
ship during turns.
Before the ping data can be used for mapping, we edit each file. About
twenty-four files are produced each day. We look for the errant beams
and delete them from the data that will be used in the final mapping.
The original data set still has the "bad" beams and will be saved for
future reference by the scientists. The ping editing process is slow
and methodical. We follow general guidelines, but it is primarily
through experience that you become efficient and accurate at ping
editing.
After each file is edited, a map of that data is printed and compared
to the raw data. Chris Linden, multibeam support, and Marcy Davis, from
UTIG catch any glairing errors made during editing in "quality
control". Each of these individual files is then combined to form large
finished maps of the data.
The ice has been cooperative. We should have all of the holes filled in
the multibeam data by tomorrow. Traffic in McMurdo Sound is picking up.
Container ships with supplies for the winter and next year are making
their way into McMurdo port. The end of the summer in Antarctica means
the end of the science field season. Our science crew is scheduled to
be on the second to last flight out of McMurdo. The population at
McMurdo will be reduced to the winter overs. Everyone that has not left
on the last flight is in Antarctica for the winter. It will be October
before the next flight returns.