Back to Search Start Over

Coring of Antarctic Subglacial Sediments

Authors :
Da Gong
Xiaopeng Fan
Yazhou Li
Bing Li
Nan Zhang
Raphael Gromig
Emma C. Smith
Wolf Dummann
Sophie Berger
Olaf Eisen
Jan Tell
Boris K. Biskaborn
Nikola Koglin
Frank Wilhelms
Benjamin Broy
Yunchen Liu
Yang Yang
Xingchen Li
An Liu
Pavel Talalay
Source :
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, Vol 7, Iss 6, p 194 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2019.

Abstract

Coring sediments in subglacial aquatic environments offers unique opportunities for research on paleo-environments and paleo-climates because it can provide data from periods even earlier than ice cores, as well as the overlying ice histories, interactions between ice and the water system, life forms in extreme habitats, sedimentology, and stratigraphy. However, retrieving sediment cores from a subglacial environment faces more difficulties than sediment coring in oceans and lakes, resulting in low yields from the most current subglacial sediment coring methods. The coring tools should pass through a hot water-drilled access borehole, then the water column, to reach the sediment layers. The access boreholes are size-limited by the hot water drilling tools and techniques. These holes are drilled through ice up to 3000−4000 m thick, with diameters ranging from 10−60 cm, and with a refreezing closure rate of up to 6 mm/h after being drilled. Several purpose-built streamline corers have been developed to pass through access boreholes and collect the sediment core. The main coring objectives are as follows: (i) To obtain undisturbed water−sediment cores, either singly or as multi-cores and (ii) to obtain long cores with minimal stratigraphic deformation. Subglacial sediment coring methods use similar tools to those used in lake and ocean coring. These methods include the following: Gravity coring, push coring, piston coring, hammer or percussion coring, vibrocoring, and composite methods. Several core length records have been attained by different coring methods, including a 290 cm percussion core from the sub-ice-shelf seafloor, a 400 cm piston core from the sub-ice-stream, and a 170 cm gravity core from a subglacial lake. There are also several undisturbed water−sediment cores that have been obtained by gravity corers or hammer corers. Most current coring tools are deployed by winch and cable facilities on the ice surface. There are three main limitations for obtaining long sediment cores which determines coring tool development, as follows: Hot-water borehole radial size restriction, the sedimentary structure, and the coring techniques. In this paper, we provide a general view on current developments in coring tools, including the working principles, corer characteristics, operational methods, coring site locations, field conditions, coring results, and possible technical improvements. Future prospects in corer design and development are also discussed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20771312
Volume :
7
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0eeeb3409c4ab9a0f22831d9b514f9
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7060194