Skip to main content

Home/ About The Indian Ocean/ Group items tagged volcan

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jérôme OLLIER

On a Remote Island, a Lost Part of the World Is Found - @earthinstitute - 0 views

  •  
    On a remote tropical island in the Indian Ocean lies a geologic enigma. Some 4 million years ago, volcanic eruptions on the seabed piled lava upward almost two miles, until it broke above the waves. Then it kept piling up, to form what is now the craggy, densely vegetated island of Anjouan. Like all islands formed this way (think Hawaii) Anjouan is 100 percent dark volcanic basalt. Except for the part that is not. That part-a mass of pure white quartzite, apparent remains of a river or beach deposit formed on some faraway, long-ago continent-is not supposed to be there.
Jérôme OLLIER

Volcanic history dredged from deep-sea rocks - @SNWA - 0 views

  •  
    FOUR-and-a-half thousand metres beneath the waves, trapped in deep-sea volcanoes and submarine canyons, the history of WA's coastline is written into the rocks.
  •  
    FOUR-and-a-half thousand metres beneath the waves, trapped in deep-sea volcanoes and submarine canyons, the history of WA's coastline is written into the rocks.
Jérôme OLLIER

Magma 'conveyor belt' fuelled world's longest erupting supervolcanoes - @CurtinUni - 0 views

  •  
    International research led by geologists from Curtin University has found that a volcanic province in the Indian Ocean was the world's most continuously active - erupting for 30 million years - fuelled by a constantly moving 'conveyor belt' of magma.
Jérôme OLLIER

Characteristics of Ichthyoplankton Communities and Their Relationship With Environmenta... - 0 views

  •  
    The Ninety East Ridge is a submarine north-south oriented volcanic ridge in the eastern Indian Ocean. Surface-layer ichthyoplankton collected in this area from September to October were identified by combined morphological and molecular (DNA barcoding) techniques, and their species composition, diversity, and abundance, and correlations with environmental variables were described. Collections comprised 109 larvae and 507 eggs, which were identified to 37 taxa in 7 orders, 20 families, and 27 genera, and were dominated by the order Perciformes and species Vinciguerria sp., Oxyporhamphus micropterus, and Decapterus macarellus. Species abundances at each station and of each species were relatively low, suggesting that this area or the time of sampling were not of major importance for fish spawning. Waters above Ninety East Ridge had lower species diversity but higher species richness than waters further offshore. A generalized additive model revealed that high abundance of ichthyoplanktonic taxa occurred in areas with low sea surface height and high sea surface salinity, temperature, and chlorophyll a concentration. Of these, sea surface height was most correlated with ichthyoplankton abundance. We provided baseline data on surface-dwelling ichthyoplankton communities in this area to aid in development of pelagic fishery resources in waters around the Ninety East Ridge.
Jérôme OLLIER

When Imagery and Physical Sampling Work Together: Toward an Integrative Methodology of ... - 0 views

  •  
    Imagery has become a key tool for assessing deep-sea megafaunal biodiversity, historically based on physical sampling using fishing gears. Image datasets provide quantitative and repeatable estimates, small-scale spatial patterns and habitat descriptions. However, taxon identification from images is challenging and often relies on morphotypes without considering a taxonomic framework. Taxon identification is particularly challenging in regions where the fauna is poorly known and/or highly diverse. Furthermore, the efficiency of imagery and physical sampling may vary among habitat types. Here, we compared biodiversity metrics (alpha and gamma diversity, composition) based on physical sampling (dredging and trawling) and towed-camera still images (1) along the upper continental slope of Papua New Guinea (sedimented slope with wood-falls, a canyon and cold seeps), and (2) on the outer slopes of the volcanic islands of Mayotte, dominated by hard bottoms. The comparison was done on selected taxa (Pisces, Crustacea, Echinoidea, and Asteroidea), which are good candidates for identification from images. Taxonomic identification ranks obtained for the images varied among these taxa (e.g., family/order for fishes, genus for echinoderms). At these ranks, imagery provided a higher taxonomic richness for hard-bottom and complex habitats, partially explained by the poor performance of trawling on these rough substrates. For the same reason, the gamma diversity of Pisces and Crustacea was also higher from images, but no difference was observed for echinoderms. On soft bottoms, physical sampling provided higher alpha and gamma diversity for fishes and crustaceans, but these differences tended to decrease for crustaceans identified to the species/morphospecies level from images. Physical sampling and imagery were selective against some taxa (e.g., according to size or behavior), therefore providing different facets of biodiversity. In addition, specimens collected at a larger scale
Jérôme OLLIER

Flight MH370: New search images reveal seabed details - BBC - 0 views

  •  
    Flight MH370: New search images reveal seabed details.
1 - 7 of 7
Showing 20 items per page