Navy-Sponsored Scientist Awarded For Sea-Floor Mapping
by Warren Duffie, Office of Naval Research May 10, 2019
For creating the most comprehensive global map of the ocean
floor, Dr. David Sandwell received the Charles A. Whitten Medal,
sponsored by the American Geophysical Union (AGU).
Sandwell,
a geophysicist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, accepted the
award at the AGU Fall Meeting in December 2018. Named after
scientist Charles A. Whitten, the medal is given to honor
“outstanding achievement in research on the form and dynamics of the
Earth and planets.”
Since the 1990s, sponsored by the Office
of Naval Research (ONR), Sandwell has combined satellite data with
acoustic depth measurements to develop a detailed, accurate map of
the sea floor—painting a vivid tapestry of the deepest,
least-explored parts of the ocean. The map catalogues thousands of
previously unidentified underwater mountains, trenches, physical
undersea connections between South America and Africa, and extinct
ridges that spread the sea floor in the Gulf of Mexico.
“Dr. Sandwell’s groundbreaking work provides the first
high-resolution map of the ocean floor,” said Dr. Tom Drake, head of
ONR’s Ocean Battlespace and Expeditionary Access Department. “This
has opened new research areas for oceanography, marine geology and
geophysics—critical topics for the U.S. Navy.”
A version of Dr. David Sandwell’s sea floor map reveals details about earthquakes (red dots), sea floor-spreading ridges and faults. For creating the most comprehensive global map of the ocean floor, with support from the Office of Naval Research, Sandwell received the Charles A. Whitten Medal, sponsored by the American Geophysical Union. (Photo courtesy of Dr. David Sandwell, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego
- February 6, 2019)
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Sandwell’s
work relies on satellite altimetry (radar) to measure small bumps
and dips on the ocean surface, which point to large-scale features
on the ocean floor. For example, undersea mountains are huge enough
to exert gravitational pulls that gather water in a bump on the sea
surface. In contrast, massive cracks and rifts on the ocean floor
have less gravitational attraction, resulting in a dip on the
surface.
For utmost accuracy, Sandwell blends satellite
measurements with traditional sonar soundings from manned research
ships. This enables him to compare the topography of the sea surface
with that of the sea floor and form a complete map of the bottom.
Sandwell created multiple versions of his map over the last two
decades. He unveiled the first in 1997, based on marine
gravitational data gathered by the Navy’s GEOSAT Earth-observation
satellite. In 2014, he improved the original map by adding data from
additional satellites operated by the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) and the European Space Agency.
“Dr.
Sandwell’s map is like a smart phone that improves with each new
model,” said Dr. Reginald Beach, who sponsors Sandwell’s work for
ONR’s Ocean Battlespace and Expeditionary Access Department. “Each
version teaches us more about the topography of the ocean bottom,
which is crucial to safe navigation for the Navy.”
Sandwell
is now updating the 2014 map with information gathered by another
pair of satellites run by NASA and the French space agency, CNES.
Other data comes from sonar soundings compiled by Australia, during
that nation’s participation in an international effort to scour the
southern Indian Ocean in search of the wreckage of Malaysian Airways
Flight 370 ... which disappeared in 2014. Australia made the sonar data
publicly available in 2017.
“Thanks to this new data, our map
can provide greater information about the world’s oceans,” said
Sandwell, “particularly the Southern Hemisphere, which includes the
Indian Ocean and south Atlantic Ocean. I’m grateful to ONR for its
valuable support over the years, which has been crucial to creating
the most accurate sea floor map possible.”
American Geophysical Union is a
not-for-profit, scientific organization with nearly 60,000 members
in 139 countries.
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Warren Duffie Jr. is a contractor for Office of Naval Research
Corporate Strategic Communications.
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