4.0 Article

Sea-floor and sea-ice conditions in the western Weddell Sea, Antarctica, around the wreck of Sir Ernest Shackleton'sEndurance

Journal

ANTARCTIC SCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 301-313

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0954102020000103

Keywords

acoustic stratigraphy; continental shelf; continental slope; icebergs; sea-floor landforms

Funding

  1. Flotilla Foundation
  2. Marine Archaeology Consultants Switzerland
  3. Norwegian Vista Programme
  4. German Aerospace Center (DLR) [OCE3624]

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Marine-geophysical evidence on sea-floor morphology and shallow acoustic stratigraphy are used to examine the substrate around the location at which Sir Ernest Shackleton's shipEndurancesank in 1915 and on the continental slope-shelf sedimentary system above this site in the western Weddell Sea. Few signs of turbidity-current and mass-wasting activity are found near or upslope of the wreck site, and any such activity was probably linked to full-glacial higher-energy conditions when ice last advanced across the continental shelf. The wreck is well below the maximum depth of iceberg keels and will not have been damaged by ice-keel ploughing. The wreck has probably been draped by only a few centimetres of fine-grained sediment since it sank in 1915. Severe modern sea-ice conditions hamper access to the wreck site. Accessing and investigating the wreck ofEndurancein the Weddell Sea therefore represents a significant challenge. An ice-breaking research vessel is required, and even this would not guarantee that the site could be reached. Heavy sea-ice cover at the wreck site, similar to that encountered byAgulhus IIduring the Weddell Sea Expedition 2019, would also make the launch and recovery of autonomous underwater vehicles and remotely operated vehicles deployed to investigate theEndurancewreck problematic.

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