The Stellwagen Bank region, located off Boston, Massachusetts, just east of Massachusetts Bay between Cape Cod and Cape Ann, is a glaciated terrain of shallow banks and deep basins with water depths ranging from 20 to 200 meters. The region is heavily utilized by humans and marine species. It serves as a National Marine Sanctuary; a rich commercial and recreational fishing ground; a disposal site for dredged material; a habitat for various species of marine mammals, including the endangered North Atlantic right whale; the focus of a large tourism industry centered on whale watching; a shipping lane to and from Boston Harbor; and as a location for engineering projects, such as fiber optic and electric power cable routes, oil and gas pipelines, LNG terminals, and potential offshore wind farms.
With more diverse, intensive, and conflicting uses than ever before, it is necessary to map and analyze the physical properties and processes of the seafloor at a higher resolution than was required in the past to ensure the Stellwagen Bank region can be effectively managed in a way that maintains and enhances the environmental sustainability of these varied uses.
The National Seafloor Mapping and Habitat Studies – Atlantic project, a cooperative effort supported by the Coastal and Marine Geology Program of the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Marine Fisheries Service and National Marine Sanctuary System of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, regional Fishery Management Councils, the Geological Survey of Canada, and academic scientists, has produced the first series of high-resolution seabed maps for a 630 square kilometer area of Stellwagen Bank and its adjacent basins. The maps show the distribution of geologic materials and structures that form seabed substrates (characterized by grain-size composition, surficial features, layering, and mobility) at a resolution level never before achieved, specifically 1:25,000 (meaning 1cm on the map represents 250m on the seafloor). This innovative work provides the reliable foundation needed for successful seafloor research and resource management, as mandated by the new National Ocean Policy. For example, these high-resolution maps enable stakeholders to conduct research projects and develop management policies, select pathways for engineering projects, target specific types of seabed for recreational and commercial fishing purposes, educate whale watching tourists, and identify habitats that should be protected from fishing disturbance.
Project Goals:
- Map the distribution of geologic materials and structures that form seabed substrates and understand the processes that produce them in order to provide a reliable foundation for sea floor research and resource management
- Develop a geology-based methodology for identifying and classifying geological substrates
- Provide a documented framework of natural conditions suitable for the testing and validation of sediment transport models
- Provide maps showing the distribution of substrate properties for use by ecologists to study the requirements of species, to predict the distributions of species, and to guide Ecosystem-Based Fishery Management
- Produce science products that are innovative and responsive to users’ needs, and make data accessible
Summary of Stellwagen Bank Survey Data and Map Products:
- Multibeam sonar survey 3,780 km2
- Topographic & backscatter imagery
- Sediment sampling
- Video/photo imagery
- Area divided into 18 quadrangles
- 93 map sheets as of 2018
- Map scale 1:25,000
- MA Bay Disposal Site special map
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Substrate Mapping and Process Studies of New England Seabeds
Geologic and Biologic Studies of Georges Bank and the New England Shelf
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Sea-floor Sediment Samples, Seabed Imagery, and CTD Instrument Data Collected on Stellwagen Bank in November, 2013, U.S. Geological Survey Field Activity 2013-044-FA
Location and analyses of sediment samples collected on Stellwagen Bank off Boston, Massachusetts from November 5, 2013 to April 30, 2019 on U.S. Geological Survey field activities
Sea Floor Sediment Samples, Seabed Imagery, and CTD Water Column Data Collected on Stellwagen Bank in January 2017, U.S. Geological Survey Field Activity 2017-009-FA
Below are publications associated with this project.
Surficial geology and shaded seafloor relief of Georges Bank, Fundian Channel and Northeast Channel, Gulf of Maine
Submarine glacial landforms on the Bay of Fundy–northern Gulf of Maine continental shelf
Determining the flux of methane into Hudson Canyon at the edge of methane clathrate hydrate stability
Observations of recruitment and colonization by tunicates and associated invertebrates using giant one-meter2 recruitment plates at Woods Hole, Massachusetts
Large submarine sand waves and gravel lag substrates on Georges Bank off Atlantic Canada
Surficial geology and benthic habitat of the German Bank seabed, Scotian Shelf, Canada
Shaded seafloor relief, backscatter strength, and surficial geology; German Bank, Scotian Shelf, offshore Nova Scotia
- Overview
The Stellwagen Bank region, located off Boston, Massachusetts, just east of Massachusetts Bay between Cape Cod and Cape Ann, is a glaciated terrain of shallow banks and deep basins with water depths ranging from 20 to 200 meters. The region is heavily utilized by humans and marine species. It serves as a National Marine Sanctuary; a rich commercial and recreational fishing ground; a disposal site for dredged material; a habitat for various species of marine mammals, including the endangered North Atlantic right whale; the focus of a large tourism industry centered on whale watching; a shipping lane to and from Boston Harbor; and as a location for engineering projects, such as fiber optic and electric power cable routes, oil and gas pipelines, LNG terminals, and potential offshore wind farms.
With more diverse, intensive, and conflicting uses than ever before, it is necessary to map and analyze the physical properties and processes of the seafloor at a higher resolution than was required in the past to ensure the Stellwagen Bank region can be effectively managed in a way that maintains and enhances the environmental sustainability of these varied uses.
Stellwagen Bank project research areas in the United States and Canada The National Seafloor Mapping and Habitat Studies – Atlantic project, a cooperative effort supported by the Coastal and Marine Geology Program of the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Marine Fisheries Service and National Marine Sanctuary System of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, regional Fishery Management Councils, the Geological Survey of Canada, and academic scientists, has produced the first series of high-resolution seabed maps for a 630 square kilometer area of Stellwagen Bank and its adjacent basins. The maps show the distribution of geologic materials and structures that form seabed substrates (characterized by grain-size composition, surficial features, layering, and mobility) at a resolution level never before achieved, specifically 1:25,000 (meaning 1cm on the map represents 250m on the seafloor). This innovative work provides the reliable foundation needed for successful seafloor research and resource management, as mandated by the new National Ocean Policy. For example, these high-resolution maps enable stakeholders to conduct research projects and develop management policies, select pathways for engineering projects, target specific types of seabed for recreational and commercial fishing purposes, educate whale watching tourists, and identify habitats that should be protected from fishing disturbance.
Project Goals:
- Map the distribution of geologic materials and structures that form seabed substrates and understand the processes that produce them in order to provide a reliable foundation for sea floor research and resource management
- Develop a geology-based methodology for identifying and classifying geological substrates
- Provide a documented framework of natural conditions suitable for the testing and validation of sediment transport models
- Provide maps showing the distribution of substrate properties for use by ecologists to study the requirements of species, to predict the distributions of species, and to guide Ecosystem-Based Fishery Management
- Produce science products that are innovative and responsive to users’ needs, and make data accessible
Backscatter intensity and sun-illuminated topography. Blue= "soft" seabed, Green, orange = "hard" seabed Summary of Stellwagen Bank Survey Data and Map Products:
- Multibeam sonar survey 3,780 km2
- Topographic & backscatter imagery
- Sediment sampling
- Video/photo imagery
- Area divided into 18 quadrangles
- 93 map sheets as of 2018
- Map scale 1:25,000
- MA Bay Disposal Site special map
Massachusetts Bay Disposal Site map, feature interpretation - Science
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Substrate Mapping and Process Studies of New England Seabeds
In response to the growing need for Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning as a means to better manage seabed environments, it is necessary to compile high-resolution (1:25,000) interpretive maps and to formulate a geology-based seabed classification system that will allow users to recognize and correctly interpret seabed substrate types.Seabed imagery from multibeam mapping surveys has provided new...Geologic and Biologic Studies of Georges Bank and the New England Shelf
Large areas of Georges Bank (which lies in both the US and Canada) and the New England Shelf have been closed to fishing for 25 years in order to conserve and rebuild fishery stocks. These closures, along with an increased need to improve characterization of the seabed, have provided the opportunity to map the extent of gravel substrates that dominant parts of the region, study the effects of... - Data
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Sea-floor Sediment Samples, Seabed Imagery, and CTD Instrument Data Collected on Stellwagen Bank in November, 2013, U.S. Geological Survey Field Activity 2013-044-FA
This field activity is part of the effort to map geologic substrates of the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary region off Boston, Massachusetts. The overall goal is to develop high-resolution (1:25,000) interpretive maps, based on multibeam sonar data and seabed sampling, showing surficial geology and seabed sediment dynamics. This cruise was conducted in collaboration with the Stellwagen BLocation and analyses of sediment samples collected on Stellwagen Bank off Boston, Massachusetts from November 5, 2013 to April 30, 2019 on U.S. Geological Survey field activities
These data are part of the effort to map geologic substrates of the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary (SBNMS) region off Boston, Massachusetts. The overall goal is to develop high-resolution (1:25,000) interpretive maps, based on multibeam sonar data and seabed sampling, showing surficial geology and seabed sediment dynamics. The data were collected in collaboration with the Stellwagen BanSea Floor Sediment Samples, Seabed Imagery, and CTD Water Column Data Collected on Stellwagen Bank in January 2017, U.S. Geological Survey Field Activity 2017-009-FA
This field activity is part of the effort to map geologic substrates of the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary region off Boston, Massachusetts. The overall goal is to develop high-resolution (1:25,000) interpretive maps, based on multibeam sonar data and seabed sampling, showing surficial geology and seabed sediment dynamics. This cruise was conducted in collaboration with the Stellwagen B - Publications
Below are publications associated with this project.
Surficial geology and shaded seafloor relief of Georges Bank, Fundian Channel and Northeast Channel, Gulf of Maine
Georges Bank is a shallow submarine bank that lies south of Nova Scotia and east of Cape Cod and bounds the seaward side of the Gulf of Maine. The international boundary between Canada and the United States transects the bank, and the eastern part of the bank (~7500 square kilometres) lies in Canadian territory. This map shows the surficial geology of a part of Georges Bank at a scale of 1:50 000.Submarine glacial landforms on the Bay of Fundy–northern Gulf of Maine continental shelf
The Bay of Fundy–northern Gulf of Maine region surrounds the southern part of Nova Scotia, encompassing, from west to east, the Bay of Fundy, Grand Manan Basin, German Bank, Browns Bank, Northeast Channel and northeastern Georges Bank (Fig. 1a, b). During the last glacial maximum (c. 24–20 14C ka BP), the SE margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) occupied the study area, the rest of the Gulf ofDetermining the flux of methane into Hudson Canyon at the edge of methane clathrate hydrate stability
Methane seeps were investigated in Hudson Canyon, the largest shelf-break canyon on the northern US Atlantic Margin. The seeps investigated are located at or updip of the nominal limit of methane clathrate hydrate stability. The acoustic identification of bubble streams was used to guide water column sampling in a 32 km2 region within the canyon's thalweg. By incorporating measurements of dissolveObservations of recruitment and colonization by tunicates and associated invertebrates using giant one-meter2 recruitment plates at Woods Hole, Massachusetts
Large recruitment plates measuring 1 × 1 m were deployed over an 18-month period from September 2013 to March 2015 for the purpose of documenting recruitment and colonization processes of marine invertebrate species at Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Each side of two plates was subdivided into 16 subareas (25 × 25 cm), and an observational strategy was developed whereby, at approximately two-week interLarge submarine sand waves and gravel lag substrates on Georges Bank off Atlantic Canada
Georges Bank is a large, shallow, continental shelf feature offshore of New England and Atlantic Canada. The bank is mantled with a veneer of glacial debris transported during the late Pleistocene from continental areas lying to the north. These sediments were reworked by marine processes during postglacial sea-level transgression and continue to be modified by the modern oceanic regime. The surfiSurficial geology and benthic habitat of the German Bank seabed, Scotian Shelf, Canada
To provide the scientific context for management of a newly opened scallop fishing ground, surficial geology and benthic habitats were mapped on German Bank on the southern Scotian Shelf off Atlantic Canada. To provide a seamless regional dataset, multibeam sonar surveys covered 5320 sqaure kilometres of the bank in water depths of 30–250 m and provided 5 m horizontal resolution bathymetry and bacShaded seafloor relief, backscatter strength, and surficial geology; German Bank, Scotian Shelf, offshore Nova Scotia
This map is part of a three-map series of German Bank, located on the Scotian Shelf off southern Nova Scotia. This map is the product of a number of surveys (1997-2003) that used a multibeam sonar system to map 5321 km2 of the seafloor. Other surveys collected geological data for scientific interpretation. This map sheet shows the seafloor topography of German Bank in shaded-relief view and sea