Ginger Barth (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Sediment Thickness Data in the Deep-Sea Basins of the Bering Sea Sediment Thickness Data in the Deep-Sea Basins of the Bering Sea
A raster grid of sediment thickness in GeoTIFF format (BeringSeaBasins-SedimentThicknessGrid.tif) of the Aleutian, Bowers, and Komandorsky Basins was created by merging GeoTIFF grids of the Aleutian and Bowers Basins and of the Komandorsky Basin, provided in other sections of this data release. The raster grid file, along with a corresponding CSDGM FGDC-compliant metadata file, is...
Multibeam bathymetry and acoustic backscatter from the Alaskan region, Extended Continental Shelf Project, 2011 field season: Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea Multibeam bathymetry and acoustic backscatter from the Alaskan region, Extended Continental Shelf Project, 2011 field season: Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea
This publication releases swath bathymetry and backscatter datasets derived from multibeam bathymetric data acquired by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) on the R/V Marcus G. Langseth legs MGL1108 (transit) and MGL1109 in the Gulf of Alaska, and MGL1111 in the Bering Sea. Leg MGL1108 data were combined with leg MGL1109 data during processing. These data were acquired with a Kongsberg...
Detrital zircon geochronology and geochemistry data from the seafloor of the Bering Sea and adjacent river systems Detrital zircon geochronology and geochemistry data from the seafloor of the Bering Sea and adjacent river systems
This dataset archives geochronology and geochemistry measurements from detrital zircons collected from samples taken from the Bering Sea and its major feeder rivers.
Did the Aleutian Basin form by plate capture or backarc basin opening? Did the Aleutian Basin form by plate capture or backarc basin opening?
The origin of the Aleutian Basin is unresolved because its crust is deeply buried beneath sediments. It has been interpreted as forming in the Eocene when the Beringian convergent margin jumped seaward to south of the Aleutian arc, thereby capturing a large sector of Cretaceous Pacific crust. Alternatively, it may have formed by backarc spreading. We present new magnetic and seismic...
Authors
Robert Stern, David W. Scholl, Matthew A. Malkowski, Kylara M. Martin, Ginger Barth, Daniel Scheirer
Seismic evidence for magmatic underplating along the Kodiak-Bowie Seamount Chain, Gulf of Alaska Seismic evidence for magmatic underplating along the Kodiak-Bowie Seamount Chain, Gulf of Alaska
Oceanic crust formed at mid-ocean ridges may be later modified by off-ridge magmatism forming seamounts, guyots, and islands. We investigate processes associated with seamount formation in the Gulf of Alaska Seamount Province using two coincident seismic reflection/wide-angle profiles. A north-south profile crosses the Kodiak-Bowie Seamount Chain and Aja fracture zone (FZ), and an...
Authors
Gail Christeson, Sean P.S. Gulick, Maureen Walton, Ginger Barth
Continental shelves as detrital mixers: U-Pb and Lu-Hf detrital zircon provenance of the Pleistocene–Holocene Bering Sea and its margins Continental shelves as detrital mixers: U-Pb and Lu-Hf detrital zircon provenance of the Pleistocene–Holocene Bering Sea and its margins
Continental shelves serve as critical transfer zones in sediment-routing systems, linking the terrestrial erosional and deep-water depositional domains. The degree to which clastic sediment is mixed and homogenized during transfer across broad shelves has important implications for understanding deep-sea detrital records. Wide continental shelves are thought to act as capacitors...
Authors
Matthew A. Malkowski, Samuel Johnstone, Glenn Sharman, Colin White, Daniel Scheirer, Ginger Barth
By
Coastal and Marine Hazards and Resources Program, National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program, Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center, Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center, Deep Sea Exploration, Mapping and Characterization
Multiple melt source origin of the Line Islands (Pacific Ocean) Multiple melt source origin of the Line Islands (Pacific Ocean)
The Line Islands volcanic chain in the central Pacific Ocean exhibits many characteristics of a hotspot-generated seamount chain; however, the lack of a predictable age progression has stymied previous models for the origin of this feature. We combined plate-tectonic reconstructions with seamount age dates and available geochemistry to develop a new model that involves multiple melt...
Authors
Robert Pockalny, Ginger Barth, Barry Eakins, Katherine Kelley, Christina Wertman
Aleutian basin oceanic crust Aleutian basin oceanic crust
We present two-dimensional P-wave velocity structure along two wide-angle ocean bottom seismometer profiles from the Aleutian basin in the Bering Sea. The basement here is commonly considered to be trapped oceanic crust, yet there is a change in orientation of magnetic lineations and gravity features within the basin that might reflect later processes. Line 1 extends ∼225 km from...
Authors
Gail Christeson, Ginger A. Barth
Deep-Water Acoustic Anomalies from Methane Hydrate in the Bering Sea Deep-Water Acoustic Anomalies from Methane Hydrate in the Bering Sea
A recent expedition to the central Bering Sea, one of the most remote locations in the world, has yielded observations confirming gas and gas hydrates in this deep ocean basin. Significant sound speed anomalies found using inversion of pre-stack seismic data are observed in association with variable seismic amplitude anomalies in the thick sediment column. The anomalously low sound...
Authors
Warren Wood, Ginger A. Barth, David Scholl, Nina Lebedeva-Ivanova
Dynamic response to strike-slip tectonic control on the deposition and evolution of the Baranof Fan, Gulf of Alaska Dynamic response to strike-slip tectonic control on the deposition and evolution of the Baranof Fan, Gulf of Alaska
The Baranof Fan is one of three large deep-sea fans in the Gulf of Alaska, and is a key component in understanding large-scale erosion and sedimentation patterns for southeast Alaska and western Canada. We integrate new and existing seismic reflection profiles to provide new constraints on the Baranof Fan area, geometry, volume, and channel development. We estimate the fan’s area and...
Authors
Maureen Walton, Sean P. S. Gulick, Robert Reece, Ginger A. Barth, Gail Christeson, Harm VanAvendonk
The role of farfield tectonic stress in oceanic intraplate deformation, Gulf of Alaska The role of farfield tectonic stress in oceanic intraplate deformation, Gulf of Alaska
An integration of geophysical data from the Pacific Plate reveals plate bending anomalies, massive intraplate shearing and deformation, and a lack of oceanic crust magnetic lineaments in different regions across the Gulf of Alaska. We argue that farfield stress from the Yakutat Terrane collision with North America is the major driver for these unusual features. Similar plate motion...
Authors
Robert Reece, Sean P. S. Gulick, Gail Christesen, Brian Horton, Harm VanAvendonk, Ginger Barth
Continental margins and the U.S. extended continental shelf project Continental margins and the U.S. extended continental shelf project
No abstract available.
Authors
Deborah Hutchinson, Ginger A. Barth
Possible deep-water gas hydrate accumulations in the Bering Sea Possible deep-water gas hydrate accumulations in the Bering Sea
Seismic reflection images from the deep-water Aleutian and Bowers Basins of the Bering Sea contain many hundreds of acoustic Velocity-AMPlitude (VAMP) anomalies, each of which may represent a large accumulation of natural gas hydrate. Against a backdrop of essentially horizontal sedimentary reflections, the VAMP anomalies stand out as both high-amplitude bright spots and zones of...
Authors
Ginger A. Barth, David Scholl, Jonathan Childs
A preliminary assessment of geologic framework and sediment thickness studies relevant to prospective US submission on extended continental shelf A preliminary assessment of geologic framework and sediment thickness studies relevant to prospective US submission on extended continental shelf
Under the provisions of Articles 76 and 77 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), coastal States have sovereign rights over the continental shelf territory beyond 200-nautical mile (nm) from the baseline from which the territorial sea is measured if certain conditions are met regarding the geologic and physiographic character of the legal continental shelf as...
Authors
Deborah Hutchinson, Jonathan Childs, Erika Hammar-Klose, Shawn Dadisman, N. Edgar, Ginger A. Barth
Science and Products
Sediment Thickness Data in the Deep-Sea Basins of the Bering Sea Sediment Thickness Data in the Deep-Sea Basins of the Bering Sea
A raster grid of sediment thickness in GeoTIFF format (BeringSeaBasins-SedimentThicknessGrid.tif) of the Aleutian, Bowers, and Komandorsky Basins was created by merging GeoTIFF grids of the Aleutian and Bowers Basins and of the Komandorsky Basin, provided in other sections of this data release. The raster grid file, along with a corresponding CSDGM FGDC-compliant metadata file, is...
Multibeam bathymetry and acoustic backscatter from the Alaskan region, Extended Continental Shelf Project, 2011 field season: Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea Multibeam bathymetry and acoustic backscatter from the Alaskan region, Extended Continental Shelf Project, 2011 field season: Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea
This publication releases swath bathymetry and backscatter datasets derived from multibeam bathymetric data acquired by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) on the R/V Marcus G. Langseth legs MGL1108 (transit) and MGL1109 in the Gulf of Alaska, and MGL1111 in the Bering Sea. Leg MGL1108 data were combined with leg MGL1109 data during processing. These data were acquired with a Kongsberg...
Detrital zircon geochronology and geochemistry data from the seafloor of the Bering Sea and adjacent river systems Detrital zircon geochronology and geochemistry data from the seafloor of the Bering Sea and adjacent river systems
This dataset archives geochronology and geochemistry measurements from detrital zircons collected from samples taken from the Bering Sea and its major feeder rivers.
Did the Aleutian Basin form by plate capture or backarc basin opening? Did the Aleutian Basin form by plate capture or backarc basin opening?
The origin of the Aleutian Basin is unresolved because its crust is deeply buried beneath sediments. It has been interpreted as forming in the Eocene when the Beringian convergent margin jumped seaward to south of the Aleutian arc, thereby capturing a large sector of Cretaceous Pacific crust. Alternatively, it may have formed by backarc spreading. We present new magnetic and seismic...
Authors
Robert Stern, David W. Scholl, Matthew A. Malkowski, Kylara M. Martin, Ginger Barth, Daniel Scheirer
Seismic evidence for magmatic underplating along the Kodiak-Bowie Seamount Chain, Gulf of Alaska Seismic evidence for magmatic underplating along the Kodiak-Bowie Seamount Chain, Gulf of Alaska
Oceanic crust formed at mid-ocean ridges may be later modified by off-ridge magmatism forming seamounts, guyots, and islands. We investigate processes associated with seamount formation in the Gulf of Alaska Seamount Province using two coincident seismic reflection/wide-angle profiles. A north-south profile crosses the Kodiak-Bowie Seamount Chain and Aja fracture zone (FZ), and an...
Authors
Gail Christeson, Sean P.S. Gulick, Maureen Walton, Ginger Barth
Continental shelves as detrital mixers: U-Pb and Lu-Hf detrital zircon provenance of the Pleistocene–Holocene Bering Sea and its margins Continental shelves as detrital mixers: U-Pb and Lu-Hf detrital zircon provenance of the Pleistocene–Holocene Bering Sea and its margins
Continental shelves serve as critical transfer zones in sediment-routing systems, linking the terrestrial erosional and deep-water depositional domains. The degree to which clastic sediment is mixed and homogenized during transfer across broad shelves has important implications for understanding deep-sea detrital records. Wide continental shelves are thought to act as capacitors...
Authors
Matthew A. Malkowski, Samuel Johnstone, Glenn Sharman, Colin White, Daniel Scheirer, Ginger Barth
By
Coastal and Marine Hazards and Resources Program, National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program, Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center, Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center, Deep Sea Exploration, Mapping and Characterization
Multiple melt source origin of the Line Islands (Pacific Ocean) Multiple melt source origin of the Line Islands (Pacific Ocean)
The Line Islands volcanic chain in the central Pacific Ocean exhibits many characteristics of a hotspot-generated seamount chain; however, the lack of a predictable age progression has stymied previous models for the origin of this feature. We combined plate-tectonic reconstructions with seamount age dates and available geochemistry to develop a new model that involves multiple melt...
Authors
Robert Pockalny, Ginger Barth, Barry Eakins, Katherine Kelley, Christina Wertman
Aleutian basin oceanic crust Aleutian basin oceanic crust
We present two-dimensional P-wave velocity structure along two wide-angle ocean bottom seismometer profiles from the Aleutian basin in the Bering Sea. The basement here is commonly considered to be trapped oceanic crust, yet there is a change in orientation of magnetic lineations and gravity features within the basin that might reflect later processes. Line 1 extends ∼225 km from...
Authors
Gail Christeson, Ginger A. Barth
Deep-Water Acoustic Anomalies from Methane Hydrate in the Bering Sea Deep-Water Acoustic Anomalies from Methane Hydrate in the Bering Sea
A recent expedition to the central Bering Sea, one of the most remote locations in the world, has yielded observations confirming gas and gas hydrates in this deep ocean basin. Significant sound speed anomalies found using inversion of pre-stack seismic data are observed in association with variable seismic amplitude anomalies in the thick sediment column. The anomalously low sound...
Authors
Warren Wood, Ginger A. Barth, David Scholl, Nina Lebedeva-Ivanova
Dynamic response to strike-slip tectonic control on the deposition and evolution of the Baranof Fan, Gulf of Alaska Dynamic response to strike-slip tectonic control on the deposition and evolution of the Baranof Fan, Gulf of Alaska
The Baranof Fan is one of three large deep-sea fans in the Gulf of Alaska, and is a key component in understanding large-scale erosion and sedimentation patterns for southeast Alaska and western Canada. We integrate new and existing seismic reflection profiles to provide new constraints on the Baranof Fan area, geometry, volume, and channel development. We estimate the fan’s area and...
Authors
Maureen Walton, Sean P. S. Gulick, Robert Reece, Ginger A. Barth, Gail Christeson, Harm VanAvendonk
The role of farfield tectonic stress in oceanic intraplate deformation, Gulf of Alaska The role of farfield tectonic stress in oceanic intraplate deformation, Gulf of Alaska
An integration of geophysical data from the Pacific Plate reveals plate bending anomalies, massive intraplate shearing and deformation, and a lack of oceanic crust magnetic lineaments in different regions across the Gulf of Alaska. We argue that farfield stress from the Yakutat Terrane collision with North America is the major driver for these unusual features. Similar plate motion...
Authors
Robert Reece, Sean P. S. Gulick, Gail Christesen, Brian Horton, Harm VanAvendonk, Ginger Barth
Continental margins and the U.S. extended continental shelf project Continental margins and the U.S. extended continental shelf project
No abstract available.
Authors
Deborah Hutchinson, Ginger A. Barth
Possible deep-water gas hydrate accumulations in the Bering Sea Possible deep-water gas hydrate accumulations in the Bering Sea
Seismic reflection images from the deep-water Aleutian and Bowers Basins of the Bering Sea contain many hundreds of acoustic Velocity-AMPlitude (VAMP) anomalies, each of which may represent a large accumulation of natural gas hydrate. Against a backdrop of essentially horizontal sedimentary reflections, the VAMP anomalies stand out as both high-amplitude bright spots and zones of...
Authors
Ginger A. Barth, David Scholl, Jonathan Childs
A preliminary assessment of geologic framework and sediment thickness studies relevant to prospective US submission on extended continental shelf A preliminary assessment of geologic framework and sediment thickness studies relevant to prospective US submission on extended continental shelf
Under the provisions of Articles 76 and 77 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), coastal States have sovereign rights over the continental shelf territory beyond 200-nautical mile (nm) from the baseline from which the territorial sea is measured if certain conditions are met regarding the geologic and physiographic character of the legal continental shelf as...
Authors
Deborah Hutchinson, Jonathan Childs, Erika Hammar-Klose, Shawn Dadisman, N. Edgar, Ginger A. Barth