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coordinated canyon experiment

1

High-tech “smart boulders” give the first look from inside an underwater landslide

06 Apr 2022

April 6, 2022 – Motion-sensing “smart boulders” have provided new insight about the powerful sediment gravity flows that barrel down Monterey Canyon.

2

Measuring the maelstrom

25 Jul 2019

July 25, 2019 – A new paper shows how strong currents carry sand-sized particles 50 kilometers down Monterey Canyon.

3

A new conceptual model for turbidity currents

08 Oct 2018

October 5, 2018 – A new paper shows that currents in submarine canyons often involve large-scale movement of the seafloor. This discovery could help ocean engineers avoid damage to pipelines, communications cables, and other seafloor structures.

4

Large underwater experiment shows that “turbidity currents” involve movement of the seafloor

05 Oct 2018

October 5, 2018 – A new paper shows that currents in submarine canyons often involve large-scale movement of the seafloor. This discovery could help ocean engineers avoid damage to pipelines, communications cables, and other seafloor structures.

5

Multi-year submarine-canyon study challenges textbook theories about turbidity currents

11 Dec 2017

December 11, 2017 – Results of the Coordinated Canyon Experiment presented at the Fall 2017 meeting of the American Geophysical Union.

6

Buried at sea

06 Feb 2017

Feb 6, 2017 – During a study to learn how sediments flow through submarine canyons, a one-ton monitoring device on the seafloor was swept down Monterey Canyon and partially buried—twice in one year.

7

Signs of a turbidity event in Monterey Canyon

21 Jan 2016

Jan 21, 2016 – On Friday, January 15, an event on the floor of Monterey Canyon triggered two sediment transport event detectors. A few days later, a benthic event detector, originally deployed at a depth of 200 meters in the canyon, drifted ashore in Santa Cruz.

8

Coordinated Canyon Experiment

29 Dec 2015

The Coordinated Canyon Experiment (CCE), promises to give scientists a uniquely detailed and comprehensive view of sediment movement within the canyon

Deploying a benthic event detector in Monterey Bay
9

International experiment tracks underwater avalanches in Monterey Canyon

15 Oct 2015

Oct 15, 2015 – Underwater avalanches and turbidity currents carry huge amounts of sediment, organic material, and pollutants down submarine canyons and into the deep sea. Yet geologists know very little about how sediment moves during these events.

10

MBARI engineers create “smart boulders” to understand how sand moves in submarine canyons

15 Oct 2015

Oct 15, 2015 – Submarine canyons are notoriously difficult to study because underwater avalanches periodically surge down the bottoms of many canyons, often burying or destroying scientific instruments.

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About MBARI

Research programs at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) encompass the entire ocean, from the surface waters to the deep seafloor, and from the coastal zone to the open sea. The need to understand the ocean in all its complexity and variability drives MBARI's research and development efforts.


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