Morphological and geological features of Drake Passage, Antarctica, from a new digital bathymetric model
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Taylor & Francis
Materia
Bathymetry Seafloor Drake Passage Scotia-Arc Antarctica
Date
2019-01-01Referencia bibliográfica
F. Bohoyo, R. D. Larter, J. Galindo-Zaldívar, P. T. Leat, A. Maldonado, A. J. Tate, M. M. Flexas, E. J. M. Gowland, J. E. Arndt, B. Dorschel, Y. D. Kim, J. K. Hong, J. López-Martínez, A. Maestro, O. Bermúdez, F. O. Nitsche, R. A. Livermore & T. R. Riley (2019) Morphological and geological features of Drake Passage, Antarctica, from a new digital bathymetric model, Journal of Maps, 15:2, 49-59.
Patrocinador
This work was supported through projects CTM2014- 60451-C2-02/01, CTM2017-89711-C2-2/1-P and special action CTM2011-13970-E from “Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades” of Spain.Résumé
The Drake Passage is an oceanic gateway of about 850 km width located between South America
and the Antarctic Peninsula that connects the southeastern Pacific Ocean with the southwestern
Atlantic Ocean. It is an important gateway for mantle flow, oceanographic water masses, and
migrations of biota. This sector developed within the framework of the geodynamic evolution of
the Scotia Arc, including continental fragmentation processes and oceanic crust creation, since
the oblique divergence of the South American plate to the north and the Antarctic plate to the
south started in the Eocene. As a consequence of its complex tectonic evolution and subsequent
submarine processes, as sedimentary infill and erosion mainly controlled by bottom currents and
active tectonics, this region shows a varied physiography. We present a detailed map of the
bathymetry and geological setting of the Drake Passage that is mainly founded on a new
compilation of precise multibeam bathymetric data obtained on 120 cruises between 1992 and
2015, resulting in a new Digital Bathymetric Model with 200 × 200 m cell spacing. The map
covers an area of 1,465,000 km2 between parallels 52°S and 63°S and meridians 70°W and 50°W
at scale 1:1,600,000 allowing the identification of the main seafloor features. In addition, the map
includes useful geological information related to magnetism, seismicity and tectonics. This work
constitutes an international cooperative effort and is part of the International Bathymetric Chart
of the Southern Ocean project, under the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research umbrella.