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References
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[1]
The five deeps: The location and depth of the deepest place in each ...Other entries state that the 'Litke Deep' (350 km north of Svalbard) is the deepest point in the Arctic Ocean (5449 m), while asserting that the Molloy Deep ( ...
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[2]
A Multi‐Decade Tracer Study of the Circulation and Spreading ...Dec 18, 2024 · The Eurasian Basin is further divided by the Gakkel Ridge into the Amundsen Basin, with a maximum depth of 4,500 m, and the Nansen Basin, which ...
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[3]
International Bathymetric Chart of the Arctic Ocean (IBCAO) - GEBCOA digital data base that contains all available bathymetric data north of 64° North, for use by mapmakers, researchers, institutions, and others.
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[4]
Spatial and Temporal Variations in Crustal Structure in the Eurasian ...Jan 26, 2022 · The Eurasian Basin formed about 56 Ma ago and is composed of the Nansen Basin, the Amundsen Basin, and the Gakkel Ridge (Figure 1a) [10,11]. The ...2. Geological Setting · 3. Data And Method · 3.4. Residual Mantle Bouguer...
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[5]
(PDF) Eurasian Basin - ResearchGateThe Eurasian Basin, ~2000 km long and ~900 km wide, consists of abyssal ... and maximum thickness 2.5 km in the central part. The crust thick-. ness ...
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Eurasia Basin Composite Tectono-Sedimentary ElementThe Eurasia Basin formed by continental break-up and separation of the Lomonosov Ridge from the northern Barents–Kara Shelf at about 56–54 Ma.
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[7]
The Gakkel Ridge: Bathymetry, gravity anomalies, and crustal ...Feb 22, 2003 · The ridge axis is generally deep, at a depth of 5000–5250 m and is characterized by a valley throughout this portion of the ridge. The deepest ...Missing: Litke coordinates
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[8]
Initial Opening of the Eurasian Basin, Arctic Ocean - FrontiersOct 20, 2016 · Seismic transect across the Lomonosov and Mendeleev Ridges: constraints on the geological evolution of the Amerasia Basin, Arctic Ocean.
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[9]
Ultraslow Spreading and Volcanism at the Eastern End of Gakkel ...Dec 5, 2019 · A notable exception occurs between 81°10′N and 82°N latitude along 120°E longitude (Figure 1). Here, on the easternmost part of the Gakkel ...Missing: Litke | Show results with:Litke
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[10]
Peculiarities of roughness and thickness of oceanic crust in the ...The gravity models reveal a 5–6 km thick oceanic crust (density of 2900 kg m−3) in the central part of the Amundsen Basin, increasing to 9 km towards the Gakkel ...Missing: Litke | Show results with:Litke
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[11]
Depositional Evolution of the Western Amundsen Basin, Arctic ...Oct 5, 2018 · A new stratigraphic model and estimated sedimentation rates of the western Amundsen Basin, Arctic Ocean, are presented based on multichannel seismic reflection ...Missing: Litke | Show results with:Litke
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[12]
A case study of NP-28 channel in the Amundsen Basin, Arctic OceanAug 6, 2025 · Debris flows on the slopes and ensuing turbidity currents in the basins provide considerable sediment redistribution in the central Arctic Ocean ...
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[13]
The Earth - Imagine the Universe! - NASAOct 22, 2020 · Its equatorial radius is 6378 km, but its polar radius is 6357 km - in other words, the Earth is slightly flattened. Eratosthenes was ...Missing: shorter than
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[14]
[PDF] Revisiting “Ocean Depth closest to the Center of the Earth”Litke Deep is now considered the closest point of the Earth's crust to its center, being 0.1793 km closer than Molloy Deep.
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[PDF] Map projections--a working manual - USGS Publications WarehouseNov 12, 1987 · e = eccentricity of the ellipsoid. (1 - b2 /a2 )'12. f = flattening of the ellipsoid. h = relative scale factor along a meridian of ...
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[16]
[PDF] Fedor Petrovich Litke and his Expeditions to Novaya Zemlya 1821-24Litke was the senior midshipman on board, the others being Ferdinand. Petrovich Vrangel' and Fedor Fedorovich Matyushkin, both of whom became lifelong friends.Missing: Fyodor biography
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The Challenger Expedition - Dive & DiscoverModern oceanography began with the Challenger Expedition between 1872 and 1876. It was the first expedition organized specifically to gather data on a wide ...Missing: lag cover
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[18]
[PDF] Maps of the Arctic Basin Sea Floor: A History of Bathymetry and its ...This concept lost credibility after Nansen's ship Frum drifted with the arctic pack ice from the New Siberian Islands to Svalbard between 1893 and 1896 (Nansen ...Missing: Fridtjof | Show results with:Fridtjof
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[19]
[PDF] The International Bathymetric Chart of the Arctic Ocean (IBCAO ...Jun 29, 2012 · the Fram Expedition 1893–1896, Fridtjof Nansen compiled a bathymetric map that portrayed the central Arctic Ocean as a single deep ...Missing: 1955 | Show results with:1955
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[20]
[PDF] Northern Sea Route and Icebreaking Technology - DTICThe Northern Sea Route (NSR) follows the Eurasian coastline between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The USSR developed a marine transportation ...Missing: 1940s- motivations
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[21]
Soviet Strategic Interest in the Maritime Arctic - U.S. Naval InstituteUse of the route continued to increase during World War II, when Liberty ships with Russian crews brought in lend-lease supplies across the Pacific and via the ...
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the arctic ocean - jstorIn this vicinity the icebreaker Litke in 1955 sounded the greatest known depth in the Arctic Ocean, a depth of 17,880 feet, and discovered a rift running ...
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Significance of the Nautilus Polar Cruise - May 1958 Vol. 84/5/663The United States is now in a position to gather bathymetric data on the Arctic Ocean in a shorter time and in the much more precise and meaningful form of ...
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Alexey Piskarev Victor Poselov Valery Kaminsky Editors1.7 demonstrates the locations of multi-beam sonar surveys of 2010—. 2014 carried out by the Russian expeditions in the Arctic Ocean. The 2010 expedi- tion ...
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The International Bathymetric Chart of the Arctic Ocean Version 5.0Dec 21, 2024 · The newly added multibeam bathymetry for IBCAO 5.0 from the German Research RV Polarstern expedition PS115/1 shows a continental slope ...
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The emerging picture of a diverse deep Arctic Ocean seafloorOct 4, 2024 · The deepest point in the Arctic Ocean is the Molloy Deep at 5,607 m depth (Thiede et al., 1990).
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[28]
Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing ...The polar regions are losing ice, and their oceans are changing rapidly. · Arctic surface air temperature has · The Arctic and Southern Oceans are continuing to ...Sea Level Rise · Summary for Policymakers · Download Report · View ChapterMissing: Litke | Show results with:Litke