Regional Ice Scour Data Base


Book Description







Beaufort Sea Ice Scour Data Base (scourbase) Update to 1986


Book Description

Grounding of sea ice on high latitude continental shelves represents potential threat to maintenance of subsea industrial installations. SCOURBASE system created to store major parameters relevant to engineering design in comprehensive data base format.







Ice Scour Data Base for the Beaufort Sea


Book Description

Grounding of sea ice on high-latitude continental shelves of the world represent a geologic constraint to safe installation of subsea petroleum faciliaties. To faciliate assessment of seabottom ice scouring on marine design criteria, computerized data-management system has been established for Canadian Beaufort Sea. Side-scan sonar, bathymetric, and sub-bottom profile acoustic data are digitized and computer processed to produce various scour parameters that are incorporated into a compreshensive, location-reference data file.




Ice Scour Bibliography


Book Description

This bibliography includes 379 annotated citations to works on ice scour, defined as the disturbance of the bottom sediments of a water body by floating ice. Works describing ice scour conditions in specific locations are arranged geographically by region. Other works are assigned to the following subject categories: theory or modelling of ice scour; and protection of sea-bed structures such as pipelines from ice scour. Includes subject, geographic, author, title, and serial indexes.







Regional Ice Scour Data Base Update Studies


Book Description

Study was to update & refine regional computerized database of ice scour distribution & characteristics for eastern Canadian continental shelf which was established by Atlantic Geoscience Centre to provide better understanding of iceberg scour process & its relationship with seabed & environment.







Design of an Iceberg Scour Repetitive Mapping Network for the Canadian East Coast


Book Description

Provides recommendations for the establishment of a network for the purpose of monitoring the recurrence rates of iceberg/seabed interactions on the eastern Canadian continental shelf. The network is based on a detailed analysis of predicted iceberg grounding densities, generated by a computer model, combined with available information on existing iceberg scours, observed and interpreted groundings and scours, seabed geological conditions, and existing geophysical data. The network recommended covers a variety of water depths and surficial geological conditions over a broad geographic range, ensuring that the results will be applicable to many other areas on the shelf. The size and orientation of each control area or corridor, the geophysical instruments to be used, the survey techniques, and the recommended intervals between surveys are specified and are designed to ensure optimum probability of successful, complete, and reproducible data collection.