MODAL DEPTHS FROM SHIPBOARD BATHYMETRY - THERE IS A SOUTH-PACIFIC SUPERSWELL

Citation
Mk. Mcnutt et al., MODAL DEPTHS FROM SHIPBOARD BATHYMETRY - THERE IS A SOUTH-PACIFIC SUPERSWELL, Geophysical research letters, 23(23), 1996, pp. 3397-3400
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
ISSN journal
00948276
Volume
23
Issue
23
Year of publication
1996
Pages
3397 - 3400
Database
ISI
SICI code
0094-8276(1996)23:23<3397:MDFSB->2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Since the first quantification 10 years ago of a large regional depth anomaly in French Polynesia, numerous studies have explored the origin and the geophysical and geochemical consequences of this ''South Paci fic Superswell.'' These efforts would be widely viewed as a waste of t ime if this superswell were proven not to exist. Recently, Levitt and Sandwell (1996) have proposed just that, based on a modal analysis of multibeam bathymetric data collected on sea floor aged 15 to 35 Ma in eastern French Polynesia. Citing a discrepancy between the ETOPO5 grid ded depths and ship data from 4 expeditions in their study area, they suggest that the entire Superswell could be an artifact of poor ETOPO5 sampling and gridding. Here we present a more comprehensive analysis of original ship soundings from 82 oceanographic expeditions with sate llite navigation collected since 1967. The soundings span sea floor fr om less than 30 to more than 110 Ma. We confirm the conclusion of Levi tt and Sandwell that depth anomalies calculated from ETOPO5 slightly o verestimate the true values from original ship soundings on sea floor aged 30 to 35 million years, but a positive depth anomaly of 250 m exi sts nevertheless. On older sea floor, we find that ETOPO5 slightly und erestimates the magnitude of the depth anomaly based on a modal analys is, but overall the agreement in the mode of the depth/age data betwee n ETOPO5 and the original ship soundings is quite striking, especially given the fact that less than 20% of the ship data used in our analys is had been collected at the time that the global bathymetric grid was prepared. There indeed is a South Pacific Superswell, and the magnitu de and age-dependence of the depth anomaly is as originally calculated from the mode of gridded bathymetry.