DocumentCode :
601355
Title :
Mapping the Bayonnaise knoll caldera and the Hakurei hydrothermal deposit with autonomous underwater vehicle using side-scan and multi-beam sonars
Author :
Chie Honsho ; Ura, Tamaki ; Asada, Akira
Author_Institution :
Atmos. & Ocean Res. Inst., Univ. of Tokyo, Chiba, Japan
fYear :
2013
fDate :
5-8 March 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
8
Abstract :
We conducted autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) surveys of a large-scale hydrothermal deposit called the Hakurei site located in the Bayonnaise knoll caldera of the Izu-Ogasawara island arc during the YK11-11 research cruise of the R/V Yokosuka in December 2011. Two dives of the AUV Urashima, a vehicle developed by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), were devoted to collecting side-scan and multi-beam acoustic data from the southern part of the caldera, including the location of the hydrothermal site. We made detailed corrections for the vehicle´s position data and obtained a high-resolution multi-beam bathymetric map. After radiometric corrections, side-scan and multi-beam backscatter mosaics were created by using the corrected position data. These mosaics commonly show lower backscatter intensities on the caldera floor, suggesting that ponded sediments cover the seafloor. On the other hand, they show stronger backscattering on the central cone, probably because it is exposed volcanic rocks with little sediment cover. An elongated zone of a distinctive, scaly pattern of strong backscattering was identified in the side-scan image of the southwestern caldera floor. However, this remarkable pattern appears rather modestly in the bathymetric map and in the multi-beam image. It implies that this pattern is not the result of topographic relief but rather reflects different materials on the seafloor, possibly representing erupted volcanic rocks with a little sediment cover. The side-scan image of the Hakurei hydrothermal site is characterized by short-wavelength alternation of strong and weak backscattering with high contrast, which probably represents rugged topography associated with sulfide chimneys and mounds. These different characteristics of the seafloor were quantitatively classified by means of the side-scan image. The Hakurei site was marked by a distinctive spotty pattern in the multi-beam image, a different expression by the - ide-scan image. This spotty pattern was utilized to characterize the hydrothermal site and to delineate other areas that have similar characteristics. The resulting distribution is generally in good agreement with the classification result from the side-scan image. We suggest that hydrothermal activity at various scales would occur in several places in the caldera.
Keywords :
autonomous underwater vehicles; bathymetry; geophysical image processing; image segmentation; radiometry; rocks; sediments; sonar; AD 2011 12; AUV Urashima; Bayonnaise knoll caldera; Hakurei hydrothermal deposit; Hakurei hydrothermal site; Hakurei site; Izu-Ogasawara island; Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology; R/V Yokosuka; YK11-11 research cruise; autonomous underwater vehicle surveys; backscatter intensities; bathymetric map; erupted volcanic rocks; high-resolution multibeam bathymetric map; large-scale hydrothermal deposit; multibeam acoustic data; multibeam backscatter mosaics; multibeam image; multibeam sonar; ponded sediments; radiometric corrections; scaly pattern; sediment cover; short-wavelength alternation; side-scan data; side-scan image; side-scan mosaics; side-scan sonar; southwestern caldera floor; spotty pattern; sulfide chimneys; topographic relief; vehicle position data; volcanic rocks; Backscatter; Floors; Rocks; Sediments; Sonar; Surface topography; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Underwater Technology Symposium (UT), 2013 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Tokyo
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-5948-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/UT.2013.6519848
Filename :
6519848
Link To Document :
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