Abstract

The Pacific Arctic Region, encompassing the Bering, Chukchi, Western Beaufort, and Eastern Siberian shelves and seas, has experienced decadal changes in atmospheric conditions, seasonal sea-ice coverage, and seawater temperature. In the summer of 2016, the Canada Basin Acoustic Propagation Experiment (CANAPE) was conducted to understand the changing soundscape and to explore the use of acoustic signals as a remote sensing tool in the modern Arctic. During the experiment, low-frequency signals from five tomographic sources located in the Canada Basin were recorded by a short vertical line array of hydrophones deployed from a research vessel. The recordings were made at seven stations located in the Canada Basin, on the continental rise, and on the Chukchi Shelf. The propagation distances ranged from 50 km to 500 km, and the propagation conditions changed from ducted by the Beaufort Lens in the basin to upward refracting on the continental shelf. Multiple measurements of the sound speed profile were acquire...

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