Abstract

Abstract Maritime spatial planning, management of marine resources, environmental assessments and forecasting all require good seabed maps. Similarly there is a need to support the objectives to achieve Good Environmental Status in Europe's seas by 2020, set up by the European Commission's Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Hence the European Commission established the European Marine Observation and Data Network (EMODnet) programme in 2009, which is now in its fourth phase (2019–21). The programme is designed to assemble existing, but fragmented and partly inaccessible, marine data and to create contiguous and publicly available information layers which are interoperable and free of restrictions on use, and which encompass whole marine basins. The EMODnet Geology project is delivering integrated geological map products that include seabed substrates, sedimentation rates, seafloor geology, Quaternary geology, geomorphology, coastal behaviour, geological events such as submarine landslides and earthquakes, and marine mineral occurrences. Additionally, as a new product during the ongoing and preceding phase of the project, map products on submerged landscapes of the European continental shelf have been compiled at various time frames. All new map products have a resolution of 1:100 000, although finer resolution is presented where the underlying data permit. A multi-scale approach is adopted whenever possible. Numerous national seabed mapping programmes worldwide have demonstrated the necessity for proper knowledge of the seafloor. Acting on this, the European Commission established the European Marine Observation and Data Network (EMODnet) programme in 2009. The national geological survey organizations of Europe have a strong network of marine geological teams through the Marine Geology Expert Group of the association of European geological surveys (Eurogeosurveys). This network was the foundation of the EMODnet Geology consortium which today consists of the national geological surveys of Finland, the UK, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, The Netherlands, Belgium, France, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Albania, Greece, Cyprus, Malta, Russia, Germany, Montenegro and Iceland, as well as marine teams of research organizations in Portugal (IPMA), Bulgaria (IO-BAS), Romania (GeoEcoMar), the UK (CEFAS), Greece (HCMR) and Ukraine (PSRGE, replaced in the fourth phase by Institute of Geological Sciences, NAS of Ukraine). The consortium is further strengthened with experts from six universities: Edge Hill University (UK), Sapienza University of Rome (Italy), University of Tartu (Estonia), University of Crete through FORTH-ICS, Institute of Marine Science and Technology of Dokuz Eylul University (Turkey), and EMCOL Research Centre of Istanbul Technical University – altogether, 30 partners and nine subcontractors. The EMODnet Geology programme is now in its fourth phase, which started in September 2019. In addition to geological information, the wider EMODnet programme aims to also bring together information from European seas on seabed habitats, physical properties, chemistry, biology, human activities and hydrography. This paper describes the EMODnet Geology project and the different end products which were delivered in the end of the third phase and will be further developed during the recent fourth phase of the project.

Highlights

  • Numerous national seabed mapping programmes worldwide have demonstrated the necessity for proper knowledge of the seafloor

  • This network was the foundation of the European Marine Observation and Data Network (EMODnet) Geology consortium which today consists of the national geological surveys of Finland, the UK, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, The Netherlands, Belgium, France, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Albania, Greece, Cyprus, Malta, Russia, Germany, Montenegro and Iceland, as well as marine teams of research organizations in Portugal (IPMA), Bulgaria (IO-BAS), Romania (GeoEcoMar), the UK (CEFAS), Greece (HCMR) and Ukraine (PSRGE, replaced in the fourth phase by Institute of Geological Sciences, NAS of Ukraine)

  • This paper describes the EMODnet Geology project and the different end products which were delivered in the end of the third phase and will be further developed during the recent fourth phase of the project

Read more

Summary

Project objectives

EMODnet Geology compiles marine geological information held primarily by the project partners with some additional datasets that are publicly available. The project outputs are delivered through the European Geological Data Infrastructure (EGDI) portal (http://www.emodnet-geology.eu/). The consortium delivers ‘Operation, development and maintenance of a European Marine Observation and Data Network’, collecting and harmonizing datasets on seabed substrates, sedimentation rates, seafloor (bedrock) lithology, seafloor (bedrock) stratigraphy, coastal behaviour (migration direction, rate and volume, resilience), mineral occurrences (e.g. oil and gas, aggregates, metallic minerals), geological events and probabilities (e.g. earthquakes, submarine landslides, volcanic centres). As a new output, included for the third phase of the project, information on the submerged landscapes of the European continental shelves have been compiled at various time frames (e.g. Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and younger low sea-level stages). The regional seas covered by the project are the Baltic Sea, the Barents Sea, the Bay of Biscay, the Celtic Sea, the Greater North Sea, the Iberian Coast, the Norwegian Sea, the White Sea, the North Atlantic Ocean (continental shelves around Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Macaronesia), the Mediterranean Sea (within waters of EU countries), the Black Sea and, from the beginning of the fourth phase, the Caspian Sea (Fig. 1)

Geological data and metadata
Emodnet Geology deliverables and products
Sedimentation rates
Quaternary geology
Coastal behaviour
Geological events and probabilities
Submerged landscapes
Challenges of map production
Web portal and presentation of data products
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call