Abstract

The margins of the Rockall Trough, currently the focus of oil and gas exploration interest, incorporate an environmentallyimportant and lightly studied shelf region. To address the paucity of information within this region an extensive high resolution sidescan sonar survey was carried out in the Irish sector of the Rockall Trough in June/July 1998. This valuable natural laboratory contains information on slope stability, sediment transport, nutrient upwelling, bottom current, and biological activity at a shelf/slope/basin-floor transition. Detailed information on the nature of many of these processes can be provided from shallow geophysical techniques. The TRIM (TOBI Rockall Irish Margins) project (Shannon et al., 2001), funded by the Irish Petroleum Infrastructure Programme (Rockall Studies Group), acquired 3100 line-km of TOBI sidescan sonar and 3700 km of 3.5 kHz profiler data along the margins of the Rockall Trough (Figure 1). This project followed on from the earlier reconnaissance AIRS (Atlantic Irish Regional Survey) survey conducted over the entire southern Rockall Trough region, using the lower resolution surface towed sonar side-scan system known as GLORIA (Unnithan et al., 2001). The TOBI sidescan system, developed at the Southampton Oceanography Centre (Flewellen et al., 1993), is deep-towed at 300-400 m above the seafloor. It transmits at a frequency of 32 kHz and samples the acoustic response of the seabed and shallow sedimentary structure to a centimetre to metre depth scale. This acoustic response therefore reflects not only the backscattering properties of the seabed but also the shallow detailed structure of sediments formed by recent sedimentological processes.

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