Martin Jakobsson, Larry Mayer, Ryder 2019 Scientific Party
The Ryder 2019 Expedition was carried out during summer 2019 in the Arctic Ocean off Northwest Greenland. The main target was Sherard Osborn Fjord where Ryder Glacier drains the northwestern sector of Northern Greenland Ice Sheet. Included in the expedition survey areas were also Petermann Fjord and adjacent Hall Basin, northern parts of Nares Strait and an area northeast of Ellesmere Island in the Lincoln Sea.
With the Swedish icebreaker Oden serving as the research platform, a range of scientific investigations were made. The main scientific goal was to increase our knowledge on the marine cryosphere and ecosystem of Northwest Greenland, specifically changes caused by a warming climate, including the contribution from a retreating Greenland Ice Sheet to sea-level rise. Data types included in the database are high-resolution multibeam bathymetry, oceanographic hydrography data, marine chemistry data, marine sediment core data, meteorological observation and micrometeorology data and a glacier calving front imagery.
This was an Explorers Club Flag Expedition carrying Flag #51. It started and ended in US Air Force Base Thule, Northwest Greenland, and lasted from August 5 to September 11, 2019.
Datasets
Meteorology
Weather station and ship log
Micrometeorology
Marine Geology
Bathymetry
Sediment cores
Oceanography
Hydrography
Ocean chemistry
Other
Glaciers
Map
Citation
Martin Jakobsson, Larry Mayer, Ryder 2019 Scientific Party (2024) Data from expedition Ryder, off North Greenland, 2019. Dataset version 5. Bolin Centre Database. https://doi.org/10.17043/oden-ryder-2019-expedition-5
References
Jakobsson M, Mayer LA, Farrell F, Ryder 2019 Scientific Party (2020) Expedition report: SWEDARCTIC Ryder 2019, Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, 455 pp, ISBN 978-91-519-5132-4
O'Regan M, Cronin TM, Reilly B, Alstrup AKO, Gemery L, Golub A, Mayer LA, Morlighem M, Moros M, Munk OL, Nilsson J, Pearce C, Detlef H, Stranne C, Vermassen F, West G, Jakobsson M (2021) The Holocene dynamics of Ryder Glacier and ice tongue in north Greenland. The Cryosphere 15:4073 – 4097. https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-15-4073-2021
Comments
The main scientific goal was to increase our knowledge on the marine cryosphere and ecosystem of Northwest Greenland, specifically changes that have or may occur due to a warming of the climate. The marine cryosphere includes outlet glaciers extending into the ocean, sea ice, frozen gas hydrates and subsea permafrost. In addition, land research included collection of driftwood for paleoclimate studies, mapping of uplifted shorelines and collections of clam shells for dating to reconstruct sea-level history, and terrestrial ecology. The latter included sediment coring in lakes for ancient DNA research.
Scientists from Sweden, USA, Canada and Denmark made up the scientific party of 39. The logistics of the expedition was financially supported by the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping, University of New Hampshire, and Stockholm University. The Nippon Foundation of Japan supported multibeam bathymetry to be collected during the transects from and back to Sweden. All multibeam bathymetry data are contributed to the Nippon Foundation — GEBCO — Seabed 2030 project. The US Arctic Research Commission facilitated support from NOAA with satellite imagery for ice recognizance during the expedition.
Participants
Co-chief scientists
- Martin Jakobsson, Department of Geological Sciences, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Larry Mayer, Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Center, University of New Hampshire, USA
Expedition work package leaders
- Geophysical Mapping: Brian Calder (University of New Hampshire)
- Remotely Operated Mapping: Sam Reed (University of New Hampshire), Kevin Jerram (University of New Hampshire)
- Water Column Imaging: Christian Stranne (Stockholm University), Liz Weidner (Stockholm University/University of New Hampshire)
- Sediment Coring/Processing: Matt O’Regan (Stockholm University), Carina Johansson (Stockholm University)
- Physical Oceanography: Johan Nilsson (Stockholm University), Christian Stranne (Stockholm University)
- Sediment and Water Chemistry: Volker Brüchert (Stockholm University), Adam Ulfsbo (University of Gothenburg)
- Water Column Biology: Julek Chawarski (Memorial University)
- Glaciology: Nina Kirchner (Stockholm University), Abhay Prakash (Stockholm University), Felicity Holmes (Stockholm University)
- Trace Gas Biogeochemistry: Brett Thornton (Stockholm University)
- Sea level history: Alan Mix (Oregon State University)
- Paleoclimatology: Hans Linderholm (University of Gothenburg)
- Terrestrial ecology, paleoecology, and archaeology: Love Dalén (Swedish Natural History Museum), Fredrik Dalerum (Stockholm University)
Scientific party
- Lee-Gray Boze, USGS USA
- Volker Brüchert, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Brian Calder, University of New Hampshire, CCOM, USA
- Christian Carøe, Copenhagen University, Denmark
- Julek Chawarski, Memorial University, Canada
- Tom Cronin, USGS, USA
- Love Dalé, Swedish Natural History Museum, Sweden
- Fredrik Dalerum, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Björn Eriksson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- John Farrell, US Arctic Research Commission, USA
- Jonas Fredriksson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Laura Gemery, USGS, USA
- Anna Glüder, Oregon State University, USA
- Anders Götherström, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Björn Gunnarson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Dan Hammarlund, Lund University, Sweden
- Tamara Handl, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Felicity Holmes, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Martin Jakobsson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Kevin Jerram, University of New Hampshire, CCOM, USA
- Carina Johansson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Markus Karasti, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Hans Linderholm, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- Johannes Måsviken, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Larry Mayer, University of New Hampshire, CCOM, USA
- Alan Mix, Oregon State University, USA
- Julia Muchowski, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Johan Nilsson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Matt O’Regan, Stockholm University, Sweden
- June Padman, Oregon State University, USA
- Abhay Prakash, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Sam Reed, University of New Hampshire, CCOM, USA
- Brendan Reilly, Oregon State University, USA
- Emelie Ståhl, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Christian Stranne, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Brett Thornton, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Adam Ulfsbo, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- Elizabeth Weidner, University of New Hampshire, CCOM, USA
- Gabriel West, Stockholm University, Sweden
Reports
See more information at the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat.
Version history
Version 5
12 datasets. One marine sediment core dataset added.
Version 4
11 datasets. Two marine sediment core datasets added.
Version 3
9 datasets. Weather station and micrometeorology datasets added.
Version 2
7 datasets. A glacier calving front imagery and two marine chemistry datasets added.
Version 1
Initial release. Includes four datasets: a high-resolution multibeam bathymetry, meteorological observation data, and two oceanographic datasets.