Go to page content

Under the sea

Global partnership strengthens Memorial’s marine geoscience research

Research

By Jeff Green

Researchers and graduate students will continue to benefit from a unique scientific ocean drilling program thanks to a renewed partnership.

Memorial and the Canadian Consortium for Ocean Drilling (CCOD) are maintaining participation in the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) until at least 2023.

“The International Ocean Discovery Program is a more than 50-year-old, 23-nation research collaboration to investigate Earth’s geological record buried in sediments and rocks beneath the seafloor,” said Dr. John Jamieson, Canada Research Chair in Marine Geology, Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science.

Dr. John Jamieson
Dr. John Jamieson
Photo: Chris Hammond

“This is the only program of its kind and requires an international collaboration due to the high costs associated with this type of research,” he added.

Memorial roots

Memorial is the home institution for the CCOD while Dr. Jamieson is chair of the consortium, which consists of 10 universities and Natural Resources Canada.

“The International Ocean Discovery Program is regarded by many as one of the most successful international research programs in the geosciences.” — Dr. John Jamieson

The CCOD facilitates the participation of Canadian-based researchers on IODP expeditions, workshops, summer schools and access to the core and data repositories.

Thanks to support from the CCOD, Ocean Networks Canada and the Canada Foundation for Innovation, Canadian researchers will be able to access to multiple drilling platforms as well as cutting-edge technology and research.

Deep dive

“The International Ocean Discovery Program is regarded by many as one of the most successful international research programs in the geosciences,” Dr. Jamieson told the Gazette during a recent interview.

“Canadian-based researchers have published over 800 articles in peer-reviewed scientific journals using data collected during IODP expeditions. Today, over 150 Canadian-based scientists, including 15 researchers here at Memorial, use data collected from beneath the seafloor as part of their research program. Research topics range from plate tectonics to climate change and the limits of life on and within Earth.”

International collaboration

Dr. Jamieson says the IODP provides an opportunity for researchers – particularly emerging marine geoscientists – to enhance their studies.

In 2018 he and Dr. Andrew Martin, a post-doctoral fellow with his lab, participated on a two-month drilling expedition to study the interior of an active submarine volcano north of New Zealand.

Dr. Andrew Martin logs core on the <i>JOIDES Resolution</i> during a two-month long expedition in 2018.
Dr. Andrew Martin logs core on the JOIDES Resolution during a two-month long expedition in 2018.
Photo: Dr. John Jamieson

“We are interested in understanding the circulation of seawater and fluids derived from magma within the volcano, and the chemical reactions between the fluids and the volcanic rocks,” Dr. Jamieson explained.

“The data and samples collected during this expedition have also formed the basis of several other research projects within my group, including Sarah Moriarty (M.Sc.’20), a PhD student in my group, and Melissa Mills (B.Sc.’19) – now doing an M.Sc. at the University of Victoria – that are using measurements of different isotopes of sulfur within the rocks cored from within the volcano to study fluid circulation. Because of the international nature of these expeditions, these research projects include collaborations with researchers from the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Japan, China and New Zealand.”

With a renewed membership, Dr. Jamieson says Canada will be well positioned to participate in the implementation of a new scientific vision for IODP, as outlined in its 2050 Science Framework.


To receive news from Memorial in your inbox, subscribe to Gazette Now.


Latest News

Four for four

Memorial University named Canadian leader in annual research rankings

Run towards the chaos

Entrepreneurship centre’s new director sees new opportunities for student entrepreneurs

St. John’s, Marine Institute and Signal Hill campuses closed for the day

All classes and activities cancelled

Moving and transforming

Royal Society of Canada member blends science and innovation to protect the planet

Op-ed: Drs. Tyler Eddy and Maxime Geoffroy

Revealing the role of the North Atlantic and eastern Canadian Arctic in climate change

Be prepared 

Memorial University has a plan in place for poor weather