CV17020 Quantifying Irish Marine Placer Resources (QuIMPeR) Survey

Published by: Marine Institute
Category: Environment
Views: 1
Openness rating:

Heavy mineral sands are common on the beaches of the Belmullet Peninsula and Achill Island as well as southern outer Clew Bay. The combination of metamorphic and igneous terrain adjacent to high energy coastlines offers a clear scenario for heavy mineral sand development in Ireland. This survey took place in July-August 2017 on board the Marine Institute's R.V. Celtic Explorer, led by University College Cork (UCC). This survey focused exclusively on studying offshore heavy mineral sand deposits in the Blacksod/Achill Island/SW Clew Bay area and provided data to the SFI-funded iCRAG (Irish Centre for Research in Applied Geosciences) project FLIPeR (Formation of Littoral and Offshore Irish Placer Resources). A series of areas were surveyed to locate, delineate and sample heavy mineral sands near to beaches where heavy minerals had already been sampled. All areas surveyed were mapped with non-overlapping multibeam lines at 250m or 500m apart. Magnetometer data and seismic and sub-bottom profiler data was collected, and CTDs (Conductivity-Temperature-Depth) were taken to calibrate the sound velocity for the multibeam echosounder. To map the spatial and volumetric extent offshore heavy mineral sand deposits To retrieve samples to quantify the amount and type of heavy mineral sands and enable heavy mineral sand grain analysis for provenance studies and assays. To retrieve cores through heavy mineral sand deposits to look a variation in heavy minerals sands through time and relate to temporal changes in environmental conditions and to allow better quantification.

Data Resources (4)

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-HTTP--DOWNLOAD
available as www:download-1.0-http--download
HTML
available as HTML
HTML
available as HTML
Marine Institute home page
Theme Environment
Date released 2018-01-15
Date updated 2018-11-29
Dataset conforms to these standards See the referenced specification
Rights notes {"While every effort is made in preparing the dataset no responsibility is accepted by or on behalf of the Marine Institute for any errors, omissions or misleading information. The Marine Institute accepts no responsibility for loss or damage occasioned or claimed to have been occasioned, in part or in full, as a consequence of any person acting, or refraining from acting as a result of a matter contained in this datasets or as a consequence of using this dataset for any purpose whatsoever.","A Creative Commons (CC) license is one of several public copyright licenses that enable the free distribution of an otherwise copyrighted work. A CC license is used when an author wants to give people the right to share, use, and build upon a work that they have created. Under Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 the following is granted: Rights Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format; Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially. The licensor cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you follow the license terms. Requirements Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use. No additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.",CC%20BY%204.0}
Update frequency Other
Language English
Geographic coverage in GeoJSON format {"type":"Polygon","coordinates":[[[-10.286944999999948, 52.582222000000066],[-10.286944999999948, 54.62934700000003], [-8.437646999999995, 54.62934700000003], [-8.437646999999995, 52.582222000000066], [-10.286944999999948, 52.582222000000066]]]}
Spatial Reference Systems (SRS) WGS 84 (EPSG:3857)
Provenance information Data supplied by Marine Institute.
Period of time covered (begin) 2017-07-24
Period of time covered (end) 2017-08-06