|
RETURN
TO
NEWS SUMMARY
EKU
HOME PAGE
WHAT'S
HOT?
NEWS
ARCHIVES
PHOTO
GALLERY
PUBLIC
RELATIONS
AND MARKETING
|
|
An EKU earth sciences
professor has been invited to participate in an international research
project to investigate the presence of methane gas hydrates within sediments
of the ocean floor.
For seven weeks this summer, Dr.
Walter Borowski will serve as a geological chemist aboard the JOIDES
Resolution, which will be stationed in the Pacific Ocean off the Oregon
shore. He will be joined on the 471- by 70-foot drill ship by about
30 other research scientists from many different countries. The ship's
derrick rises 200 feet above the water line, and the ship's drilling
system can operate in water as deep as approximately 27,000 feet.
This will be the third time Borowski, in his first year at EKU, has
participated in an Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) project. The ODP is
an international partnership of scientists and research institutions
organized to explore the evolution and structure of the Earth, providing
researchers around the world access to a vast repository of geological
and environmental information recorded far below the ocean surface in
seafloor sediments and rocks.
"One purpose of the expedition is to measure how much gas hydrate
is present at this locale, so
we can then extrapolate how much gas hydrate is likely present in oceans
worldwide," Borowski said. "Gas hydrate is important because
it contains methane, a greenhouse gas."
The amount of methane released from oceans potentially impacts world
climate patterns, he explained. "Methane can warm the atmosphere
by a factor 10 to 20 times greater than carbon dioxide on a per molecule
basis.
"Our efforts represent some of the best research going on,"
he added. "A great deal of what we know about the world's past
climate is through the ODP and its preceding drilling program.
"When there's a decrease in sea level," Borowski explained,
"methane can be injected into the atmosphere and act as a greenhouse
gas. With sea levels at their highest in about ten thousand years,"
large methane releases are "probably not happening today."
Borowski, who spent 10 years as a geologist with oil companies, said
his undergraduate students benefit from class discussions stemming from
his research. In addition, graduate students will have the opportunity
to work on some of the samples generated from the project.
|