The Sognefjord is the longest (205 km) and deepest (1308 m) fjord in Norway, and the second-longest in the world. Coast-fjord exchange in Sognefjord is limited by a seaward sill at 170 m water depth, which causes a clear stratification between water masses as the dense oxygen-poor basin water mixes slowly with the well-oxygenated water directly above from the coastal ocean. Due to the homogeneity and limited variability in the deep-water, the deep slopes of Sognefjord represent the ideal setting to study how abiotic factors influence the deep-water benthic community structure. During the summer of 2017, two remotely operated vehicle (ROV) video transects were performed to compare the megabenthic community behind the sill (water depth: 1230 ...
The Faroe-Shetland Channel, located in the NE Atlantic, ranges in depth from 0–1700 m and is an unus...
Cold seeps support fragile deep-sea communities of high biodiversity and are often found in areas wi...
Ecosystems deeper than 2,000 m cover ~60% of the Earth's surface and represent the world's most vast...
ABSTRACT. The Sognefjord is the longest (205 km) and deepest (1308 m) fjord in Norway, and the secon...
The Sognefjord is the longest (205 km) and deepest (1308 m) fjord in Norway, and the second-longest ...
Fjords play an important role in carbon cycling and sequestration, but the burial of organic matter ...
Here we present novel data on bacterial assemblages along a coast-fjord gradient in the Sognefjord, ...
The Ægir Ridge System (ARS) is an ancient extinct spreading axis in the Nordic seas extending from t...
Kelp forests produce large amounts of macroalgal detritus, ranging from whole plants to small partic...
This study describes the distribution, species composition and environmental characteristics of bent...
Polar deep water environments are poorly studied. This thesis investigates fundamental questions as ...
Climate change is leading to increases in freshwater discharge to coastal environments with implicat...
Fjord systems in higher latitudes are unique coastal water ecosystems that facilitate the study of d...
Cold seeps support fragile deep-sea communities of high biodiversity and are often found in areas wi...
Seamounts are isolated underwater mountains stretching > 1000 m above the seafloor. They are identif...
The Faroe-Shetland Channel, located in the NE Atlantic, ranges in depth from 0–1700 m and is an unus...
Cold seeps support fragile deep-sea communities of high biodiversity and are often found in areas wi...
Ecosystems deeper than 2,000 m cover ~60% of the Earth's surface and represent the world's most vast...
ABSTRACT. The Sognefjord is the longest (205 km) and deepest (1308 m) fjord in Norway, and the secon...
The Sognefjord is the longest (205 km) and deepest (1308 m) fjord in Norway, and the second-longest ...
Fjords play an important role in carbon cycling and sequestration, but the burial of organic matter ...
Here we present novel data on bacterial assemblages along a coast-fjord gradient in the Sognefjord, ...
The Ægir Ridge System (ARS) is an ancient extinct spreading axis in the Nordic seas extending from t...
Kelp forests produce large amounts of macroalgal detritus, ranging from whole plants to small partic...
This study describes the distribution, species composition and environmental characteristics of bent...
Polar deep water environments are poorly studied. This thesis investigates fundamental questions as ...
Climate change is leading to increases in freshwater discharge to coastal environments with implicat...
Fjord systems in higher latitudes are unique coastal water ecosystems that facilitate the study of d...
Cold seeps support fragile deep-sea communities of high biodiversity and are often found in areas wi...
Seamounts are isolated underwater mountains stretching > 1000 m above the seafloor. They are identif...
The Faroe-Shetland Channel, located in the NE Atlantic, ranges in depth from 0–1700 m and is an unus...
Cold seeps support fragile deep-sea communities of high biodiversity and are often found in areas wi...
Ecosystems deeper than 2,000 m cover ~60% of the Earth's surface and represent the world's most vast...